A Florida law requiring newspapers to allow equal access to political candidates in the case of a political editorial or endorsement content is unconstitutional.
Miami Herald Publishing Co. v. Tornillo,[a] 418 U.S. 241 (1974), was a seminal
First Amendment ruling at the
United States Supreme Court.[2] The Supreme Court overturned a Florida state law that required newspapers to offer equal space to political candidates who wished to respond to election-related editorials or endorsements. That law was found to be an unconstitutional restriction of
freedom of the press under the
First Amendment.[3]
Background
In 1972 Pat Tornillo, a candidate for an upcoming election to the
Florida House of Representatives, found that the Miami Herald newspaper had criticized his candidacy and endorsed his opponent. Tornillo wrote some replies in which he accused the newspaper of defaming his character, and demanded that the newspaper offer him free space in which to print them. Such a request was permissible under a Florida
right of reply statute for newspapers (Florida Statute § 104.38).[3]
The newspaper refused Tornillo's demands so he sued in Florida court for violation of the state's right of reply statute. The Miami Herald responded that the Florida statute was a violation of the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, because it
compelled newspapers to print content against their will.[3] After several local hearings, the case was sent to the
Supreme Court of Florida, which ruled that the Florida statute was not a constitutional violation because, by offering media space to anyone regardless of their financial power or publishing abilities, it enhanced rather than restricted
free speech.[4]
The Miami Herald requested a special appeal to the
United States Supreme Court, because of questions related to the federal constitution, and the Supreme Court accepted the case per a federal law stating that a state supreme court's ruling on a federal question may not be the final word.[5]
Opinion of the court
The Supreme Court struck down the Florida right of reply statute for reasons of
compelled speech,
chilled speech, and the financial nature of the newspaper industry. The court held that the Florida statute violated the
First Amendment by requiring newspapers to publish text against their will, while the statute may chill the press because "editors may conclude that the safe course is to avoid controversy".[3]
Furthermore, the Court held that unlike mass media broadcasting in which a right of reply may be merited due to
scarce frequencies, the newspaper industry suffered no such restrictions and a criticized person would have a relatively easier time finding a competing publication, or even starting a new publication of their own.[6]
Thus, the Supreme Court overturned the Florida right of reply statute as a violation of
freedom of the press, "because of its intrusion into the function of editors" and its restrictions on "the exercise of editorial control and judgment."[3]
Impact
Miami Herald Publishing Co. v. Tornillo has been widely cited as one of the most important Supreme Court rulings on
freedom of the press, serving as a crucial precedent in later disputes over government attempts to control the activities of newspapers.[6][7] However, this ruling is part of an inconsistent duo of cases, with the other being Red Lion Broadcasting Co. v. FCC (1969), in which the Supreme Court upheld different levels of government regulation for print media vs. broadcast media.[8] This has resulted in frequent criticism of the differing free speech protections for different types of
mass media simply because of their delivery methods.[9][10][11]
^Savage, Charlie (February 26, 2024).
"Supreme Court Seems Open to Tech Companies' Challenge to Social Media Laws". The justices keep calling the landmark newspaper case 'TorNEEyo.' As someone who covered the Miami teachers union chief Pat Tornillo early in my career, when I was the Miami Herald's education beat reporter, I can attest that he pronounced his name 'TorNILlo.'
^Fischman, Bruce D. (1975). "Miami Herald Publishing Co. v. Tornillo: Editorial Discretion v. The Electorate's Right to Know - Freedom of the Press for Whom". Ohio Northern University Law Review. 2 (3): 562–569 – via HeinOnline.
^Lipsky Jr., Abbott B. (February 1976). "Reconciling Red Lion and Tornillo: A Consistent Theory of Media Regulation". Stanford Law Review. 28 (3): 563–588.
doi:
10.2307/1228307.
JSTOR1228307 – via HeinOnline.
^Emord, Jonathan W. (1992). "The First Amendment Invalidity of FCC Content Regulations". Notre Dame Journal of Law, Ethics & Public Policy. 6 (1): 93–216 – via HeinOnline.
^Soriano, Josephine (Spring 2006). "The Digital Transition and the First Amendment: Is It Time to Reevaluate Red Lion's Scarcity Rationale?". Boston University Public Interest Law Journal. 15 (2): 341–356 – via HeinOnline.
^Calvert, Clay (2022). "First Amendment Battles over-Anti-Deplatforming Statutes: Examining Miami Herald Publishing Co. v. Tornillo's Relevance for Today's Online Social Media Platform Cases". New York University Law Review Online. 97: 1–17 – via HeinOnline.