Judge: GOP Twitter block violates law

MADISON, Wis. -- Top Republicans in the Wisconsin Legislature violated the First Amendment when they blocked a liberal advocacy group from seeing their Twitter feeds, a federal judge ruled Friday.

U.S. District Judge William Conley's decision marks liberal group One Wisconsin Now's second legal victory in as many days over Assembly Speaker Robin Vos. Another federal judge, James Peterson, on Thursday struck down early-voting restrictions Vos and his fellow Republicans passed in a contentious lame-duck session in December. One Wisconsin Now and other groups had challenged those provisions days after then-Gov. Scott Walker signed them into law.

"Two different federal courts offered the same warning to Robin Vos and the Republicans: It's the people's government, not theirs," One Wisconsin Now Executive Director Scot Ross said. "Vos and the Republicans cannot suppress people's speech simply because they don't like what's being said, whether it's at the ballot box or on social media."

Vos spokesman Kit Beyer didn't immediately respond to an email seeking comment on Friday's ruling.

One Wisconsin Now filed a lawsuit in November 2017 alleging Vos, state Rep. John Nygren, the co-chairman of the Legislature's powerful budget-writing committee, and then-Rep. Jesse Kremer blocked the group from following their official Twitter accounts. The group argued the moves amounted to a violation of free speech.

A blocked user on Twitter can't follow, see Twitter messages or reply to the user who blocked them. The blocked user can't see who is following the account or search their tweets. They're also not notified if the account holder mentions them in a tweet.

Conley wrote Friday that the lawmakers were government actors when they created their accounts, the interactive portion of their accounts are public forums and the legislators engaged in content-based discrimination when they blocked One Wisconsin Now.

He pointed to U.S. District Judge Naomi Reice Buchwald's ruling in May that President Donald Trump violates the First Amendment when he blocks critics on Twitter as precedent. Trump is appealing that ruling.

"Defendants in this case blocked plaintiff because of its prior speech or identity. Indeed, all three defendants indicated, either directly or indirectly, that they do not approve of plaintiff's liberal perspective," Conley wrote.

The judge stopped short of granting One Wisconsin Now's request that he order the lawmakers to unblock the group and prohibit them from blocking others, asking both sides for briefs on what relief he should grant and set aside time in March for a one-day trial on that question if necessary.

Nygren aide Chris Borgerding didn't immediately respond to an email. Kremer didn't run for re-election in November, but his Twitter account in which he calls himself a state representative still appears active. He didn't immediately respond to a message sent through it Friday seeking comment on Conley's decision.

A spokesman for the state Department of Justice, which defended the lawmakers, didn't immediately respond.

A Section on 01/19/2019

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