In a moment that perplexed many, Congressman Eric Swalwell recently took to Twitter with a post that quickly drew ire and ridicule. The tweet, marked by its cringe-inducing and ill-advised nature, has ignited a storm of criticism, even from those who typically align with Swalwell’s political positions.
We’re not entirely sure what the Hell Eric Swalwell was thinking with this post and picture, but whatever it was, it did not come through or go the way he thought it would.
Don’t threaten me with a good time pic.twitter.com/WuzDpelYUX
— Rep. Eric Swalwell (@RepSwalwell) March 24, 2024
People had thoughts about this tweet:
Am I misreading this situation or is there a lock on the outside of your child’s room.
— The Redheaded libertarian (@TRHLofficial) March 25, 2024
Why is there a lock on the outside?
This is cringe level 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
— Miss Genny Bloodbath 🩸 (@100_percentgenx) March 25, 2024
Why do you have a lock on the outside of your kid’s bedroom door???
— Victory Gin Woodworker (@DrunkWoodworker) March 24, 2024
Someone call child services…now!
— 🇺🇸 Hakim 🇺🇸 (@kareemjeanjr) March 24, 2024
it appears that the children live in fear while locked in their room?
Should child services be notified?
— dcnh (@davec_NH) March 25, 2024
He decided to block a lot of people and got caught:
Why are you blocking people? Also, are you locking your child in their bedroom?! pic.twitter.com/fpaA9QWJxN
— 🇺🇸Sheri (@SheriCarter18) March 24, 2024
He also hides some replies and people wonder why:
Why is creepy Eric Swalwell hiding these replies? pic.twitter.com/JmbNV3bfRh
— 𝕔hi𝓁𝓁iຖ໐iˢ (@chiIIum) March 25, 2024
There could be some legal consequences if we have a proper legal system:
It’s against the law for a public official to block people. You open yourself to civil action in doing so
— Shelley (@ProudArmymom66) March 24, 2024
This was posted on SCOTUSblog on Mar 15, 2024:
The Supreme Court on Friday ruled that public officials who post about topics relating to their work on their personal social media accounts are acting on behalf of the government, and therefore can be held liable for violating the First Amendment when they block their critics, only when they have the power to speak on behalf of the state and are actually exercising that power.
The court’s decisions came in a pair of cases, involving local officials in California and Michigan who blocked constituents who made repetitive and critical comments on their personal social media accounts. In O’Connor-Ratcliff v. Garnier, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit ruled that two school board members violated the First Amendment when they blocked two parents from their personal Facebook and Twitter accounts, which they used to provide information about the board and its work. The court of appeals reasoned that there was a “close nexus between the Trustees’ use of their social media pages and their official positions.”
But in Lindke v. Freed, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit ruled that because James Freed, the Port Huron city manager, maintained his Facebook page on his own rather than as part of his job, he was not acting as a government official when he blocked a city resident – and therefore there was no First Amendment violation.
In a unanimous decision on Friday by Justice Amy Coney Barrett, the justices sent Freed’s case back for another look. Barrett acknowledged that the question before the court was a “difficult” one, “especially in a case involving a state or local official who routinely interacts with the public.” Although such officials can act on the government’s behalf, she reasoned, “Freed did not relinquish his First Amendment rights when he became city manager.”
Instead, Barrett explained, a government official’s social media posts can be attributed to the government only if the official had the authority to speak on behalf of the government and was exercising that power when he created the social media post at the center of the dispute. In a case like Freed’s, Barrett continued, involving a social media page with both personal and official posts, making such a determination will require “a fact-specific undertaking in which the post’s content and function are the most important considerations.”
Barrett also cautioned that the “nature of the technology matters” when determining whether an official acted on behalf of the government: Although deleting comments allows an official to target only personal posts, blocking someone from a social media page that contains both personal and official posts could also prevent someone from commenting on official posts. “A public official who fails to keep personal posts in a clearly designated personal account therefore exposes himself to greater potential liability,” she warned.
In a brief unsigned opinion that followed Barrett’s decision in Freed’s case, the justices sent O’Connor-Ratcliff back to the 9th Circuit for it to take another look using the new test.
Friday’s ruling is the first of several expected this term involving the relationship between government and social media. On Feb. 26, the justices heard argument in a pair of challenges to controversial laws in Florida and Texas that seek to regulate large social-media companies. And on Monday the justices will hear oral arguments in a dispute alleging that the federal government violated the First Amendment by pressuring social media companies to remove false or misleading content. Decisions in those cases are expected by summer.
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