CH. 19-4 FREEDOM OF ASSEMBLY AND PETITION ADVANCED AMERICAN GOVERNMENT.
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Transcript of CH. 19-4 FREEDOM OF ASSEMBLY AND PETITION ADVANCED AMERICAN GOVERNMENT.
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CH. 19-4 FREEDOM OF ASSEMBLY AND PETITION
ADVANCED AMERICAN GOVERNMENT
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THE CONSTITUTION’S GUARANTEES
• The Ist Amendment states:• “…the right of the people peaceably to
assemble, and to petition the Government for redress of grievances.”
• ASSEMBLE—to gather with one another• Things protected: written petitions, letters, or
advertisements; lobbying; or parades, marches, or other demonstrations
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• CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE—violating the law nonviolently but deliberately
• Does the 1st and 14th Amends. Protect civil disobedience?
• Courts have consistently said the civil disobedience is not protected
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TIME-PLACE-MANNER REGULATIONS
• Government can make and enforce reasonable rules concerning time, place, and manner of assemblies
• Grayned v. City of Rockford (1972)—USSC said a city could create a noise ordinance if an assembly near a school caused a disruption to activities
• Government rules must be CONTENT NEUTRAL• Can’t regulate what is said
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PUBLIC PROPERTY
• Most demonstrations take place on public property: streets, sidewalks, public parks
• There is always some degree of conflict• USSC normally requires advance notice of a
demonstration by requiring a license, etc.
• GREGORY V. CHICAGO (1969)
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• While under police protection, Dick Gregory and others marched, while singing, chanting, and carrying placards, from city hall to the mayor’s house 5 miles away
• They demanded the firing of the school’s superintendent and an end to de facto segregation
• A crowd of hundreds gathered, including many residents from the all-white neighborhood
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• Bystanders began throwing insults and threat, as well as rocks, eggs, and other things
• Police tried to keep order, but they decided serious violence was going to break out
• Demonstrators were ordered to leave the area• Gregory and others refused and were arrested
and charged with disorderly conduct
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• Their arrests and convictions were unanimously overturned
• USSC said they were just exercising their constitutional rights of assembly and petition
• Neighborhood residents caused the disruption, not the marchers
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• Hill v. Colorado (2000)—USSC ruled 5-4 upholding a state law the limits “sidewalk counseling” at abortion clinics.
• Law creates an 8-foot buffer zone around anyone within 100 feet of the entrance
• No one may make an “unwanted approach” to talk or do such other things as hand out a leaflet or wave a sign
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PRIVATE PROPERTY
• What is the ruling about demonstrations on private property such as a shopping mall?
• Very few cases but the right of assembly cannot be used to trespass on private property
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FREEDOM OF ASSOCIATION
• This guarantees the right to associate with others to promote political, economic, and other social causes
• NAACP vs. Alabama (1958)—”…it is beyond doubt that freedom to engage in association for the advancement of beliefs and ideas is an inseparable aspect” of constitutional guarantees
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• Boy Scouts of America v. Dale (2000)—The BSA has a constitutional right to exclude gays from their organization
• The New Jersey Supreme Court had said that Eagle Scout James Dale, who was dismissed because he was gay, should be re-instated.
• THE END