Rethinking Times v. Sullivan - David Logan
Rescuing Our Democracy by Rethinking New York Times Co. v. Sullivan
By David A. Logan [Roger Williams/forthcoming Ohio State Law Journal]
New York Times v. Sullivan (1964) is an iconic decision, foundational to modern First Amendment
theory, and in a string of follow-on decisions the Court firmly grounded free speech theory and practice in
the need to protect democratic discourse. To do this the Court provided broad and deep protections to the
publishers of falsehoods. This article recognizes that New York Times and its progeny made sense in the
“public square” of an earlier era, but the justices could never have foreseen the dramatic changes in
technology and the media environment in the years since, nor predict that by making defamation cases
virtually impossible to win they were harming, rather than helping self-government. In part because of
New York Times, the First Amendment has been weaponized, frustrating a basic requirement of a healthy
democracy: the development of a set of broadly agreed-upon facts. Instead, we are subject to waves of
falsehoods that swamp the ability of citizens to effectively self-govern. As a result, and despite its iconic
status, New York Times needs to be reexamined and retooled to better serve our democracy.
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