Arkansas Educational Television Commission v. Forbes: Betraying Freedom of Political Expression and Undermining Democracy
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Description
In Arkansas Educational Television Commission v. Forbes (1998), the Supreme Court upheld the exclusion of an Independent congressional candidate from a televised debate organized by Arkansas’s taxpayer-funded public television network. By a vote of six to three, the majority reversed the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals and affirmed the state’s power to sponsor the general election debate closed to all but the Democratic and Republican candidates. To resolve the case, the Court grappled with two key questions. The first was whether the debate on a state-controlled station constituted a 'public forum' for First Amendment purposes, and, second, whether the exclusion of Ralph Forbes from the debate constituted 'viewpoint discrimination.' The Court determined that the debate was a 'nonpublic' forum. The majority also saw no viewpoint discrimination in Forbes’s exclusion. Justice Kennedy, who authored the majority opinion, was principally moved by the trial jury’s finding that Forbes was rejected as a participant by the debate managers not because they disliked his politics but because they correctly deemed his candidacy to be 'not viable.' Thus, the AETC’s exclusion of Forbes was not political viewpoint discrimination but a 'reasonable, viewpoint neutral exercise of its journalistic discretion.' In his dissent, Jamin Raskin concludes that the Court decided both of these questions erroneously and that the Court should have found that Arkansas was required to permit Forbes, a balloted candidate who had nearly become lieutenant governor in the prior election, to participate in the debate.
ISBN
0814707238
Publication Date
1-1-2008
Book Title
We Dissent: Talking Back to the Rehnquist Court, Eight Cases that Subvert Civil Liberties and Civil Rights
Publisher
NYU Press
Keywords
First Amendment, Public forum, Political debates
Disciplines
Constitutional Law | Law
Recommended Citation
Raskin, Jamin. “Arkansas Educational Television Commission v. Forbes: Betraying Freedom of Political Expression and Undermining Democracy.” In We Dissent: Talking Back to the Rehnquist Court: Eight Cases That Subverted Civil Liberties and Civil Rights, edited by Michael Avery, 32-53. New York: New York University Press 2008.