George welcome. Thanks for coming on a saturday morning in the summer. I think we have a great panel here on trump and the press and the First Amendment. Before we do anything else, i would like to introduce a wonderful panel. For coming out. To my immediate left is floyd abrams. He has been the preeminent First Amendment attorney in this country for the last 40 or so years, worked on the pentagon papers case for the New York Times in 1971. Has been in the Supreme Court for basically every major media or in his asian and high Appellate Courts since then. As a matter of disclosure, 43 years ago today, i was working about three offices down the hall from him as a summer associate, so we have known each other and being friends along time. To his immediate left is jim rutenberg, a media columnist of the New York Times. The times in the 2000s. Has been the City Hall Bureau chief in new york. Has covered the media and politics. And we are lied to have a real live journalist with the lawyers
Join our life threeour conversation. Your calls, emails, tweet, and facebook questions live sunday at noon eastern on cspan2. Now, a conversation on the trunk administration and its relationship with the press. From the american bar s annual meeting. This is an hour and a half. George welcome. Thanks for coming on a saturday morning in the summer. I think we have a great panel here on trump and the press and the First Amendment. Before we do anything else, i would like to introduce a wonderful panel. I think them for coming out. To my immediate left is floyd abrams. He has been the preeminent First Amendment attorney in this country for the last 40 or so years, worked on the pentagon papers case for the New York Times in 1971. Has been in the Supreme Court for basically every major Media Organization and high Appellate Courts since then. As a matter of disclosure, 43 years ago today, i was working about three offices down the hall from him as a summer associate, so we have known each o
The news outlets’ 2018 investigation into famed Houston heart surgeon Bud Frazier provided a “fair, true, and impartial account,” the court said in its ruling, potentially bringing a close to the nearly six-year legal battle.
An appeals blocked the Texas Education Agency from enforcing a state law requiring booksellers to rate the explicitness and relevance of sexual references.