CA Governor Newsom And AG Bonta Pretend Court Agreed With Them On Kids Code

from the you-don't-have-to-do-this dept

Dear California Governor Newsom and Attorney General Bonta: you really don’t have to be the opposite end of the extremists in Florida and Texas. You don’t have to lie to your constituents and pretend losses are wins. Really. Trust me.

You may recall that the Attorneys General of Texas and Florida have taken to lying to the public when they lose big court cases. There was the time when Texas AG Ken Paxton claimed “a win” when the Supreme Court did exactly the opposite of what he had asked it to do.

Or the time when Florida AG Ashley Moody declared victory after the Supreme Court made it quite clear that Florida’s social media law was unconstitutional, but sent it back to the lower court to review on procedural grounds.

And now it looks like Newsom and Bonta are doing the same sort of thing, claiming victory out of an obvious loss, just on the basis of some procedural clean-up (ironically, the identical procedural clean-up that Moody declared victory over).

As you’ll recall, we just wrote about the Ninth Circuit rejecting California’s Age Appropriate Design Code (AADC) as an obvious First Amendment violation (just as we had warned both Bonta and Newsom, only to be ignored). However, because of the results in the Supreme Court decision in Moody, the Ninth Circuit sent some parts of the law back to the lower court.

The details here are kind of important. In the Moody decision, the Supreme Court said for there to be a “facial challenge” against an entire law (i.e., a lawsuit saying “this whole law is unconstitutional, throw it out”), the lower courts have to consider every part of the law and whether or not every aspect and every possible application is unconstitutional. In the Texas and Florida cases, the Supreme Court noted that the lower courts really only reviewed parts of those laws and how they might impact a few companies, rather than really evaluating whether or not some of the laws were salvageable.

However, the ruling also made quite clear that any law that seeks to tell social media companies how to moderate is almost certainly a violation of the First Amendment.

In the challenge to the AADC, most of the case (partly at the request of the district court judge!) focused on the “Data Protection Impact Assessment” (DPIA) requirements of the law. This was the main part of the law, and the part that would require websites to justify every single feature they offer and explain how they will “mitigate” any potential risks to kids. The terrible way that this was drafted would almost certainly require websites to come up with plans to remove content the California government disapproved of, as both courts recognized.

But the AADC had a broader scope than the DPIA section.

So, the Ninth Circuit panel sent part of the law back to the lower court following the requirements in the Moody ruling. They said the lower court had to do the full facial challenge, exploring the entirety of the law and how it might be applied, rather than throwing out the whole law immediately.

However (and this is the important part), the Ninth Circuit said that on the DPIA point specifically, which is the crux of the law, there was enough briefing and analysis to show that it was obviously a violation of the First Amendment. It upheld the injunction barring that part of the law from going into effect.

That doesn’t mean the rest of the law is good or constitutional. It just means that now the lower court will need to examine the rest of the law and how it might be applied before potentially issuing another injunction.

In no way and in no world is this a “win” for California.

But you wouldn’t know that to hear Newsom or Bonta respond to the news. They put out a statement that suggests they either don’t know what they’re talking about or they’re hoping the public is too stupid to realize this. It’s very likely the latter, but it’s a terrible look for both Newsom and Bonta. It suggests they’re so deep in their own bullshit that they can’t be honest with the American public. They supported an unconstitutional bill that has now been found to be unconstitutional by both the district and the appeals court.

First up, Newsom:

“California enacted this nation-leading law to shield kids from predatory practices. Instead of adopting these commonsense protections, NetChoice chose to sue — yet today, the Court largely sided with us. It’s time for NetChoice to drop this reckless lawsuit and support safeguards that protect our kids’ safety and privacy.”

Except, dude, they did not “largely side” with you. They largely sided with NetChoice and said there’s not enough briefing on the rest. I mean, read the fucking ruling, Governor:

We agree with NetChoice that it is likely to succeed in showing that the CAADCA’s requirement that covered businesses opine on and mitigate the risk that children may be exposed to harmful or potentially harmful materials online, Cal. Civ. Code §§ 1798.99.31(a)(1)–(2), facially violates the First Amendment. We therefore affirm the district court’s decision to enjoin the enforcement of that requirement, id., and the other provisions that are not grammatically severable from it…

And, no, the law does not shield kids from predatory practices. That’s the whole point that both courts have explained to you: the law pressures websites to remove content, not change conduct.

So, why would NetChoice drop this lawsuit that it is winning? Especially when letting this law go into effect will not protect kids’ safety and privacy, and would actually likely harm both, by encouraging privacy-destroying age verification?

As for Bonta:

“We’re pleased that the Ninth Circuit reversed the majority of the district court’s injunction, which blocked California’s Age-Appropriate Design Code Act from going into effect. The California Department of Justice remains committed to protecting our kids’ privacy and safety from companies that seek to exploit their online experiences for profit.” 

Yeah, again, it did not “reverse the majority.” It upheld the key part, and the only part that was really debated in the lower court. It sent the rest back to be briefed on, and it could still be thrown out once the judges see what nonsense you’ve been pushing.

It wasn’t entirely surprising when Paxton and Moody pulled this kind of shit. After all, the GOP has made it clear that they’re the party of “alternative facts.” But the Democrats don’t need to do the same at the other end of the spectrum. We’ve already seen that Newsom’s instincts are to copy the worst of the GOP, but in favor of policies he likes. This is unfortunate. We don’t need insufferable hacks running both major political parties.

Look, is it so crazy to just ask for our politicians to not fucking lie to their constituents? If they can’t be honest about basic shit like this, what else are they lying about? You lost a case because you supported a bad law. Suck it up and admit it.

Filed Under: , , , , , , , ,
Companies: netchoice

Rate this comment as insightful
Rate this comment as funny
You have rated this comment as insightful
You have rated this comment as funny
Flag this comment as abusive/trolling/spam
You have flagged this comment
The first word has already been claimed
The last word has already been claimed
Insightful Lightbulb icon Funny Laughing icon Abusive/trolling/spam Flag icon Insightful badge Lightbulb icon Funny badge Laughing icon Comments icon

Comments on “CA Governor Newsom And AG Bonta Pretend Court Agreed With Them On Kids Code”

Subscribe: RSS Leave a comment
29 Comments

This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Anonymous Coward says:

Politicians have always lied. What’s different is that the lies have become blatant and obvious. Politicians have always assumed that voters were stupid but were reluctant to say that directly. I suspect that the wide acceptance of Trump’s outrageous lies has demonstrated that many politicians were correct. The lies by Newsom and Bonta are the consequence.

That One Guy (profile) says:

'Court case doesn't go your way? Just lie about the ruling!' -GOP and Newsom apaprently

Nothing says ‘Even I know I can’t defend this law on it’s merits’ like lying about a court ruling that your pet project is unconstitutional garbage but sending it back down the ladder because the lower court didn’t do quite enough work to establish that the entire thing(rather than just the core pillar of it) is rubbish.

Tdestroyer209 says:

Not surprised that politicians like Newsom, Blackburn, Blumenthal can’t accept reality that their bills are unconstitutional

Kind of figured that Newsom wouldn’t accept that the AADC got mostly struck down and puts out some sore loser bs making it seem like he won even though he lost.

Not surprised considering also that Blackburn and Blumenthal along with the “think of the children” advocates are still pushing for KOSA even though there’s no way in hell it will pass this year.

It’s really sad and makes you slap your face with your hand when they throw a sore loser fit over their bills being defeated and/or thrown out in court and yet they want things to go their way even if the bills are already dead like Jfc.

I feel like a lot of politicians and certain groups are so out of touch with reality these days it kind of makes you wonder how they even function thru the day like yikes.

That One Guy (profile) says:

Re: One bumbles towards malice on occasion. One actively seeks it out. They are not the same

When a democrat politician passes or attempts to pass some horrifying bit of legislation it’s generally an outlier, and outnumbered by bills intended to actually help the average person proposed/passed by other democrat politicians.

When a member of the insurrectionists party passes or attempts to pass a horrifying bit of legislation that just means that it’s yet again a day ending in ‘y’.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

Or.

Yes, we fucking get it you dis8ngenious fuck.

We know the Dems are just as authoritarian as the Grand Russian Party.

But guess what? The Dems aren’t trying to actively push out dissenting voices, commiting what would be a slam dunk case of treason in a wartime situation, or trying to reestablish the Confederate States with the power of Putin.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:2

In your last paragraph, I agree with the last two points wholeheartedly. However the first point I disagree with to some degree. That point is quite true at the very visible federal level and that’s a thing to be glad for, but there are instances in the past four years that lead me to think there is also a security faction of sorts that isn’t working so well with some it’s allies in the party. This alarms me as I feel that area of government is perhaps the most concerning as well as introverted.

Of course I will vote for the ticket unless just crazy things start being said. On top of that I’d like to cruise in this coalition for a while past the elections, but things I’m reading on Politico and CNN and the Telegraph suggest ideas are percolating on how to convince a new administration to make that less likely, which would probably not work out well for anyone but people floating the idea who’ve also set conditions for this sort of thing for the past four years at least. So that’s why I disagree with the first point. I do think the campaign isn’t openly showing any support for this idea except maybe some hints at an incredibly unpopular beartrap of an idea that hints to listening to things like the NCOSE crusaders instead of people who aren’t trying to impose wide ranging social controls in order to have wide ranging social controls rather than fixing problems well.

That said onward to election day, yoou can count on me unless you really piss me off

That One Guy (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:3 Demanding everything is a great way to end up with nothing

That said onward to election day, yoou can count on me unless you really piss me off

Any time a democrat or third party voter starts thinking that the democrat party/candidates aren’t looking too great and they’re tempted to sit this one out to show the democrat party their displeasure they need only ask themselves one simple question: ‘As bad as [insert problematic behavior/statement/policy idea] is, is it bad enough that I want convicted felon, self-described would-be dictator and ‘I’ve never heard of Project 2025 and my running mate certainly hasn’t, pinky-promise’ Donald Trump in office instead?’

You’re either getting candidate A in office, or you’re getting candidate B, there is no ‘enough people sat this one out that neither side wins’ option.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:2

When your only response to the next step of Big Brother made reality is “BUT THE OTHER GUY!” then you’re just cheering for it to happen but with a friendly avatar on the screens.

You deserve to not have privacy or freedom of information. So stop complaining about by coming to a site that highlights it you hypocritical little shitbird.

Anonymous Coward says:

The magical thinking around this piece of legislation is really something. I saw some of the commentary after this ruling, and there were people who insisted that because it was sent down on a technicality, that the bill will be upheld.

In a more ideal world, someone would acknowledge the concerns here. It’s a bad piece of legislation. It’s poorly written. Even if it was somehow constitutional, that wouldn’t make it any better. It doesn’t matter if Kidron says that “this is how it is done”, it is still bad.

Add Your Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Have a Techdirt Account? Sign in now. Want one? Register here

Comment Options:

Make this the or (get credits or sign in to see balance) what's this?

What's this?

Techdirt community members with Techdirt Credits can spotlight a comment as either the "First Word" or "Last Word" on a particular comment thread. Credits can be purchased at the Techdirt Insider Shop »

Follow Techdirt

Techdirt Daily Newsletter

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Get all our posts in your inbox with the Techdirt Daily Newsletter!

We don’t spam. Read our privacy policy for more info.

Ctrl-Alt-Speech

A weekly news podcast from
Mike Masnick & Ben Whitelaw

Subscribe now to Ctrl-Alt-Speech »
Techdirt Deals
Techdirt Insider Discord
The latest chatter on the Techdirt Insider Discord channel...
Loading...