By Kevin D. Williamson
Tuesday, September 23, 2025
The recent all-out assault on free speech by the Trump
administration and its allies has some of my friends in the business grumbling
about the fact that the United States has no national “shield law” giving
journalists certain kinds of legal protections, mainly having to do with being
compelled to disclose sources or being subjected to various kinds of electronic
surveillance. But shield laws are the wrong policy.
The most recent attempt to pass such a law failed in the
Senate last year, not because Senate Republicans thought through the issue
carefully but because Donald Trump demanded
it be killed. Trump probably does not understand the law, but he knows he hates
journalists. Even the doggie-vitamin salesmen who play journalists on Fox News
annoy him from time to time—a true-blue Trump sycophant can never be abject enough.
But a federal shield law (there are many state-level
versions) was a bad idea before Donald Trump and it is a bad idea now—not
because of the proposed shield or shields per se, but because it raises
the question of who is to be protected by such a law and implies a government
power to make that decision.
Deciding, as someone must decide, that a
journalist’s shield law applies to Smith but not to Jones amounts to the
licensing of journalists. And who hands out the licenses? If not the courts on
a case-by-case basis (in which case what you have is not a shield law for journalists
but a widely applicable general legal principle, which is distinctly different)
then it will certainly be some agent of government in the executive
branch—i.e., precisely the people who have the strongest incentive to prevent
journalism from being done competently … or at all.
I wonder if my journalist friends have meditated on the
question of which member of the Trump administration should have the power to
determine who counts as a journalist when it comes to the application of
federal law—Pam Bondi, the perky Wilhelm Stuckart of free-speech law? J.D.
Vance and Stephen Miller, the Schultz and Klink of that filthy little Stalag 13
they’ve built on the Potomac? Marco Rubio, the Dick Sargent of Elmer Gantry? Or
Donald Trump, the J. Wellington Wimpy of Elagabalus epigones, a weepy little
man-child who wants to make it a crime to hurt his precious presidential
feelings?
Effectively licensing journalists would likely have
consequences far beyond relatively narrow and rarely encountered issues of
legal procedure. For example: Most commercial printers require newspapers, book
publishers, and other clients to carry legal-liability insurance that covers
libel, invasion of privacy, and other torts. Printers are not the only service
providers who may require such insurance. One suspects that insurers will have
at least some interest in whether the insured party is covered by a
national shield law. (NB: Insurance pricing is complicated.) And if they
are not interested, it is not very difficult to imagine that the levers of
government could be pulled in such a way as to force their interest, as the attorney
general of New York did by pressuring banks and insurance companies to deny
financial services to the National Rifle Association, as the state of
Minnesota has done by pretending
that disagreements about climate policy are securities fraud, etc.
A power given to the state is a power that is going to be
abused, period—no, that isn’t a brief for anarchism, it is an argument for not
creating unnecessary new powers. G.K. Chesterton’s rule applies to the building
of new fences as much as to knocking them down.
The power to create arbitrary financial and practical
disadvantages that burden unfriendly media outlets may not always rise to
censorship in a formal sense, but, when the power is wielded with sufficient
energy and amorality, it becomes effectively indistinguishable from ordinary
censorship. Giving the federal government an opportunity to declare who is and
who is not a journalist sets a precedent that raises possible legal threats far
beyond the obvious short-term stuff. It is not difficult to imagine some
punitive new national-security law—something along the lines of what Pete
Hegseth is trying to establish on his own as a policy matter at Defense—that
would criminalize publishing information the administration does not wish to
see published, perhaps with a First Amendment fig-leaf in the form of a
carve-out for government-recognized journalists, a category that could easily
exclude critics of the administration.
And not just this administration—new powers tend
to be long-lived. As George Orwell put it: “Journalism is printing something
that someone does not want printed. Everything else is public relations.”
The Trump administration is not, at this juncture, very
much interested in marginal cases. Trump is interested in—and digitally
screaming about—weaponizing the federal government against his enemies,
which include, in the media world, such targets as ABC,
the New
York Times, and Facebook.
One of the reasons Republicans have turned against Section 230 of the woefully
misnamed Communications Decency Act is that gutting it would open up platforms
such as Facebook to the kind of baloney litigation Trump has used to cow such
gutless corporate megaliths as Paramount
(60 Minutes) and ABC
News, both of which did the cause of a free press a major disservice by
cynically paying off Donald Trump as a cost of doing business.
What’s needed isn’t a shield law—what’s needed is some
guts, especially on the part of those who can damned well afford to
stand up for themselves. Amazon, to take one prominent example, allowed itself
to get buffaloed into pulling a book that offended trans activists from its
virtual shelves and then, a few years later, allowed itself to get
buffaloed into reversing itself—why? Because its executives suddenly
discovered some new conviction about free speech? No, because a few years ago,
it was the trans mob that was the loudest and angriest pain in Amazon’s lower
GI tract, and now it is the Trump mob. The principles of free speech and
freedom of the press did not change in the intervening years—it was only the
political winds that shifted. Every time a firm such as Paramount or ABC (with
its chastening
of Jimmy Kimmel) allows itself to be bullied by Trump and his sycophants,
it puts itself and its peers at greater risk. L’appétit vient en mangeant.
I do not expect that anybody in Washington would be very
much interested in applying ideologically neutral and intelligent standards to
the question of shield laws. But, even if someone did try, the results would
almost certainly be stupid and destructive. The question of what criteria might
entitle someone to such protections already has produced such profoundly
idiotic answers as possession
of a journalism degree, as though they didn’t hand those damned things
out from the bottom of a Cracker Jack box.
Reporters are not political representatives, but they
should resemble legislators—at least, the ideal of a legislator—in one
important way: They are not meant to be a class apart, mandarins of a special
caste, but citizens working to advance certain public interests. What they need
is not some special legal status—what they need is bosses with the balls to
stand up to presidents, weaponized bureaucrats, social media mobs, and anybody
else who would get in the way of the press doing its job.
What we need isn’t permission to do journalism but the
conviction to do our jobs without anybody’s permission.
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