Source: https://mtsu.edu/first-amendment/article/198/central-hudson-gas-and-electric-corp-v-public-service-commission
Timestamp: 2019-04-25 08:40:14+00:00

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The Supreme Court decision in Central Hudson Gas and Electric Corp. v. Public Service Commission, 447 U.S. 557 (1980), established a four-part test for determining when commercial speech can be regulated without violating the Constitution.
Although the test has been subsequently modified slightly and is often criticized, it remains the standard applied in virtually all commercial speech cases.
In 1942 the Supreme Court had flatly denied First Amendment protections to commercial speech in Valentine v. Chrestensen.
In 1976, in Virginia State Board of Pharmacy v. Virginia Citizens Consumer Council, Inc., it noted the value of commercial communications to a free enterprise system, but nevertheless still considered commercial expression to be low-value speech.
With Central Hudson Gas and Electric Corp. v. Public Service Commission, Justice Lewis F. Powell Jr. commanded the support of five of eight justices in the majority in overturning lower court decisions and announcing a new four-part test for determining when commercial speech is protected by the Constitution.
In an effort to conserve energy and discourage consumption during the 1973 energy crisis, the Public Service Commission of New York had ordered all electric utilities in the state to cease advertising. Central Hudson Gas and Electric Corp. challenged the order in court as a restraint on free speech.
Lower courts ruled that the government’s interest in discouraging consumption outweighed the value of the speech. The Supreme Court reversed, declaring the regulation too broad.
Part one flatly denies constitutional protection to “communication more likely to deceive the public than to inform it” and to “commercial speech relating to illegal activity.” This constitutes a threshold for identifying types of commercial speech that merit First Amendment protection. The burden of proof resides with the communicator to demonstrate that speech does not fall into one of these categories. Any commercial speech that satisfies the threshold requirement is presumed to be protected, and the burden of proof shifts to the state to justify regulation by satisfying parts two through four.
The Court made a major modification in the Central Hudson test by altering the level of proof required of the government to meet part four of the test. The original requirement entailed that the government prove that the means of regulation be the “least restrictive means” available, but from more recent cases evolved the demand that the government “demonstrate narrow tailoring of the challenged regulation to the asserted interest — ‘a fit that is not necessarily perfect, but reasonable; that represents not necessarily the single best disposition but one whose scope is in proportion to the interest served’ ” (Greater New Orleans Broadcasting Association v. United States , citing Board of Trustees of State University of New York v. Fox ).
Critics contend that the reasonableness standard is inherently subjective because what is reasonable varies from case to case. Nevertheless, since reasonableness was first proposed in In re R.M.J. (1982), the Supreme Court has more often used the standard to overturn than to uphold governmental restrictions on commercial speech.
Kozinski, Alex, and Stuart Banner. “Who’s Afraid of Commercial Speech?” Virginia Law Review 76 (May 1990): 627–653.
Shiner, Roger A. Freedom of Commercial Expression. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.
Waters, Brian J. “A Doctrine in Disarray: Why the First Amendment Demands the Abandonment of the Central Hudson Test for Commercial Speech.” Seton Hall Law Review 27 (1997): 1626–1657.

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