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June 8, 1925court rulingFirst Amendmentcivil libertiespolitical speechstate police powerCivil RightsJusticeGovernment

Supreme Court upholds Benjamin Gitlow conviction over radical political pamphlet

The Supreme Court assumed that the First Amendment applied to state governments through the Fourteenth Amendment, but still upheld Benjamin Gitlow’s conviction under New York law. The case shows an early twentieth-century free-speech record where radical political advocacy was recognized as constitutionally important while still receiving weak protection when officials framed it as a public-order threat.