ACLU Asks U.S. Supreme Court to Review Tennessee’s Anti-Choice License Plate Program (5/1/2006)
FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
CONTACT: media@aclu.orgNASHVILLE - The American Civil Liberties Union today asked the U.S. Supreme
Court to review a lower court decision upholding an anti-choice specialty
license plate in Tennessee, saying that the specialty license plate program
violates the free speech rights of some Tennessee residents.
“We are hopeful
that the Supreme Court will agree that Tennessee cannot discriminate against
people because of their point of view,” said Julie Sternberg, a Senior Staff
Attorney with the ACLU Reproductive Freedom Project. “If the state is going to
give some people the opportunity to express their opinions on their license
plates, it must allow people with opposing viewpoints the same
opportunity.” The legislature twice rejected an amendment that would have
authorized a “Pro-Choice” specialty plate. The law in question makes a
“Choose Life” license plate available to motorists for an annual fee of $35 over
and above the basic cost of registering a car in the state. Fifty percent
of all funds raised, after expenses, will go to a private anti-choice
organization called New Life Resources.
Last month, the Sixth Circuit Court
of Appeals ruled that Tennessee must postpone production of the anti-choice
plate while the Supreme Court considers the ACLU’s appeal. In March, that
same court issued a decision saying that the plate did not violate free speech
rights.
“The state of Tennessee cannot silence viewpoints it doesn’t
like,” said Hedy Weinberg, Executive Director of the ACLU of Tennessee.
“The specialty plate program, in its current form, gags some speech while
championing others.”
Plaintiffs in the case include the ACLU of Tennessee,
Planned Parenthood of Middle and East Tennessee, Inc., and three
individuals. Lawyers on the case include Sternberg, Brigitte Amiri, and
Carrie Flaxman with the ACLU Reproductive Freedom Project; Roger Evans of
Planned Parenthood Federation of America; and Susan L. Kay, the ACLU of
Tennessee Legal Committee Chair. Today's case is ACLU of Tennessee v. Bredesen, #03-1046. To read the ACLU's
brief to the Supreme Court go to: www.aclu.org/reproductiverights/gen/25393lgl20060501.html
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