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Subject: AEJ 95 SpillmaM LAW Anti-abortion political ads
From: Elliott Parker <[log in to unmask]>
Reply-To:AEJMC Conference Papers <[log in to unmask]>
Date:Thu, 8 Feb 1996 12:48:46 EST
Content-Type:text/plain
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Anti-Abortion Political AdsANTI-ABORTION POLITICAL ADS: BALANCING QUESTIONS
 OF INDECENCY, CENSORSHIP, AND ACCESS
 
        Political advertising enjoys unique privileges in American broadcasting.
 
          Section 315 of the Communications Act of 1934 requires station
licensees to
 provide equal opportunities to legally qualified candidates for public
 
         office,1 meaning if a station permits one candidate to use its
facilities,
 
          all other candidates for that office are entitled to equal time.  Even
if a
 station chooses to refuse all political ads, in some instances it cannot;
 
          Section 312(a)(7) of the Act permits the Federal Communications
Commission
 
          (FCC) to revoke a broadcast station license if the licensee fails to
 
      provide "reasonable access" to a legally qualified federal candidate for
 
          public office.2
        The ultimate privilege, however, deals with content.  Unlike other
 
     advertising or programs, the content of political ads is not subject to
 
         control by the individual stations.  Section 315(a) states in part,
"that
 
          such licensee shall have no power of censorship over the material
broadcast
 under the provisions of this section."3
        Perhaps the most controversial application of these two sections has been
 
          the recent use of explicit pictures of aborted fetuses in the
television
 
          ads of anti-abortion candidates throughout the country.  The no
censorship
 
          clause of Section 315 protected the content of these ads; the
candidates
 
          were on the air because they were running for federal office and were
 
       guaranteed access by Section 312(a)(7).  The furor created by these spots
 
          prompted some licensees to ask the FCC for the right to reject these
ads as
 unacceptable, or limit the times of day when they must be aired.  More
 
         than two years after the first complaint was filed, the Commission
ruled in
 September 1994 that neither the reasonable access law nor the no
 
   censorship clause preclude licensees from channeling these ads to times
 
         when children are less likely to be viewers.4
        This paper will examine three aspects of the abortion ad controversy:
 
        indecency and safe harbor, censorship of political broadcasting, and
 
      reasonable access.  It will explore the issues of law involved,
 
 specifically the pertinent sections of the Communications Act of 1934, and
 
          the court decisions and FCC rulings in the three areas.  The position
will
 
          be advanced that the Commission's 1994 Declaratory Ruling best serves
both
 
          the public interest and the political process.
        Basis for the study is provided by a review of the campaigns of the two
 
          candidates whose use of the explicit anti-abortion spots put the
spotlight
 
          on this entire issue, and who, as of March 1995, are the only
candidates to
 have been victorious in a primary election campaign using these political
 
          commercials--Michael Bailey of Indiana and Daniel Becker of Georgia.
The
 
          paper also will challenge Bailey's charge that stations must be forced
to
 
          air all television ads submitted by federal candidates.
 
Explicit Anti-Abortion Political Ads on Television
        The use of explicit anti-abortion political spots became an issue three
 
          years ago, thrust into the national spotlight by a person who had not
 
       intended to be a candidate.  Michael Bailey, a self-described born-again
 
          Christian and pro-life activist from southern Indiana, planned to use
his
 
          background in advertising to become the campaign manager for
candidates who
 shared his conservative Christian views.  However, as the filing deadline
 
          approached for the 1992 Indiana primary, Bailey still was looking for
so
 
         meone to run for Congress in Indiana's ninth district against 14-term
 
       incumbent Lee Hamilton.  So, Bailey decided to enter the race himself, as
a
 candidate for the Republican nomination.5  Bailey knew exactly what type
 
          of spots he wanted to run, and he also knew what the law would allow.
        "And I was reading the law, the reasonable access law, that said if you
 
          are a federal candidate and you run for high office in America, your
 
      television ads, by law, cannot be censored. . . . And I went, 'Eureka,
 
        praise God!  There's a way to get the truth on television.'"6
        That "truth" was pictures of aborted fetuses.  Bailey originally planned
 
          to photograph fetuses found in abortion clinic dumpsters, but settled
for
 
          excerpts from a film, The Hard Truth, distributed by a company in
 
   Cleveland.7  He created two spots for the primary campaign; the first,
 
        "Choice A/B" began with the disclaimer: "Warning:  The following
commercial
 has been paid for by the Bailey for Life for Congress Committee and is not
 suitable for small children."  The spot, written by Bailey's wife, showed
 
          two healthy babies (Choice A), then a picture of an aborted fetus
(Choice
 
          B).8   Spot two, "Abortion is Evil," showed a number of aborted
fetuses.9
        Bailey bought time in Indianapolis and Louisville (and later, Cincinnati
 
          and Evansville) to reach the southeastern Indiana congressional
district.
 
          Stations were reluctant to run his ads, but after consultations with
their
 
          attorneys and the FCC, found they had no choice.  One Louisville
general
 
          manager editorialized against the commercials, announcing,"We find
them
 
         awful. . . .";10 In Indianapolis, WISH-TV President and General Manager
 
         Paul Karpowicz charged Bailey with "taking advantage of a system that
 
       probably never anticipated anyone using it in this manner."11  Yet, on
the
 
          day the Bailey ads first ran, the station devoted almost one-quarter
of its
 early evening newscast to the controversy, including a live interview with
 the candidate.12
        In the May primary, Bailey won a surprisingly easy victory over a former
 
          state auditor, capturing 59 percent of the vote, and winning all but
one of
 the district's 21 counties.13  In preparation for the fall campaign
 
      against incumbent Hamilton, Bailey produced two more commercials.  The
 
        first, "Life or Death," showed bloody body parts from dead fetuses; a
 
       woman's voice was heard in the background saying, "It's my body. It's my
 
          choice."  The candidate closed the spot with, "Abortion is not a
matter of
 
          choice.  It is a matter of life and death."14
        Bailey said the second spot, "Hitler," generated the strongest emotional
 
          response of any of his 1992 ads.15  Black and white photos of dead
fetuses
 
          were shown alongside photos of dead bodies from World War II German
death
 
          camps.  The spot ended with an announcer asking, "If the people
 
 representing you in Washington don't respect human life, what can they
 
        respect?"16
        In the November election, Bailey lost to Hamilton by the same margin as
 
          the Republican candidate in 1988 and 1990, 70 to 30 percent.17  On
election
 night, however, Bailey vowed to return in 1994, and told reporters, "We've
 got out a message that's never got out before.  We're bringing, by God's
 
          grace, Christian principles back to the political system."18
        No station tried to use the courts to stop Michael Bailey, but that was
 
          the route taken by a Georgia station in an attempt to stop candidate
Daniel
 Becker.  Becker, running for the 1992 Republican nomination for Congress
 
          in Georgia's ninth district (north of Atlanta, bordering on
Tennessee),
 
         modeled two ads after Bailey's, and began running them during 4th of
July
 
          weekend telecasts of Atlanta Braves baseball games.19
        In anticipation of Georgia's runoff election on August 11, the law firm of
 Kaye, Scholer, Fierman, Hays & Handler, on behalf of unnamed broadcast
 
         clients, asked the FCC to permit stations to refuse explicit
anti-abortion
 
          spots because they were indecent.  Attorney Irving Gastfreund wrote,
"Give
 
          us the authority to decline these graphic depictions when there's a
 
     reasonable risk of children being in the audience."20  Counsel for Gillett
 
          Communications, owners of WAGA-TV5, Atlanta, also contacted the FCC
for
 
         assistance, arguing that pictures of dead fetuses portrayed excretory
 
       activity, and therefore, were indecent.21
        The Commission turned down both requests.  In a letter to the two law
 
        firms, Mass Media Bureau Chief Roy Stewart stated it was not proper to
 
        restrict the time periods in which the spots could be aired.  His letter
 
          went on to rule the content of the ads was not indecent.  "Neither the
 
        expulsion of fetal tissues nor fetuses themselves constitutes
'excrement.'"
 
          22
        However, the Bureau did note that in view of the interest previously shown
 by the FCC and Congress in serving "the special needs of children,"
 
      stations would be within their right to broadcast a disclaimer prior to a
 
          spot the stations determined should not be viewed by children.  The
 
     suggested wording was, "The following political advertisement contains
 
        scenes which may be disturbing to children.  Viewer discretion is
advised."
 
          23
        Becker was victorious in the August primary; just before the general
 
       election, he tried to buy time on WAGA to run a 30-minute program,
Abortion
 in America: The Real Story.  The time requested was late afternoon Sunday,
 November 1, following the telecast of an Atlanta Falcons football game.
 
          The station determined that the program contained footage that was
 
    indecent, and offered Becker time after midnight.  WAGA's concern was a
 
         four-minute segment showing an actual abortion.24  Becker filed a
complaint
 with the FCC; the station went to Federal District Court.
        In the FCC's response to Becker, dated October 30, 1992, the Mass Media
 
          Bureau cited an informal staff opinion from 1984 which held that the
law
 
          prohibiting the broadcast of obscenity and indecency (Section 1464 of
the
 
          U.S. Criminal Code) is an exception to Section 315 of the
Communications
 
          Act.  The Bureau wrote that it would not be unreasonable for WAGA "to
rely
 
          on the informal staff opinion referred to above and conclude that
Section
 
          312(a)(7) does not require it to air, outside the 'safe harbor,'
material
 
          that it reasonably and in good faith believes is indecent."25
        In Atlanta, District Court Judge Robert Hall also ruled that WAGA had the
 
          right to move Becker's program to safe harbor after midnight.  Hall
went
 
          further in his decision, however, ruling the segment showing the
actual
 
         abortion was in violation of Section 1464, and was indecent.  He wrote,
 
         "This portion of the videotape depicts these activities and materials
in a
 
          manner which is patently offensive according to contemporary community
 
        standards."26  Judge Hall specifically cited graphic depictions of
female
 
          genitalia, and further concluded that images and words in the program
would
 be understandable to children in the audience.
        The court also took issue with the FCC for waiting until after Georgia's
 
          runoff election to respond to the July letter from WAGA's attorneys.
Hall
 
          noted, "Failure to rule in a timely fashion thwarts the whole purpose
 
       behind the indecency prohibition: the protection of children."27
        Becker appealed Hall's decision to the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals in
 
          Atlanta.  When that appeal was denied, he filed a petition for
          extraordinary writ with Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy, who has
 
        jurisdiction over the 11th Circuit.  Kennedy denied Becker's petition on
 
          November 1;28 the candidate declined to purchase time for his program
in
 
          the safe harbor period.  In the general election two days later,
Becker
 
         lost to Democrat Nathan Deal by a margin of 59 to 41 percent.29
        Over the next two years, candidates in at least fifteen other states aired
 explicit anti-abortion ads.30  In 1993, Bailey was manager for an Ohio
 
         congressional candidate who campaigned against both abortion and
 
  homosexuality.  The next year, Bailey returned as a candidate for Congress
 
          in Indiana's Republican primary.  This time, two stations fought his
attem
 
          pt to use a particular ad that featured children singing in a cemetery
 
        contrasted with pictures of aborted fetuses.  WHAS-TV, Louisville,
 
    restricted the spot to after 8:00 p.m.31; WTHR-TV, Indianapolis, rejected
 
          the ad as offensive.  After consulting with Washington counsel,
however,
 
          WTHR accepted the ad, but aired it only after 8:00 p.m.32 In the May
 
      primary, Bailey lost to a state senator, 56 to 36 percent;33 he claims the
 
          stations' decisions cost him campaign donations and possibly the
election.
 
          34
 
The Issue of Indecency in Broadcasting
        The principal law dealing with broadcast indecency is Section 1464, Title
 
          18, of the U.S. Code, which reads: "Whoever utters any obscene,
indecent,
 
          or profane language by means of radio communication shall be fined not
more
 than $10,000 or imprisoned not more than two years, or both."35  Section
 
          312(a)(6) of the Communications Act provides for revocation of a
broadcast
 
          license for violation of Section 1464.36
        While the FCC did make two attempts in the early 1970s to confront
 
     broadcast indecency, the case which established an actual definition was
 
          FCC v. Pacifica Foundation in 1978.  In this case, the Supreme Court
ruled
 
          the Commission has authority to regulate a broadcast that is indecent,
but
 
          not obscene.  The case developed from a broadcast of a comedy
recording by
 
          George Carlin, featuring the "seven filthy words" not permitted on the
air.
  The Court upheld the FCC's definition of indecency, specifically,
 
     "language that describes, in terms patently offensive as measured by
 
      contemporary community standards for the broadcast medium, sexual or
 
      excretory activities and functions, at times of the day when there is a
 
         reasonable risk that children may be in the audience."37
        The Commission adopted a loose policy of channeling indecent material to
 
          the period after 10:00 p.m., but in April 1987, issued warnings to
three
 
          stations, one of which was another Pacifica outlet, for broadcasting
 
      indecent language.  The FCC restated its decision to apply its generic
 
        definition of indecency to further actions, and warned stations that
 
      channeling indecent material to the period after 10:00 p.m. no longer
 
       guaranteed that material's permissibility.38
        The concept of a "safe harbor" was created in the 1987 Reconsideration
 
         Order of an action against Infinity Broadcasting, one of the three
 
    licensees cited earlier that year.  In this order, the Commission ruled
 
         that the period from midnight to 6:00 a.m. would constitute the safe
harbor
 hours for indecent material.39  Several groups appealed the order; in
 
        1988, the DC Court of Appeals ruled the FCC's safe harbor was arbitrary.
 
          The Appeals Court suggested the Commission initiate a rulemaking
proceeding
 to determine an appropriate safe harbor, but noted that a set time had to
 
          be implemented.  The Commission could not rely on case-by-case
rulings.40
        Before the Commission acted, however, Congress got involved by adding a
 
          24-hour indecency ban to an appropriations bill via the "Helms
Amendment."
 
          41  The DC Court of Appeals stayed enforcement in January 1989, and in
May
 
          1991, ruled the 24-hour indecency ban unconstitutional.  The court
again
 
          ordered the FCC to create an appropriate safe harbor period, however,
 
       stating that some regulation would withstand scrutiny.42
        Congress again intervened, directing the Commission in August 1992 to
 
        create a safe harbor of midnight to 6:00 a.m.43  The FCC complied, and
 
        issued rules in January 1993.44  Once more the policy was challenged,
and
 
          the DC Court of Appeals granted a stay.  In November 1993, the court
turned
 back the FCC a third time, ruling there was no reasoned analysis
 
   supporting the channeling of indecent material to the first six hours of
 
          the day.45  Pending further action by Congress or the Commission, the
safe
 
          harbor for commercial stations currently is set at 8:00 p.m. to 6:00
a.m.46
 
 
The Issue of Censorsing Political Broadcasts
        Section 315 of the Communications Act was derived from Section 18 of the
 
          Radio Act.  Washington Senator Clarence Dill wrote the language,
including
 
          both the no censorship provision and a clause limiting the liability
of
 
         broadcasters.47  Because this liability exemption was deleted prior to
the
 
          law's passage, questions have been raised over the years about
          responsibility for the content of political broadcasts.
        In 1959, in the major case on defamatory political broadcasts, Farmers
 
         Educational & Cooperative Union v. WDAY, Inc., the Supreme Court ruled
 
        unanimously that WDAY had no right to censor a candidate's defamatory
 
       remarks.  On the liability question, the justices ruled 5-4 in favor of
the
 station, noting that to hold WDAY liable would have "the unconscionable
 
          result of permitting civil and perhaps criminal liability to be
imposed for
 the very conduct the statute demands of the licensee."48
        Incitement to violence was the topic in 1972.  J.B. Stoner, a white
 
      supremacist, ran for U.S. Senate from Georgia, using spots that called
 
        blacks "niggers" and accused them of coveting white women.  The mayor of
 
          Atlanta feared violence, and that city's chapter of the NAACP asked
the FCC
 to advise stations that they could decline to run Stoner's spots and not
 
          violate Section 315.49  The Commission refused, citing the no
censorship
 
          provision, and noting, "A contrary conclusion here would permit anyone
to
 
          prevent a candidate from exercising his rights under Section 315 by
 
     threatening a violent reaction."50
        When Stoner ran for governor of Georgia in 1978, the NAACP argued that
 
         "nigger" was an indecent term.  However, the Supreme Court had just
issued
 
          its ruling in Pacifica, and the FCC Broadcast Bureau determined that
while
 
          the word "nigger" was offensive, it did not qualify as indecent as
defined
 
          by the Court.51
        Language was also the issue in 1980, when commercials for the Citizens
 
         Party used the word "bullshit."  In responding to a censorship
complaint
 
          against NBC Radio by candidate Barry Commoner, the FCC assured him
that
 
         precedents were clear, and that no censorship was permitted.52
        The Commission in 1984 informally addressed the subject of obscenity and
 
          indecency in political ads.  The year before, Hustler magazine
publisher
 
          Larry Flynt had announced his intention to run for president and to
use
 
         X-rated film clips in his ads.  Ohio Representative Thomas Luken asked
the
 
          FCC how stations should react, and in a letter to Luken in January
1984,
 
          FCC Chairman Mark Fowler wrote that, in the opinion of the staff, "The
 
        no-censorship prohibition in Section 315 was not intended to override
the
 
          statutory prohibition against the broadcast of obscene or indecent
 
    materials that is etched in Section 1464 of the Criminal Code."53  Neither
 
          Flynt's candidacy nor his ads ever materialized, but, as noted
earlier, the
 Luken Letter and Staff Memorandum were cited by the District Judge in the
 
          1992 Becker ruling.54
 
The Issue of Reasonable Access
        Congress first tried to guarantee access to federal candidates as part of
 
          a 1970 campaign reform measure, but that bill was vetoed by President
 
       Nixon.55  The Federal Election Campaign Act, S. 382, was introduced in
the
 
          Senate in January the next year, sponsored by majority leader Mike
 
    Mansfield of Montana,
Rhode Island's John Pastore, and Howard Cannon of Nevada.56  Title
I of the bill had two purposes: one, to control what the Senate Commerce
 
          Committee called the spiraling cost of campaigning for public office;
two,
 
          "to give candidates for public office greater access to the media so
that
 
          they may better explain their stand on issues, and thereby more fully
and
 
          completely inform the voters."57
        In accordance with the stated purpose, the Committee added Section 101(c)
 
          to Title I, providing for revocation of a broadcast license under
Section
 
          312(a) of the Communications Act for willful or repeated  failure to
allow
 
          reasonable access to a station by any legally qualified candidate on
behalf
 of his candidacy.58
        The Senate passed S. 382 in December 1971; the House already had passed
 
          its own version, forcing both bills to a conference committee.59  It
was
 
          there that Section 101(c) was changed from any legally qualified
candidate
 
          to candidates for federal elective office.60  In addition, a
conforming
 
         amendment was made to Section 315(a) of the Communications Act.  The
clause
 noting that licensees were under no obligation to permit candidates to use
 broadcast facilities was changed to read, "No obligation is imposed under
 
          this subsection upon any licensee to allow the use of its station by
any
 
          such candidate."61  That obligation now was imposed by the newly
enacted
 
          Section 312(a)(7).
        S. 382 became law February 7, 1972,62 and within six weeks, the FCC issued
 guidelines for compliance.  The Commission noted that no all-embracing
 
         standard could be set, but wrote, "The test of whether a licensee has
met
 
          the requirement of the new section is one of reasonableness.  The
Commiss
 
          ion will not substitute its judgment for that of the licensee, but,
rather,
 it will determine in any case that may arise whether the licensee can be
 
          said to have acted reasonably and in good faith in fulfilling his
 
   obligations under this section."63
        When Congress repealed all of Title I of the FECA in 1974, the only
 
      section ruled still in effect was the one creating Section 312(a)(7).64
 
          The FCC continued to rely on broadcasters to determine what
constituted
 
         reasonable access, but in 1978, decided to conduct an inquiry to
ascertain
 
          if its policy was working for both broadcasters and candidates.65  In
a
 
         Report and Order issued that July, the Commission reaffirmed its
position
 
          that the best way to balance the needs of candidates and broadcasters
was
 
          to rely on the reasonable, good faith discretion of individual
licensees.66
 
        The first major challenge to the law and the FCC's policy came the next
 
          year.  In October 1979, the Carter-Mondale Presidential Committee
asked
 
         ABC, CBS, and NBC each to provide time in early December for a
30-minute
 
          program to be used by President Carter in conjunction with an
announcement
 
          of his candidacy for reelection.  All three networks refused, claiming
it
 
          was too early to sell political time, and that program schedules would
be
 
          disrupted by the abundance of candidates entitled to equal time.  CBS
s
 
        uggested two five-minute blocks; ABC offered time in January 1980.  The
 
         Commission ruled the networks' refusal to sell time failed to consider
the
 
          needs of the candidate, and found all three in violation of Section
 
     312(a)(7).67   A week later, when rejecting the networks' petitions for
 
         reconsideration, the Commission suggested for the first time that
 
   broadcasters take an active role in discerning the need for political time
 
          throughout a campaign; the order described as "entirely appropriate"
 
      broadcasters contacting candidates to determine the probability of
requests
 for access.68
        Both the D.C. Court of Appeals and the Supreme Court upheld the FCC's
 
        decision.69  Chief Justice Burger delivered the majority opinion for the
 
          high court, holding that Section 312(a)(7) created an affirmative,
promptly
 enforceable right of reasonable access for individual federal candidates.
 In addition, the Court ruled the FCC has the right to determine whether a
 
          campaign has begun, though the Commission does not actually set a
starting
 
          date.70  The decision also gave formal endorsement to the Commission's
 
        "reasonable, good faith judgment" policy, while appearing, on the
surface,
 
          to side with licensees:  "If broadcasters take the appropriate factors
into
 account and act reasonably and in good faith, their decisions will be
 
        entitled to deference even if the Commission's analysis would have
differed
 in the first instance."71  However, the Court noted the reasonable access
 
          law enlarges the responsibilities of licensees in the area of
political
 
         broadcasting, and does not violate their First Amendment rights in the
area
 of editorial discretion.72
        The Commission did not issue any comprehensive guide in response to the
 
          Supreme Court ruling, but did feature the decision prominently in the
 
       section on reasonable access in the 1984 Political Primer.73  Following
the
 1990 audit of thirty radio and television stations that revealed a number
 
          of violations of political broadcast rules,74 the FCC adopted a Notice
of
 
          Proposed Rulemaking, and, in December 1991, a Memorandum Opinion and
Order
 
          codifying its political broadcasting rules.75  But the Commission
concluded
 that in the area of reasonable access it would not be practical to adopt
 
          formal rules; the FCC decided once again to rely on the reasonable,
good
 
          faith judgments of licensees, and to determine compliance on a
case-by-case
 basis.76
        The Commission did offer some specific guidelines, including:
        1. Broadcasters do not have to provide time within news programs;
        2. Both program time and spot time must be made available during prime
 
         time periods;
        3. The right of access during the periods outside the 45 days prior to a
 
          primary or 60 days prior to the general election will be determined by
the
 
          Commission on a case-by-case basis;                   4. Candidates may not be banned
from
 access to time periods made available to other advertisers;                                                    5.
 
        Stations may consider their broader programming and business
commitments,
 
          the number of candidates in a particular race, potential program
 
  disruption, and the amount of time already sold to a candidate when
 
     providing reasonable access.77
 
        In the 1992 reconsideration of its Opinion and Order, the Commission
 
       reaffirmed its guidelines in the areas of reasonable access.78  Later
that
 
          year, the National Association of Broadcasters asked the FCC to rule
that
 
          broadcasters need not sell federal candidates program time in
increments
 
          not usually made available to commercial advertisers or that a station
does
 not usually program.  The Commission's response was a request for public
 
          comment.79  In the fall of 1994, the FCC granted the NAB's request,
ruling
 
          that "broadcasters should be required to make available to federal
 
    candidates only the lengths of time offered to commercial advertisers
 
       during the year preceding a particular election period."80
 
The FCC Decision on Explicit Anti-Abortion Ads
        As noted above, the debate over controversial anti-abortion spots did not
 
          stop on election day, 1992.  On October 30, the same day the Mass
Media
 
         Bureau responded to Becker, the Commission issued a Public Notice
Request
 
          for Comments on the issues raised in both the Kaye, Scholer letter of
July
 
          1992, and Becker's October complaint against WAGA.  "Specifically,"
the
 
         Commission wrote, "we seek comment on all issues concerning what, if
any,
 
          right or obligation a broadcast licensee has to channel political
adver
 
        tisements that it reasonably and in good faith believes are indecent.
We
 
          also seek comment as to whether broadcasters have any right to channel
 
        material that, while not indecent, may be otherwise harmful to
children."81
        A coalition made up of all five major broadcast networks, major
 
  independents, the National Association of Broadcasters, and the
 
 Radio-Television News Directors Association called on the Commission to
 
         allow broadcasters to use their own judgments to determine what
material is
 appropriate for their audiences.82   But Daniel Becker said the FCC should
 make the decision, noting, "It would be too easy for a broadcaster to
 
        censor an unpopular political message under the guise that the message
is
 
          indecent."83
        The filing period ended in February 1993, but the Commission did not
 
       release its decision for twenty-one months--after a full set of primaries
 
          and general elections in both 1993 and 1994.  The ruling upheld the
Mass
 
          Media Bureau's decision that Becker's ads were not indecent.  Citing
the
 
          definition of indecency upheld sixteen years earlier in Pacifica, the
FCC
 
          rejected claims that the ads depicted excretory functions:  "Such an
 
      expanded definition arguably would encompass televised scenes of a
 
    character sweating, blowing his nose, or dressing a
wound. . . ."84  In determining that abortion was not a sexual activity
 
         simply because it relates to sex and reproduction, the Commission noted
 
         that an expanded definition would make any byproduct of sex--including
life
 itself--indecent.85
        Even though the ads were judged not indecent, the FCC gave stations the
 
          right to decide if the explicit pictures should be kept away from
 
   unsupervised children viewers.  Quoting from the 1978 policy statement, the
 Commission noted that Section 312(a)(7) does not entitle a federal
 
     candidate to a particular placement of an ad on a station's schedule.  The
 
          FCC, therefore, said it was "unwilling to infer that Congress, in
affording
 federal candidates a limited statutory right to purchase reasonable
 
      amounts of broadcast time, intended to strip licensees of all discretion
to
 consider the impact of political advertisements featuring graphic
 
    depictions of abortions on children in their audience."86  It went on to
 
          point out that "licensee discretion does not constitute 'censorship'
as
 
         that term is used in the Communications Act."87  But the Commission
warned
 
          broadcasters that a decision to channel these ads must be based on the
 
        pictures in question, not the political position of a particular
candidate.
 
          88
 
An Analysis of the FCC Decision on Explicit Anti-Abortion Ads
        As demonstrated by the previous discussion, the problem facing the FCC in
 
          this area was how to balance the rights of the public, the licensees,
and
 
          the candidates.  The Supreme Court in the WDAY case noted that Section
315
 
          was put into law to foster political debate,89 while the Commission
staff,
 
          in its memorandum accompanying the Luken Letter, stated, "Any
limitation on
 the public's access to political debate would frustrate the purpose of the
 no-censorship provision."90
        However, broadcasters point out that WDAY notwithstanding, they are the
 
          ones held accountable for what they air; the Commission's rights in
this
 
          area were established in National Broadcasting Company v. United
States in
 
          1943,91 and broadcasters' duties were outlined in the FCC's Program
Policy
 
          Statement of 1960: "Broadcasting licensees must assume responsibility
for
 
          all material which is broadcast through their facilities.  This
includes
 
          all programs and advertising material which they present to the
public."92
        Moreover, the anti-abortion political ads have raised questions of what
 
          other controversial issues may be treated in a similar manner.  As
noted,
 
          homosexuality was a topic in the campaign held prior to Ohio's special
 
        congressional primary election in March 1993.  It is not difficult to
 
       imagine explicit ads dealing with capital punishment, or candidates using
 
          graphic commercials to discuss a person's right to die, or to be
assisted
 
          in committing suicide, or to support animal rights.  Any of these will
 
        create a dilemma for licensees.
        Still, it is highly unlikely that Congress will change the laws concerning
 political broadcasting.  Section 312(a)(7) applies only to federal
 
     candidates, meaning it expressly is designed to aid the very public
 
     officials who would have to change it.  In addition, it is doubtful Section
 315(a) will be modified to give broadcasters control over the content of
 
          political ads.  Since before passage of the Radio Act, there have been
 
        reservations about the power broadcasters have.  In 1926, Secretary of
 
        Commerce Herbert Hoover warned, "We cannot allow any single person or
group
 to place themselves in position where they can censor the material which
 
          will be broadcasted to the public."93
        Thus, the needs of the public must be foremost. The Communications Act
 
         applied the principle of the "public interest, convenience, and
necessity"
 
          to broadcasting,94 and the Supreme Court ruled in the 1969 Red Lion
 
     decision, "It is the right of the viewers and listeners, not the right of
 
          the broadcasters, which is paramount."95
        Yet, while critics claim that there is little social scientific evidence
 
          to suggest that the psychological welfare of children is threatened by
 
        exposure to material deemed to be indecent,96 the concerns of parents
are
 
          an important consideration.  In Ginsberg v. New York, (1968), the
Supreme
 
          Court established that the government has an interest in protecting
 
     parents' rights to rear their children,97 and, as the Court noted in the
 
          1972 Wisconsin v. Yoder decision, "This primary role of the parents in
the
 
          upbringing of their children is now established beyond debate as an
 
     enduring American tradition."98
        Justice Stevens wrote in the Pacifica decision, "Broadcasting is uniquely
 
          accessible to children, even those too young to read,"99 while the DC
Court
 of Appeals also noted in the first Action for Children's Television case,
 
          "Channeling is designed to protect unsupervised children."100  It can
be
 
          argued that no one's interest is served when children are subjected to
ads
 
          of the type described.
        Therefore, only a compromise position could balance the rights of viewers,
 broadcasters, and candidates, and the Commission achieved this compromise
 
          with its 1994 decision.  As noted in the ruling, "The public's right
to
 
         have access to political speech is not impeded by this policy."101
Critics
 may argue that this ruling favors broadcasters, but on the contrary, it
 
          permits each side certain flexibility under the law, while requiring
all
 
          parties to take responsibility for what is broadcast.  Candidates who
fear
 
          that controversial advertising will be banished to the period after
 
     midnight will continue to have access to some of the most popular times of
 
          the broadcast day.  The FCC reiterated its policy "that licensees
should
 
          afford access to federal candidates in prime time, when access to
voters is
 greatest."102
        Michael Bailey claims that channeling spots to the period after 8:00 p.m.
 
          restricts the ability of a candidate to reach potential voters; he
also
 
         notes that prime time spots are the most expensive.103  But if the
rights
 
          of the viewers truly are paramount, then candidates must accept that
 
      treatment of a particular issue at certain times will require a different
 
          type of ad.  In addition, broadcasters who fear reproach from their
 
     audiences should be able to assure them that certain themes in political
 
          advertising will be aired only when adult programming is offered,
while
 
         viewers who do not want their children exposed to particular types of
spots
 should know at what times those spots will not air.
        Still, the vagaries of the decision will leave broadcasters with
 
   questions.  The Commission neither requires nor encourages licensees to
 
         channel graphic political ads.  That decision, once again, is left to
the
 
          reasonable good faith efforts of broadcasters.  In warning stations to
 
        avoid political reasons for moving ads, the FCC cites the CBS v. FCC
case:
 
          "A broadcaster's decision to channel an advertisement 'may not be
invoked
 
          as [a] pretext[] for denying access.'"104  Moreover, the Commission
states
 
          that channeling of explicit anti-abortion ads must relate "to the
graphic
 
          imagery in question and not to any political position the candidate
 
     espouses."105  How a licensee proves it has made a proper decision is not
 
          addressed by the Commission.  Bailey argues that stations, not
candidates,
 
          should incur the burden of appeal.106  In most ways, they will.
 
Conclusion
        This paper has examined the questions faced by the Federal Communications
 
          Commission in the controversy over the use of explicit anti-abortion
ads by
 political candidates.  The issues of indecency and safe harbor, censorship
 of political advertising, and reasonable access have been reviewed; after
 
          considering the rights as well as the needs of the viewers,
broadcasters,
 
          and candidates, the position is advanced that permitting stations to
 
      channel these ads to a period when fewer children are viewers  best serves
 
          both the public interest and the political process.
        Michael Bailey's explicit anti-abortion spots broke new ground in the area
 of political advertising and put television stations in the awkward
 
      position of broadcasting material over which they had no control.  The
 
        Commission was slow to respond to the controversy, but in the end issued
a
 
          decision that serves viewers, broadcasters, and candidates.  It did so
by
 
          making this issue not one of content, but of access, particularly
access to
 children.  In light of the FCC's ruling, the comment of one television s
 
          tation manager is appropriate:  "Why subject children to these spots?
They
 can't vote."107
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
NOTES
 
 
1. 47 U.S.C.   315 (1988).
 
2. 47 U.S.C.   312(a)(7) (1988).
 
3. 47 U.S.C.   315(a) (1988).
 
4. In re Petition for Declaratory Ruling Concerning Section 312(a)(7) of
 
          the Communications Act, Memorandum Opinion and Order,
76 Rad. Reg. 2d (P&F) 1062, 1065 (1994).
 
5. Michael E. Bailey, Christian Politics: Rocking America
(Georgetown, IN: Bailey Books, 1993), 33.
 
6. ABC News. Nightline, 31 August 1992.
 
7. Bailey, Christian Politics, 36-37.
 
8. Choice A/B, Georgetown, IN: Bailey for Life for Congress, 1992.
 
9. Abortion is Evil, Georgetown, IN: Bailey for Life for Congress,
1992.
 
10. Joe Flint, "Furor Over Anti-Abortion Political Ads," Broadcasting, 27
 
          April 1992, 41.
 
11. WISH-TV, News 8, 5:00 p.m., 20 April 1992.
 
12. WISH-TV, News 8, 5:00 p.m., 20 April 1992.
 
13. John R. O'Neill, "Anti-Abortion Ads Propel Bailey in 9th District
 
       Republican Race," Indianapolis Star, 6 May 1992.
 
14. Life or Death, Georgetown, IN: Bailey for Life for Congress, 1992.
 
15. Bailey, Christian Politics, 60.
 
16. Hitler, Georgetown, IN: Bailey for Life for Congress, 1992.
 
17. Kevin Morgan and Tom Chiat, "Victorious Hamilton Could Be In Line for
 
          New Job," Indianapolis Star, 4 November 1992.
 
18. WISH-TV, News 8, 11:00 p.m., 3 November 1992.
 
19. Ellen Whitford, "Abortion: Both Sides Galvanized by Ads," Atlanta
 
       Journal and Constitution, 8 July 1992.
 
20. Doug Halonen, "FCC Unlikely to Halt Graphic Ads," Electronic Media, 10
 
          August 1992.
 
21. Letter from Roy J. Stewart, Chief, Mass Media Bureau, to Vincent A.
 
         Pepper, Counsel, Gillett Communications, and Irving Gastfreund, Kaye,
 
       Scholer, Fierman, Hays & Handler, 7 FCC Rcd. 5599 (1992).
 
22. Letter to Pepper and Gastfreund, 7 FCC Rcd. 5599, 5600 (1992).
 
23. Letter to Pepper and Gastfreund, 7 FCC Rcd. 5599, 5600 (1992).
 
24. Gillett Communications v. Daniel Becker, 807 F. Supp. 757 (N.D. Ga
 
        1992).
 
25. Letter from Roy J. Stewart, Chief, Mass Media Bureau, to Daniel Becker,
 71 Rad. Reg. 2d (P&F) 995 (1992).
 
26. Daniel Becker, 807 F.Supp. 757, 763.
 
27. Daniel Becker, 807 F.Supp. 757, 761.
 
28. Joe Flint, "FCC Drifts Toward Safe Harbor for Abortion Ads,"
Broadcasting, 9 November 1992, 48.
 
29. "Election Results," Atlanta Journal and Constitution,
5 November 1992.
 
30. Keith Glover, "Campaigning Crusaders Air Graphic Anti-Abortion Ads,"
 
          Congressional Quarterly, 26 September 1992, 2972.
 
31. David Goetz, "WHAS Limits Bailey's Anti-Abortion Ads to Hours After 8
 
          P.M.," Louisville Courier-Journal, 31 March 1994, 1B.
 
32. Steven Click, National Sales Manager, WTHR-TV, telephone conversation
 
          with author, 28 March 1995.
 
33. Mary Dieter, "Leising's Old-Fashioned Campaign Beat Bailey's
 
  'Offensive' Tactics," Louisville Courier-Journal, 5 May 1994, 4B
 
34. Michael Bailey, "Censorship by Media Elites Will Ultimately Threaten
 
          the Republic," Federal Communications Law Journal 47 (1994): 159-163.
 
35. 18 U.S.C.   1464 (1988).
 
36. 47 U.S.C.   312(a)(6) (1988).
 
37. FCC v. Pacifica Foundation, 438 U.S. 726 (1978).
 
38. In re Pacifica Foundation, Inc., Memorandum Opinion and Order,
62 Rad. Reg. 2d (P&F) 1191 (1987).
 
39. In re Infinity Broadcasting Corp.of Pennsylvania, Memorandum Opinion
 
          and Order, 64 Rad. Reg. 2d (P&F) 211 (1987) (reconsideration order).
 
40. Action for Children's Television v. FCC, 852 F.2d. 1332, 1344
(D.C. Cir. 1988).
 
41. Pub. L. No. 100-459,  608, 102 Stat. 2228 (1988).
 
42. Action for Children's Television v. FCC, 932 F.2d.
1504, 1520 (D.C. Cir. 1991).
 
43. Pub. L. No. 102-356,  16(a), 106 Stat. 949, 954 (1992).
 
44. In re Enforcement of Prohibitions Against Broadcast Indecency in 18 USC
  1464, Report and Order, 71 Rad. Reg. 2d (P&F) 1116 (1993).
 
45. Action for Children's Television v. FCC, 74 Rad. Reg. 2d (P&F), 229-240
 (1993).
 
46. Joe Flint, "Indecency Rules Under Fire in Courts, at FCC,"
Broadcasting & Cable, 1 March 1993, 44.
 
47. 67 Congressional Record 12502 (1926).
 
48. Farmers Educational & Cooperative Union v. WDAY, Inc.,
360 U.S. 525, 529 (1959).
 
49. Letter from Ben F. Waple, Secretary, FCC, to Lonnie King, Atlanta
 
       NAACP, 36 F.C.C. 2d, 635, 636 (1972).
 
50. Lonnie King, 36 F.C.C. 2d, 635, 637 (1972).
 
51. Letter from Wallace E. Johnson, Chief, Broadcast Bureau, to Julian
 
        Bond, Atlanta NAACP, 69 F.C.C. 2d, 943, 944 (1978).
 
52. In re Complaint of Barry Commoner and LaDonna Harris Against NBC Radio,
 87 F.C.C. 2d, 1, 5 (1980).
 
53. Letter from Mark S. Fowler, Chairman, to Rep. Thomas Luken,
19 January 1984.
 
54. Daniel Becker, 807 F.Supp. 757, 763 (1992).
 
55. Senate Report (Commerce Committee), to accompany S.382,      No. 92-96,
 
          (1971).
 
56. Senate Report (Rules and Administration), to accompany S.382, No.
 
       92-229, (1971).
 
57. Id.
 
58. Id.
 
59. Senate Conference Report No. 92-580, (1971).
 
60. Id.
 
61. Id.
 
62. P.L. 92-225, reprinted in U.S.C.A.A.N. (1972).
 
63. Use of Broadcast and Cablecast Facilities by Candidates for Public
 
        Office, 23 Rad Reg. 2d (P&F) 1901 (1972).
 
64. P.L. 93-443, Title II   205 (b), reprinted in U.S.C.A.A.N. (1974).  The
 purpose behind the Federal Election Campaign Act Amendments of 1974 was to
 "renew and reemphasize the disclosure provisions of the Federal Election
 
          Campaign Act of 1971." See Senate Report (Rules and Administration),
to
 
         accompany S.3044,
No. 93-689, (1974).  Historical and Statutory Notes for 47 U.S.C.A.   312
 
          (West 1988) explain that P.L. 93-443, Title II   205 (b) "has been
 
    construed as not repealing the amendment to this
section . . .[of P.L. 92-225]."
 
65. In re Commission Policy in Enforcing Section 312 (a) (7) of the
 
     Communications Act, 43 Rad. Reg. 2d (P&F) 1029 (1978).
 
66. Id.
 
67. In re Complaint of Carter-Mondale Presidential Committee, Inc., 46 Rad.
 Reg. 2d (P&F) 829 (1979).
 
68. In re Complaint of Carter-Mondale Presidential Committee, Inc.
 
    (petition for reconsideration), 46 Rad. Reg. 2d (P&F) 899 (1979).
 
69. CBS v. FCC, 629 F. 2d 1 (D.C. Circuit, 1980); CBS v. FCC, 453 U.S. 367
 
          (1981).
 
70. CBS v. FCC, 453 U.S. at 388.
 
71. Id. at 387.
 
72. Id. at 394-396.
 
73. FCC, The Law of Political Broadcasting and Cablecasting:  A Political
 
          Primer 1984 Edition, (1984).
 
74. Mass Media Bureau Report on Political Programming Audit, 68 Rad. Reg.
 
          2d (P&F) 113 (1990).
 
75. In re Codification of the Commission's Political Programming Policies,
 
          70 Rad. Reg. 2d (P&F) 239 (1991).
 
76. Id.
 
77. Id.
 
78. In re Codification of the Commission's Political Programming Policies
 
          (reconsideration), 70 Rad. Reg. 2d (P&F) 1331 (1992).
 
79. In re Request for Declaratory Ruling of National Association of
 
     Broadcasters, Staff Ruling and Request for Public Comment, 7 FCC Rcd. 6880
 
          (1992).
 
80. In re Request for Declaratory Ruling of National Association of
 
     Broadcasters, Memorandum Opinion and Order, 76 Rad. Reg. 2d (P&F) 200, 201
 
          (1994).
 
81. In re Petition for Declaratory Ruling Concerning Section 312(a)(7) of
 
          the Communications Act (MM Dkt. No. 92-254),
Public Notice, FCC LEXIS 6155 (1992).
 
82. Harry A. Jessell, "Broadcasters Oppose Widening Indecency Net,"
 
     Broadcasting, 1 February 1993, 54.
 
83. Jessell, "Broadcasters Oppose," 54.
 
84. In re Petition for Declaratory Ruling Concerning Section 312(a)(7) of
 
          the Communications Act, supra note 4.
 
85. Id.
 
86. Id.
 
87. Id.
 
88. Id.
 
89. WDAY, 360 U.S. 525, 529 (1959).
 
90. FCC Staff Memorandum on Section 315 and Obscene or Indecent Material, 6
 January 1984, 5, accompanying Luken Letter, supra note 53.
 
91. National Broadcasting Company v. United States, 319 U.S. 190
(1943).
 
92. Commission en banc Programming Inquiry, Report and Statement of Policy,
 25 Fed. Reg. 7291, 7295 (1960).
 
93. 67 Congressional Record 5484 (1926).
 
94. 47 U.S.C.   303, 307, 309 (1988).
 
95. Red Lion Broadcasting Co. Inc. v. FCC,
395 U.S. 367, 390 (1969).
 
96. Edward Donnerstein, Barbara Wilson, and Daniel Linz, "On the Regulation
 of Broadcast Indecency to Protect Children," Journal of Broadcasting &
 
         Electronic Media 36 (winter 1992): 116.
 
97. Ginsberg v. New York, 390 U.S. 629, 639 (1968).
 
98. Wisconsin v. Yoder, 406 U.S. 205, 232 (1972).
 
99. Pacifica, 438 U.S. 726, 749 (1978).
 
100. ACT I, 852 F.2d 1332, 1340 (D.C. Cir. 1988).
 
101. In re Petition for Declaratory Ruling Concerning Section 312(a)(7) of
 
          the Communications Act, supra note 4.
 
102. Id.
 
103. Bailey, "Censorship by Media Elites," 162.
 
104. In re Petition for Declaratory Ruling Concerning Section 312(a)(7) of
 
          the Communications Act, supra note 4.
 
105. Id.
 
106. Bailey, "Censorship by Media Elites," 162.
 
107. Paul Karpowicz, interview with author, 12 February 1993.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
ANTI-ABORTION POLITICAL ADS: BALANCING QUESTIONS OF INDECENCY, CENSORSHIP,
 
          AND ACCESS
 
 
 
MICHAEL SPILLMAN
Indiana University
 
 
Mailing Address:
8259 Castle Ridge Lane
Indianapolis, IN 46256
(317) 842-2221
 
e-mail address:  [log in to unmask]

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