However, there's a different rule for radio and TV ads paid for by third parties, such as the SuperPACS loathed by Trump and his potential Democratic opponent Bernie Sanders. Broadcasters are not required to air third-party sponsored ads and, if they choose to do so, they can be held liable for airing falsehoods. Hence Cruz' legal letter/threat to television stations.
A similar tactic has been tried before. Rep. Jeff Denham (R-CA) filed libel lawsuits against broadcasters for campaign ads that he says lie about him. According to Broadcast Law Blog, in order to prevail, the candidate (or his/her attorney) must first contact the TV or radio station to complain. The station must then fact check the ad, and if determined to be untrue, must pull the ad or risk being held liable for defamation -- just as Cruz' attorneys threatened.
You'd think broadcasters who make most of their giant profits from political-ad sales, especially in the wake of Citizens United, would be fact-checking the ads they serve up to the public for the sake of "serving the public interest." (According to public files posted at the FCC, American Future Fund spent $148,453 to purchase airtime for just that one allegedly misleading ad in the Charleston, SC, television market alone.)
How are We the People supposed to know which statements made in ads that air over our publicly-owned airwaves are true or false? Shouldn't political ad fact-checking be part of the public-interest obligations TV and radio stations sign up for in exchange for their free licenses to broadcast over our airwaves?
Apparently -- legally -- that is too much for We the People to ask.
I've been trying for years to find an attorney willing to sue broadcasters over false third-party ads on behalf of the public, but I've been told over and over again that We the People have no legal standing to file such a lawsuit.
But Ted Cruz is making the case against lying ads, and in his way, so is Donald Trump. They would both, presumably, have the standing that We the People, apparently, do not.
So sue, baby, sue! And let's hope all the candidates jump on the bandwagon of holding broadcasters accountable to their public-interest obligations. Do it for all of us who are being lied to over airwaves that we all own, but can't seem to do anything about!
Originally posted at BradBlog.com
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