By Staff
Madison didn't number the Bill of Rights by accident. The First Amendment comes first because without it, the other nine aren't worth the parchment they're written on.
Why Number One? There's a reason the First Amendment isn't the Fourth Amendment.
When James Madison sat down to draft what became the Bill of Rights, he originally proposed a list of amendments to be woven directly into the Constitution's text. Congress reworked them into a standalone list of twelve, ten of which were ratified. But the ordering wasn't arbitrary and the freedom of speech, press, religion, assembly, and petition didn't land at the top by lottery.
The Founders had just fought a revolution against a government that controlled what they could say, where they could worship, and whether they could gather to complain about it. They understood something visceral: a population that cannot speak cannot govern itself. Every other right due process, trial by jury, protection from unreasonable searches, the right to bear arms depends entirely on the ability to identify tyranny, shout about it, publish about it, gather about it, and demand redress from it.
Madison initially wanted these protections in Article I, Section 9 of the Constitution itself the part that lists what Congress cannot do. That's how fundamental he considered them. They weren't add ons. They were the operating system.
The First Amendment is the right that protects all other rights. Without it:
You can't expose an unreasonable search because the press is muzzled.
You can't protest a rigged trial because assembly is banned.
You can't demand a fair hearing because petition is criminalized.
You can't even argue for the Second Amendment because speech is suppressed.
The numbering reflects a constitutional truth: first things first, or nothing follows.
The First Amendment binds the government federal, state, and local. That's the entire point. Private parties can kick you out of their restaurant for your political T-shirt. Your employer can fire you for your tweets. The First Amendment doesn't stop them because it was never meant to. It stops the people with guns and badges and tax revenue from silencing you.
That's why the scope matters. The government can impose time, place, and manner restrictions on your protest they can tell you not to block the freeway at rush hour but those restrictions have to be content neutral. They can't say anti war protests on Tuesdays, pro war protests on Wednesdays. They can't say this religion gets tax breaks, that one doesn't. The moment government starts sorting speech by its message, strict scrutiny kicks in, and the government almost always loses.
Almost. There are exceptions narrow ones. Incitement to imminent lawless action, true threats, obscenity, certain defamation. But the exceptions prove the rule: the default is freedom, and the government bears the burden of justifying any restriction.
The Religion Clause is actually two commands pulling in opposite directions, and that tension is deliberate.
The Establishment Clause says the government can't set up a church, fund a church, or endorse a church. The Free Exercise Clause says the government can't stop you from practicing your religion. The problem is obvious: what happens when the government tries to stay neutral and accidentally crushes someone's religious practice in the process?
For decades, Lemon v. Kurtzman (1971) provided the test: laws had to have a secular purpose, couldn't advance or inhibit religion, and couldn't excessively entangle government with religion. School prayer fell under Engel v. Vitale (1962). The wall between church and state stood tall.
Then Employment Division v. Smith (1990) dropped a bomb. Justice Scalia wrote that neutral, generally applicable laws don't violate the Free Exercise Clause even if they incidentally burden religion. Native Americans fired for using peyote in religious ceremonies got no protection. Congress responded with the Religious Freedom Restoration Act in 1993, explicitly demanding strict scrutiny for religious claims.
That set up Burwell v. Hobby Lobby (2014), where closely held corporations won a RFRA based exemption from the contraceptive mandate. The Establishment Clause and Free Exercise Clause had collided again and the Court sided with exercise.
The point is this: if the government can decide which religions are legitimate and which practices are acceptable, it can decide which speakers are protected and which dissent is tolerable. Religion comes first in the text because conscience comes first in the person. Control the conscience, and you control everything else.
Free speech jurisprudence is the most developed area of First Amendment law because it's the most fundamental. You can't exercise any other right without it.
The journey from Schenck v. United States (1919) to Brandenburg v. Ohio (1969) tells the story. Schenck gave us clear and present danger and promptly sent a socialist to prison for distributing anti-draft leaflets during World War I. Holmes' metaphor about falsely shouting fire in a theater became the justification for suppressing dissent for decades.
Brandenburg replaced it with the modern test: speech advocating illegal action is protected unless it's directed to inciting imminent lawless action and likely to produce it. A KKK leader's racist rant at a rally protected. The bar is sky high, and that's the point. The government doesn't get to decide which ideas are too dangerous to hear.
Then came the defamation revolution. New York Times Co. v. Sullivan (1964) held that public officials must prove actual malice knowledge of falsity or reckless disregard for the truth to win a libel case. Hustler Magazine v. Falwell (1988) extended the principle to emotional distress claims. Jerry Falwell couldn't collect damages for a parody suggesting his first sexual experience was with his mother in an outhouse. The ruling was unanimous.
Symbolic speech got its day in Texas v. Johnson (1989): burning the American flag is protected political expression. Congress passed the Flag Protection Act in response. The Court struck that down too. The principle held: the government cannot ban speech because it finds the message offensive.
And hate speech? R.A.V. v. City of St. Paul (1992) struck down an ordinance targeting cross burning and Nazi symbols. Content-based restrictions on speech even hateful speech face strict scrutiny and almost always fail. Snyder v. Phelps (2011) protected the Westboro Baptist Church's God Hates Fags signs at military funerals. The speech was outrageous, the Court admitted, but it addressed matters of public concern.
The logic is ruthless and consistent: if the government can ban hate speech today, it can ban your speech tomorrow. The definition of hate will always be written by the people in power. The only defense is a rule that protects all speech, including especially the speech you despise.
And then there's money. Citizens United v. FEC (2010) held that corporate and union political spending is protected speech. Critics call it the death of democracy. Defenders call it the logical extension of the principle that government can't ban speech based on the speaker's identity. Either way, the case stands: restricting political spending restricts political speech, and restricting political speech is the first thing authoritarians do.
Obscenity is the narrowest exception. Miller v. California (1973) gave us the three part test: appeals to prurient interest, depicts sexual conduct in a patently offensive way, and lacks serious value. That's it. Everything else is protected.
The press clause isn't a special privilege for journalists. It's a structural protection against the government deciding what gets published.
Near v. Minnesota (1931) established the prior restraint doctrine: stopping publication before it happens is the most serious and least tolerable infringement on First Amendment rights. The state had tried to shut down a newspaper as a nuisance for publishing articles about corrupt local officials. The Court said no and the principle was born.
New York Times Co. v. United States (1971) put it to the test. The Nixon administration sought an injunction to block publication of the Pentagon Papers, a classified history of the Vietnam War. The Court ruled 6-3 that the government hadn't met the heavy burden required for prior restraint. The papers ran. Nixon's abuse of power was exposed. The press clause had teeth.
Here's why this matters for every other amendment: without a free press, you don't know when the government violates the Fourth Amendment. You don't know when trials are rigged in violation of the Sixth. You don't know when cruel and unusual punishment is being inflicted in violation of the Eighth. The press is the information circulatory system of the body politic. Clamp it, and the body dies even if the other rights technically exist on paper.
Assembly is speech multiplied by bodies. It's the difference between writing a letter to the editor and filling the streets with thousands of people who can't be ignored.
Hague v. Committee for Industrial Organization (1939) established that streets, parks, and sidewalks are traditional public forums held in trust for public use. Cox v. Louisiana (1965) protected peaceful civil rights protests while clarifying that time, place, and manner restrictions are permissible if they're content neutral and narrowly tailored.
Ward v. Rock Against Racism (1989) solidified the framework: government can regulate the volume, not the message. Content neutral noise regulations at concerts pass intermediate scrutiny.
The assembly right is the one that scares governments most because it's the one that translates individual dissent into collective power. A million people silently kneeling is more threatening to a corrupt regime than a thousand angry editorials. That's why authoritarians ban protests first. That's why the Founders protected assembly alongside speech. The two are inseparable: speech without assembly is a whisper. Assembly without speech is a mob. Together, they're democracy.
The Petition Clause is the forgotten freedom but it's the one that turns grievance into action.
The right to petition means you can sue the government, lobby the government, and demand the government respond to your complaints. Borough of Duryea v. Guarnieri (2011) clarified that Petition Clause retaliation claims require a connection to a judicial or administrative proceeding. A police chief who filed a union grievance and was fired for it protected.
Petition is the procedural sibling of speech and assembly. You speak to raise awareness. You assemble to demonstrate numbers. You petition to force a response. Without petition, the government can ignore you forever. With it, the government must at least pretend to listen. The fact that the Founders included it after fighting a war that began with a list of grievances against King George is no accident.
The Court has started recognizing that the First Amendment applies to the spaces where modern speech actually happens.
Packingham v. North Carolina (2017) struck down a law banning registered sex offenders from social media. Justice Kennedy called social media the modern public square and declared that access to it is protected First Amendment activity. The principle is straightforward: if the government can ban you from the platforms where public discourse occurs, it can effectively silence you entirely.
Riley v. California (2014) technically a Fourth Amendment case recognized that cell phones are fundamentally different from other physical objects. They contain the privacies of life, including expressive and associational data. The ruling has profound implications for how the government can access your communications, your reading habits, your political affiliations.
These cases point toward a future where the First Amendment protects digital speech as vigorously as it protects speech in a public park. The battles over platform moderation, Section 230, and government jawboning of tech companies are the next frontier.
Why Losing Speech Means Losing Everything
Here's what happens when the First Amendment falls. Not hypothetically this is the historical pattern:
Step one: The government restricts speech it calls dangerous, false, or hateful. The definitions are always written by whoever holds power.
Step two: The press now operating under those restrictions cannot report on government misconduct without risking prosecution. Investigative journalism dies. Whistle blowers stay silent.
Step three: Without a free press exposing abuses, the Fourth Amendment becomes meaningless. Who's going to report on warrant less surveillance, no knock raids, or parallel construction? The public never learns about the violations, so the violations continue.
Step four: Assembly is restricted for public safety. Protests require permits that are never granted. Gatherings are dispersed as unlawful assemblies. The physical manifestation of dissent becomes impossible.
Step five: Petition becomes a formality. You can file your complaint, but no one has to respond, and no journalist will cover it, and no crowd will gather to support it. The grievance procedure exists on paper and nowhere else.
Step six: The remaining amendments due process, jury trials, the right to counsel, protection from cruel and unusual punishment become privileges granted at the government's discretion rather than rights enforceable by an informed, mobilized public.
The Second Amendment is often called the one that guarantees all others. But the First Amendment is the one that makes all others usable. A gun without a voice is just a tool. Speech without a gun can still bring down governments. The First Amendment is the peaceful mechanism for holding power accountable. When it goes, what remains is either submission or violence and the Founders chose neither. They chose speech.
That's why it's number one. That's why Madison put it first. And that's why every generation has to fight for it again because power always, always, always wants to shut you up.
Sources:
The Constitution and Bill of Rights
U.S. Constitution, Amendment I (ratified December 15, 1791)
James Madison's original proposed amendments to the Constitution (1789)
The Federalist Papers, particularly No. 10 and No. 51 (Madison)
The Fourteenth Amendment, Section 1 (ratified 1868) — vehicle for incorporation doctrine
Religion Clause Cases
Everson v. Board of Education, 330 U.S. 1 (1947) — incorporated Establishment Clause against states
Engel v. Vitale, 370 U.S. 421 (1962) — school-sponsored prayer unconstitutional
Lemon v. Kurtzman, 403 U.S. 602 (1971) — three-part Establishment Clause test
Employment Division v. Smith, 494 U.S. 872 (1990) — neutral laws of general applicability; peyote case
Burwell v. Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc., 573 U.S. 682 (2014) — RFRA and closely held corporations
Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1993, 42 U.S.C. § 2000bb et seq.
Speech Clause Cases
Schenck v. United States, 249 U.S. 47 (1919) — "clear and present danger" test
Chaplinsky v. New Hampshire, 315 U.S. 568 (1942) — "fighting words" exception
New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964) — actual malice standard
Brandenburg v. Ohio, 395 U.S. 444 (1969) — incitement to imminent lawless action
Miller v. California, 413 U.S. 15 (1973) — obscenity test
Hustler Magazine v. Falwell, 485 U.S. 46 (1988) — emotional distress and public figures
Texas v. Johnson, 491 U.S. 397 (1989) — flag burning as protected speech
R.A.V. v. City of St. Paul, 505 U.S. 377 (1992) — hate speech and content-based restrictions
Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, 558 U.S. 310 (2010) — corporate political spending
Snyder v. Phelps, 562 U.S. 443 (2011) — offensive protest at military funerals
Press Clause Cases
Near v. Minnesota, 283 U.S. 697 (1931) — prior restraint doctrine
New York Times Co. v. United States, 403 U.S. 713 (1971) — Pentagon Papers; heavy presumption against prior restraint
Assembly Clause Cases
Hague v. Committee for Industrial Organization, 307 U.S. 496 (1939) — public forum doctrine
Cox v. Louisiana, 379 U.S. 536 (1965) — peaceful protest and time/place/manner restrictions
Ward v. Rock Against Racism, 491 U.S. 781 (1989) — content-neutral noise regulation; intermediate scrutiny
Petition Clause Cases
United States v. Cruikshank, 92 U.S. 542 (1876) — early petition clause limitation
Borough of Duryea v. Guarnieri, 564 U.S. 379 (2011) — petition clause retaliation claims
Incorporation Doctrine Cases
Gitlow v. New York, 268 U.S. 652 (1925) — began incorporation of free speech
De Jonge v. Oregon, 299 U.S. 353 (1937) — incorporated right of assembly
Digital Age Cases
Riley v. California, 573 U.S. 373 (2014) — warrant required for cell phone searches
Packingham v. North Carolina, 582 U.S. 98 (2017) — social media as modern public square
Related Cases Mentioned in Context
United States v. Eichman, 496 U.S. 310 (1990) — struck down Flag Protection Act
Carson v. Makin, 596 U.S. 767 (2022) — religious schools and public funding
Murthy v. Missouri, 603 U.S. ___ (2024) — government jawboning and social media platforms
Secondary Sources and Historical Context
Sedition Act of 1798, 1 Stat. 596 — early federal speech restriction
Flag Protection Act of 1989, 103 Stat. 777 — congressional response to Texas v. Johnson
English Bill of Rights of 1689 — precursor to American rights traditions
Locke, John. A Letter Concerning Toleration (1689) and Two Treatises of Government (1689) — Enlightenment influences on Madison
Levy, Leonard W. Emergence of a Free Press (1985) — definitive history of press freedom in early America
Tribe, Laurence H. American Constitutional Law (2nd ed., 1988) — foundational treatise on First Amendment doctrine
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