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Supreme Court Smacks Down California's Invasion of Donor Privacy in Big Blow to Cancel Culture Activists

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The U.S. Supreme Court has struck down a California law that required non-profits to hand over their donor lists. 

In the 6-3 ruling, the court said California's attempts to get that information would invade donor privacy, violating the constitutional rights of citizens. 

Now Californians who donate privately for or against a controversial issue, like abortion and others, don't risk being exposed or harassed in today's cancel culture.

The Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF) says this legal fight has been ongoing since 2012 when California's Attorney General's Office demanded that Thomas More Law Center (TMLC) hand over its top donors' names and addresses.

ADF represented the nonprofit before the Supreme Court. They explain why donor privacy has been such a serious matter for their client: "TMLC supporters, employees, and clients have faced intimidation, death threats, hate mail, boycotts, and even an assassination plot from ideological opponents. And if California were to leak the private information of nonprofit donors—either accidentally or on purpose—they would be in very real danger."

First Liberty Institute also submitted a friend-of-the-court brief in key cases challenging California's private donor records reporting requirement.

"Cancel culture is bad enough without the government forcing organizations to reveal the names of their donors so they can be attacked," said Kelly Shackelford, President, CEO, and Chief Counsel for First Liberty Institute.
 
First Liberty filed a friend-of-the-court brief in Americans For Prosperity v. Bonta and Thomas More Law Center v. Bonta. The group was representing Citizen Power Initiatives for China, a nonprofit organization seeking to advance a peaceful transition to democracy in China. Its donors would face reprisals by China's communist regime if their names became public.
 
"The freedom to associate with others of like mind is indispensable to freedom," Shackelford said. "Again today, the Supreme Court recognized that the disclosure of names and address of citizens simply for belonging to a cause is chilling to the freedom of association."  

Fox News noted Vice President Kamala Harris’s silence on Thursday’s ruling. Harris was the California state attorney general when the case began.

According to Politico, she was the original defendant in the years-long case.  As the case progressed through the legal system, each new state attorney after Harris was named as the defendant.

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Benjamin Gill oversees internet and social media content as the Multimedia Manager for CBNNews.com. He has been on staff with CBN News as an internet and broadcast producer since 2000. Here are some of his commentaries and articles: Pursuing Truth in a World of Fake News: Reflections of a Christian Journalist After 20 Years with CBN News Plagues, the End Times, and Trusting in God's Protection: 'You Will Hear Us and Rescue Us' 12 Powerful Bible Verses to Build Your Faith and Fight Fear During the Coronavirus Crisis 'Beasts of Darkness': The Satanic Hatred that Possessed Connor Betts, and What