gptkbp:instanceOf
|
gptkb:United_States_Supreme_Court_case
|
gptkbp:arguedDate
|
1992-01-13
|
gptkbp:citation
|
gptkb:504_U.S._191
|
gptkbp:concurringOpinionBy
|
gptkb:Anthony_Kennedy
|
gptkbp:date
|
1992-05-26
|
gptkbp:decidedBy
|
gptkb:Supreme_Court_of_the_United_States
|
gptkbp:dissentingOpinionBy
|
gptkb:Thurgood_Marshall
gptkb:David_Souter
gptkb:John_Paul_Stevens
|
gptkbp:docketNumber
|
90-1056
|
gptkbp:heldBy
|
A Tennessee law that prohibits the solicitation of votes and the display or distribution of campaign materials within 100 feet of a polling place does not violate the First Amendment.
|
https://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#label
|
Burson v. Freeman
|
gptkbp:legalSubject
|
gptkb:First_Amendment_to_the_United_States_Constitution
freedom of speech
electioneering
|
gptkbp:majorityOpinionBy
|
gptkb:Harry_Blackmun
|
gptkbp:originatedIn
|
gptkb:Tennessee
|
gptkbp:petitioner
|
gptkb:William_H._Burson
|
gptkbp:predecessor
|
regulation of campaign activities near polling places
|
gptkbp:response
|
gptkb:Mary_Rebecca_Freeman
|
gptkbp:bfsParent
|
gptkb:Minnesota_Voters_Alliance_v._Mansky
|
gptkbp:bfsLayer
|
6
|