A central concern in First Amendment jurisprudence is the proper scope of government authority to regulate speech on matters of national political concern. Such speech supposedly secures heightened protection via a "strict scrutiny" test long glossed as "fatal in fact." Strict scrutiny is thought to demand that measures be "‘narrowly tailored'" to address a "‘compelling government interest.'" Recent scholarship, however, has demonstrated that strict scrutiny is internally variegated. Under its rubric, courts employ different methodologies and varying degrees of stringency. Courts also subtly alter the verbal formulation of scrutiny even within the political speech domain. This Essay is a case study of how the heightened judicial scrutiny of political speeh regulation can vary even between cases decided by a single tribunal—the Roberts Court.


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