Gag rules stifle financial journalism

FPF Logo for circles

Promoting press freedom in the 21st century

Securities and Exchange Commission Chair Gary Gensler testifies during a Senate subcommittee hearing last year.

Graeme Sloan/Sipa USA via AP

The Securities and Exchange Commission requires defendants who settle cases it brings to contract away their right to deny the SEC’s allegations. So does the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. That means potential sources can’t speak to financial journalists.

We wrote for The Hill about why it’s a problem when financial regulators – known for occasionally crashing the global economy – use their leverage to stifle criticism.

We explained that “the First Amendment rejects the notion that the government can protect its reputation by silencing critics. … It’s an excuse that could be used to rationalize any form of censorship by any agency.”

Read the full op-ed here.

Donate to support press freedom

Your support is more important than ever.

Read more about Transparency

Biden should declassify Senate report on CIA torture program

Release would help counter growing evidence that the agency has become too powerful for oversight

Copyright and public records don’t mix

A new court decision using copyright law to deny release of public records from the Covenant School shooting investigation harms the public’s right to know

Public must have access to U.S. report on military aid

Biden administration has no reason to withhold Congressional report on how foreign recipients of U.S. military assistance comply with human rights law