he demands from the RNC to the California-based CafePress.com put the committee at the intersection of political speech and trademark law, legal experts said. The company is refusing to comply with the letter, despite a second letter from the committee referring to “further action” and possible damages.
“If you want to say ‘GOP’ and design an elephant that’s similar, want to design an elephant that’s not precisely the same as ours, that’s fine,” RNC chief counsel Sean Cairncross told Politico. “Our elephant is specific. It’s stylized, it’s blue and red, it has three stars across its back that are tilted. They’re using that precise elephant.”
The lawyer for CafePress, Paul Alan Levy, called the RNC demand an “abuse of trademark law to suppress discussion of topics of substantial public interest.”
Levy, of the nonprofit Public Citizen Litigation Group, asked “why the RNC has chosen an election year to try to suppress speech about the Republican Party, especially since many of the images are highly favorable to their cause.”
The t-shirts at issue range across a spectrum. Some simply bear the elephant or “GOP” logo, which the committee has also trademarked. Others are pro-Republican: One shows a large elephant trailed by two smaller elephants and the words, "I'm raising my children right.”
Others attack the GOP, such as a a portrayal of an elephant leading three sheep and the words, "wake up sheeple!".
The RNC’s Cairncross responded that the letters to CafePress were a standard move to defend a trademark, and that political speech isn’t the issue.
“It’s not a political statement – it’s a commercial statement. They’re moving merchandise,” he said.Legal experts said the company has a stronger case in defense of its anti-Republican shirts, which could be protected under long-standing law and under a specific amendment to trademark law that exempts parody.
Ironically, the pro-Republican shirts could more plausibly be subject to the claim they’re “diluting” the GOP brand and could be mistaken for products of the committee itself.
“On the t-shirts that are using the logo to criticize
, the cases are almost open and shut” in favor of using the logo, said Jane Ginsburg, a professor at Columbia University Law School.
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