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Stanford Law Review Online: Privilege and the Belfast Project

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Stanford Law Review

The Stanford Law Review Online has just published a Note by Will Havemann entitled Privilege and the Belfast Project. Havemann argues that a recent First Circuit opinion goes too far and threatens the idea of academic privilege:

In 2001, two Irish scholars living in the United States set out to compile the recollections of men and women involved in the decades-long conflict in Northern Ireland. The result was the Belfast Project, an oral history project housed at Boston College that collected interviews from many who were personally involved in the violent Northern Irish “Troubles.” To induce participants to document their memories for posterity, Belfast Project historians promised all those interviewed that the contents of their testimonials would remain confidential until they died. More than a decade later, this promise of confidentiality is at the heart of a legal dispute implicating the United States’ bilateral legal assistance treaty with the United Kingdom, the so-called academic’s privilege, and the First Amendment.

He concludes:

Given the confusion sown by Branzburg’s fractured opinion, the First Circuit’s hardnosed decision is unsurprising. But by disavowing the balancing approach recommended in Justice Powell’s concurring Branzburg opinion, and by overlooking the considerable interests supporting the Belfast Project’s confidentiality guarantee, the First Circuit erred both as a matter of precedent and of policy. At least one Supreme Court Justice has signaled a willingness to correct the mischief done by the First Circuit, and to clarify an area of First Amendment law where the Court’s guidance is sorely needed. The rest of the Court should take note.

Read the full article, Privilege and the Belfast Project at the Stanford Law Review Online.


The Stanford Law Review Online: Defending DOMA in Court

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Stanford Law Review

The Stanford Law Review Online has just published an Essay by Matthew I. Hall entitled How Congress Could Defend DOMA in Court (and Why the BLAG Cannot). Professor Hall argues that the Bipartisan Legal Advisory Group lacks standing to defend DOMA:

In one of the most closely watched litigation matters in recent years, the Supreme Court will soon consider Edith Windsor’s challenge to the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA). The Court surprised many observers by granting certiorari, not only on the merits of Windsor’s equal protection and due process claims, but also on the question whether the defendants—the United States and the Bipartisan Legal Advisory Group of the House of Representatives (the BLAG)—have Article III standing to defend DOMA. The United States has agreed with plaintiffs that DOMA is unconstitutional, prompting the BLAG to intervene for the purpose of defending DOMA’s constitutionality. No lower court has yet addressed whether the BLAG has standing, so the Supreme Court will have the first crack at the issue. But it turns out that the answer is straightforward: Under settled precedent, the BLAG lacks authority to represent either the United States or Congress, and having claimed no interest of its own, it therefore lacks Article III standing.

He concludes:

Congress could solve these problems by statute or resolution, but until it does so the BLAG is a mere bystander, with no stake in defending DOMA. This lack of standing may play a decisive role in the Windsor litigation. Both the BLAG and the executive branch defendants appealed the District Court’s judgment to the Second Circuit, and petitioned the Supreme Court for certiorari. If the BLAG lacks standing, however, then it had no authority to appeal or to seek Supreme Court review, and the Court’s jurisdiction must turn on whether the United States, which has agreed with the plaintiff that DOMA is unconstitutional, has standing to proceed with the case. Interestingly, the BLAG itself has argued that no such standing exists—a controversial position that is beyond the scope of this short piece. But if the BLAG is correct, then there is no case or controversy before the Court, and the Court will have to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction. The widespread expectation that Windsor will be a significant decision appears to be well-founded. But it remains to be seen whether its significance will lie in the area of individual rights or in the areas of federal court jurisdiction and the separation of powers.

Read the full article, How Congress Could Defend DOMA in Court (and Why the BLAG Cannot) at the Stanford Law Review Online.

Bright Ideas: Mark Weiner on his new book Rule of the Clan

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Sometimes fortune smiles upon you. I met Mark Weiner when we started law school. My life and my work is much better for it. Mark is a scholar and more. He obtained his B.A. in American Studies from Stanford, his J.D. from Yale, and his PhD in American Studies from Yale.

His most recent project is his excellent book, The Rule of the Clan. Ambassadors, professors from all around the world, members of the 9/11 commission, and publishers have embraced the book. Mark argues, and I think rather well, that the state has a quite important role to play, and we ignore that to our peril. Publishers Weekly has said:

A nuanced view of clan-based societies … Weiner’s argument is a full-throated defense of the modern centralized state, which he sees as necessary to protect human rights: “In the face of well-intended but misguided criticism that the state is inimical to freedom, we must choose whether to maintain the state as our most basic political institution or to let it degrade.” An entertaining mix of anecdote and ethnography.

The New York Journal of Books has called the book “accessible, mesmerizing, and compelling.”

I wanted to get into how Mark came up with the project, why it matters, and, for the writers out there, the process of writing about such a complex subject but in a way that is accessible to a general audience. So I asked Mark whether we could do a Bright Ideas interview. He graciously agreed.

Mark, the book is great. I want to jump in and ask, What do you mean by “clan”?

Thanks, Deven. In my book, I consider clans both in their traditional form, as a subset of tribes, but also as a synecdoche for a pattern by which humans structure their social and legal lives: “the rule of the clan.” Clans are a natural form of social and legal organization. They certainly are more explicable in human terms than the modern liberal state and the liberal rule of law. Because of the natural fact of blood relationships, people tend to organize their communities on the basis of extended kinship in the absence of strong alternatives.

So why clans now?

Two reasons. First, the United States is involved militarily in parts of the world in which traditional tribal and clan relationships are critical, and if we don’t understand how those relationships work, including in legal terms, we have a major problem.

Let me give you an example from Guantanamo. In the book, I tell a story of a college friend who was in charge of the team there interrogating detainees from Saudi Arabia. (I should note that my friend finds torture morally repugnant and against the national interest, as do I, and that she has advocated for this view in meaningful ways.) Over the course of her work, my friend realized that because of the first-name/last-name structure of the detainee tracking system, basic information about detainee tribal affiliations hadn’t been gathered or had been lost. This meant, among other things, that we couldn’t fully appreciate the reason why some of these men had taken up arms against us in the first place—for instance, because the United States had become embroiled in their centuries-long, domestic tribal war with the House of Saud.

Our ignorance about these issues is what I call the contemporary “Fulda Gap.” Our lack of knowledge about more traditional societies hinders our ability to understand the motivations of those who oppose us and leaves us vulnerable—and, even more important, it diminishes our ability to cooperate with our friends and to assist liberal legal reformers abroad in ways that are both effective and ethical.

The second reason to study clans, and ultimately for me even more important than the first reason, has to do with our own political discourse here at home. You could say that I became interested in clans because of widespread ideological attacks against the state within liberal societies—that is, attacks on government. By this I mean not simply efforts to reduce the size of government or to make it more efficient. Instead, I mean broadside criticisms of the state itself, or efforts to starve government and render it anemic.

I think you are saying there is something about clans that helps us organize and understand our world. What is it?

It’s often said that individual freedom exists most powerfully in the absence of government. But I believe that studying the rule of the clan shows us that the reverse is true. Liberal personal freedom is inconceivable without the existence of a robust state dedicated to vindicating the public interest. That’s because the liberal state, at least in theory, treats persons as individuals rather than as members of ineluctable status or clan groups. So studying clans can help us imagine what our social and legal life would become if we allow the state to deteriorate through a lack of political will.

By the way, the idea that the state is somehow inimical to freedom—that we gain individual freedom outside the state, rather than through it—is hardly limited to the United States. It was a core component of Qaddafi’s revolutionary vision of Libya. Or consider Gandhi, who advocated for a largely stateless society for postcolonial India. Fortunately for India, his vision wasn’t realized. Instead, we owe the prospects for further liberal development there to the constitution drafted by B. R. Ambedkar.

Hold on. From Indian independence to Libyan revolution seems a long jump. Can you help me connect the dots?

Both imagine that individual freedom exists most when the state is weak or absent. We’ll have to talk about Gandhi’s legal vision over a tall beer sometime. I’ll show you why Ambedkar is such a fascinating figure, and why it was his constitutional ideals that were essential to the long-term liberal legal development of the country—especially vis-a-vis local forms of justice that are predicated on communal rather than individual norms (for instance in the contemporary struggle against honor killing sanctioned by khap panchayats, or caste councils). American legal academics ought to know more about him and appreciate his achievements.

The Libyan case is really interesting. If you read Qaddfai’s tract The Green Book, you’ll see that he was quite opposed to the modern state. He saw the tribe and its constituent parts as the fundamental unit of social organization. That’s why the great challenge for liberal development in Libya today is to build effective and transparent state institutions whose authority in time will supplant those of the tribe. That will take some time, but for a variety of contemporary reasons, especially the existence of social media, I think the process will be relatively fast in historical terms, at least if liberal democracies offer appropriate assistance.

Are you saying that rejection of the state is a clan impulse?

I wouldn’t put it quite that way. But clans are local power brokers, and the development of central authority diminishes their autonomy. One of the objects of constitutional reform in countries with strong clan identities is to provide national incentives for people to cede local power—and, more generally, for people to give their loyalty to a larger public identity that rises well above kinship structures. The ultimate goal of this process is the transformation of clans from hard institutions with legal and political significance to purely soft institutions with cultural and psychological importance. From clan to club. From kinship to social networks.

In all this, lawyers and members of other middle class professions are essential. But so are artists and other cultural activists, in ways I discuss in the book.

Kinship and social networks? Those seem to run in opposite directions. Kinship seems a given, an accident of birth. Social networks seem an escape from that, because one builds those networks. What is the link then from clan to social networks? Is it a devolution? Or evolution to accommodate some clannishness?

For clan societies to modernize, the economic, social, and political significance of extended kinship needs to be replaced by relationships based especially on individual choice. Societies need to undergo a change “from kinship to social networks” as part of the transformation of the clan from a hard, legal institution to a soft, cultural one.

That’s one reason why the spread of social media technology is so important as a legal and constitutional matter, including in the Middle East and North Africa. By reducing the cost of establishing relationships across clan and tribal lines, the spread of social media technology will in time facilitate constitutional modernization by fostering the construction of a transcendent public identity on the basis of which the state can vindicate the interests of individuals qua individuals. In this respect, I think that in the very long term the constitutional significance of social media will resemble the spread of monotheistic religion in propelling individuals to imagine themselves as part of social groups that transcend the family.

One challenge for liberals during this transformation will be to foster cultural and social structures that can provide the goods that clans provide much more effectively than liberal modernity does—particularly the values of solidarity and social justice.

Ah, understanding clans lets us see how to maintain some of the benefits of clans as “soft, cultural” institutions while also seeing what needs the modern state must address and meet. Sounds like reason enough to buy the book!

Before we end, some of our readers are interested in process. How on Earth did you come up with this project?

Thanks for the plug! When we meet to talk about Gandhi and Ambedkar, the first two rounds are on me. (Concurring Opinions readers can learn more about the book here, on my blog.)

As for process, after publishing my first two books, I wanted to make sure that the direction of my future intellectual life wouldn’t be determined simply by the furrows I had laid down over the past. So in late 2005, I packed up the library I had collected over the course of twenty years and gave it away. I sent it off on my birthday—it was my gift to myself.

Wait—I can’t imagine that. How did it feel and what happened after that?

It was completely liberating. All at once, I had a lot of empty shelf space, and I had the chance to start filling it. I thought it was possible that I might end up buying the very same books I had just given away, but I figured that if I did then having them around would be a conscious choice rather than the result of inertia.

As it happened, after a year I realized that most of the new books I was reading were about the European middle ages, especially the history of the Anglo-Saxons. And reading about the Anglo-Saxons soon led me to the enchanting world of medieval Iceland. The Icelanders are a northern Germanic people, cultural cousins to the west-Germanic Anglo-Saxons, and their written records provide a colorful window onto medieval Germanic dispute resolution.

My fascination with Iceland led me to apply for a Fulbright to spend a semester in the small town of Akureyri, in the very north of the country. That gave me time and inspiration to think about how the history of Iceland illuminated a more general issue that had come to interest me: the relation between decentralized forms of constitutional organization and kinship structures. Being outside the United States also helped me to think about that issue’s contemporary relevance—the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan were very much in the background.

I blogged a bit about the trip for Legal History Blog—my very first experience blogging!

Was there a moment when things came together?

One day, I took all of my notes to a local coffee shop, the Blue Cup, and I sat the whole day drinking hot chocolate and eating pastries and sketching out my ideas. By the end of the day, I had a fairly clear conception of my direction, though it took another year before I understood just what the book would cover and the tone I’d adopt in the writing.

What’s funny is that now, looking back, I realize that the book touches on many of the same themes I had written about in Black Trials and Americans without Law. In those books, I was interested in the relation between the growth of the state and the transformation of the popular concept of law. That’s a deep background feature of The Rule of the Clan, too.

Mark, thank you again for sharing some insights on clans and the writing process. I look forward to your next book and best of luck with Rule of the Clan.

NOTE: This interview was written using Google Docs. Both Mark and I edited portions to increase readability.

FAN 18 (First Amendment News) — What to do with the First Amendment? Election Law & Free Speech

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I have not taken a position, one way or the other, on these constitutional amendments; we are having a hearing.” — Senator Patrick Leahy, June 3, 2013

To amend or not to amend? The question lingers and the debate continues. In the political maelstrom, some liberals push to amend the First Amendment while conservatives push back against the idea of tinkering with the Bill of Rights. It is a sign of our times that jaws don’t drop in utter amazement at the ideological lineup at play here.

Protestors at Senate SJ 19 hearing just before it began

Protestors at Senate SJ 19 hearing just before it began

“We are here to declare victory,” said Bobby Burchfield at a Heritage Foundation event this past Monday (see below). The seasoned election law lawyer, who argued on behalf of the RNC in the McCutcheon case, stressed victory because in his view campaign finance reformers have now conceded that their reform measures cannot be reconciled with the First Amendment. Echoing that point, Donald McGahn (former FEC chairman and prominent election law lawyer now with Jones Day) told the Heritage audience: “The so-called reformers are finally admitting that what they want to do is unconstitutional.”

Messrs. Burchfield and McGahn were referring to a proposed constitutional amendment  (S.J. 19) introduced by Senator Tom Udall (D-NM) and co-sponsofed by Senators Michael Bennet (D-CO) and Jon Tester (D-MT) along with 38 others (no Republican co-sponsors — 33 co-sponsors have joined a companion amendment in the House, H.J. Res. 20). A hearing on the Udall proposal took place yesterday in the Senate.

The Senate Hearing

Senator Leahy chatting with Senator Reid (seated).

Senator Leahy chatting with Senator Reid (seated).

Senate Hart Building, Rm. 216, 10:30 a.m — Senator Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) chaired the hearing. Sixteen senators were present at various times during the hearing. Introductory comments were made by  Chairman Leahy (statement here) and Senator Chuck Grassley (R-IA) (statement here). Their remarks were followed by the first panel of witnesses, which consisted of Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) (statement here) followed by comments from Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) (statement here). “This joint appearance,” said Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), “is a first in the Committee’s history as far as we can tell.”  

Prior to the second panel’s statements, comments were offered by Senator Richard Durbin (D-IL) and Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) (video clip here).  The second panel consisted of statements by Floyd B. McKissick, Jr. (a state Senator from North Carolina) (statement here), Floyd Abrams (Partner, Cahill Gordon & Reindel) (statement here), and Jamie Raskin (Professor of Law, American University, Washington College of Law) (statement here).

Here are a few excerpts from State Senator McKissick’s remarks:

“In 2010 alone Americans For Prosperity, a group funded in large party by the Koch brothers, spent more than a quarter of a million dollars in North Carolina. Another group, Civitas Action, spent more. A new organization that sprang up, called Real Jobs NC, spent almost $1.5 million dollars. Overall, three quarters of all the outside money in state races that year were tied to one man: Art Pope. Pope and his associates poured money into 22 targeted races, and the candidates they backed won in 18.”

Here are a few excerpts from Mr. Abrams’ remarks:

“The description of the constitutional amendment it proposes states, in its text, that it ‘relate[s] to contributions and expenditures intended to affect elections.’ That’s one way to say it, but I think it would have been more revealing to have said that it actually ‘relate[s] to speech intended to affect elections.’ And it would have been even more revealing, and at least as accurate, to have said that it relates to limiting speech intended to affect elections. And that’s the core problem with it. It is intended to limit speech about elections and it would do just that. . . .”

Here are a few excerpts from Professor Raskin’s remarks:

“[I]n several recent 5-4 decisions, the wall protecting democracy from plutocracy has been crumbling under judicial attack. Four years ago, in Citizens United v. FEC, the Roberts Court majority bulldozed an essential block of the wall, the one that kept trillions of dollars in corporate treasury wealth from flowing into federal campaigns. In Arizona Free Enterprise Club’s Freedom Club PAC v. Bennett (2011), the Court stifled public debate and destroyed vast new opportunities for political speech by striking down public financing programs that use matching funds and a trigger mechanism to amplify the voices of less affluent candidates competing to be heard over the roar of big wealth. In McCutcheon v. FEC (2014), the Court took a sledgehammer to the aggregate contribution limits, empowering political tycoons and shrewd business investors to max out to every Member of Congress and all their opponents. All of these assaults on political equality and free speech were justified in the name of the First Amendment.”

See Amy Howe’s SCOTUSblog post here.

→ A vote on S.J. 19 is said to occur later this year. 

A Few Highlights from S.J. 19 Hearing

  • Boxes of petitions calling for a constitutional amendment.

    Boxes of petitions calling for a constitutional amendment.

    Senator Leahy: “Two million Americans have signed petitions calling for a constitutional amendment.” [Stacks of boxes containing the petitions were brought into the hearing room for display.]

  • Senator Grassley: “Today freedom of speech is threatened as it has not been in many decades.”
  • Senator Reid: “Is there any member of this Committee who believes the status quo is good?”
  • Senator McConnell: “Everyone on this panel knows this proposal will not pass . . . . This is a political exercise and that’s all it is.”
  • Senator Jefferson Sessions (R-AL): “The First Amendment . . . is not a collective right.”
  • Senator Cruz: “Citizens are still astonished that members of Congress would dare support repealing the First Amendment. . . . This amendment is about power and about politicians silencing citizens. . . . We are in a strange point in time when Democrats abandon the First Amendment, and, indeed, propose repealing it.”
  • Professor Raskin: “Don’t be intimidated; the people are with you. . . . [The Petitioners in Citizens United] could have won, and should have won, on that point [i.e., statutory grounds].”
  • Senator Charles Schumer (D-NY): “The First Amendment has always had a balancing test.”
  • Senator Jean Klobuchar (D-MN) question to Mr. Abrams: “Do you support any other limits [beyond disclosure] on campaign contributions . . . .?  Mr. Abrams: “I’ve pretty well come to the conclusion that contribution limits . . . ought to fall. I think they should be disclosed, but it seems to me that we’ve reached a point, both in our jurisprudence and our politics, where if we know what the money is and where it is coming from that . . . we can trust the public to make a rational decision . . . .”
  • Senator Reid quoting Senator Mitchell (apparently from statement made in 1987 or 1988): “‘We Republicans have put together a responsible and Constitutional campaign reform agenda. It would restrict the power of special interest PACS, stop the flow of all soft money, keep wealthy individuals from buying public office.’”

* * * * 

Ken Kulkowski: “Only one amendment has modified a previous amendment. The Eighteenth Amendment was ratified in 1919 and empowered Congress to forbid alcohol nationwide. Then the Twenty-First Amendment was ratified in 1933 to repeal the Eighteenth Amendment and allow alcohol to flow once again.” [Source: here]

* * * * 

Heritage Foundation Event

The day before the Senate hearing on S.J. 19, the proposed amendment was a topic of discussion at the Heritage Foundation. The panel was moderated by Elizabeth Slattery with comments by Bobby Burchfield, Donald McGahn, and Hans A. von Spakovsky. Here are a few excerpts from their remarks:

Mr. Burchfield: “The McCutcheon decision is plainly correct.  McCutcheon like Citizens United did not break new First Amendment ground” since both decisions were consistent with Buckley v. Valeo, which rejected the idea of leveling the political playing field rationale. “The self-styled reform community is trying to read into the First Amendment what democratic government should be. The First Amendment does not impose on government a duty to limit speech.”  

Dan McGahn

Dan McGahn

Mr. McGahn: Under S.J. 19, could “Congress prohibit a labor union from communicating with its members?  What about the NRA and its members?” Can S.J. 19′s ban be “speech selective?”  Would it apply to “pastors and their congregation? What about bloggers who aired a video like the one in Citizens United?  What about books?”  McGahn also analogized S.J. 19 with the British Licensing Order of 1643 and the Stamp Act of 1765 in that all of these measures required permission from the government to speak.

Mr. von Spakovsky: “Nearly all means of communication require spending money—from the ‘humblest handbill or leaflet’ to political advertisements run during prime time on ‘television, radio, and other mass media,’ which are “indispensable instruments of effective political speech. . . . Supporters of this amendment claim that restricting the amount of money that may be spent on political speech and activity is not the same as limiting speech, but that is the equivalent of saying that limiting the amount of newsprint a newspaper may buy does not limit the newspaper’s speech. Coincidentally, the proposed constitutional amendment has one glaring exception: It would not apply to the press. Thus,The New York Times and MSNBC could continue to spend as much money, newsprint, and airtime as they want supporting their preferred candidates (or attacking those they oppose), but individuals, associations, and non-media corporations would be strictly limited in their political speech. This is certainly no way to ‘level the playing field.’”

 A video of the event should be available soon (check here)

Call for Constitutional Convention? 

Montpelier, Vt. (AP) – “Sen. Patrick Leahy says he’d rather see the Congress craft a constitutional amendment to overturn recent U.S. Supreme Court decisions on campaign finance than have states call a constitutional convention to address the issue.”“The comments from the Vermont Democrat and chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee follow his home state’s Legislature becoming the first in the country to call for a constitutional convention to amend the country’s founding document.”“Leahy says he worries a constitutional convention could stray onto other issues ranging from gutting environmental regulation to restricting voting rights.” [Source: here]

“Want Money Out of Politics? Put Some Money Into Politics with Lawrence Lessig’s Super PAC”                                                 

“The Harvard professor has already raised $1 million from thousands of smaller donors who he’s asking to spend big money to make sure that no one can spend big money again–and instead politicians have to listen to regular people.”

“Harvard professor Larry Lessig’s business pitch seems backwards, at first. It goes something like this: Invest in his super PAC, and get money out of politics. Donate enough money to render all the other money in politics meaningless. So what’s the return on an investment, that, by definition, wants to ruin big, private financial investments in politics? ‘A return to something like a representative democracy,’ is how Lessig puts it.”

“That business pitch is now a $1 million idea. After launching a formal super PAC on May 1, thousands of small dollar donations flooded MayDay PAC’s servers, crashing them temporarily. It didn’t matter. Lessig and the MayDay PAC raised $1 million in less than two weeks, well ahead of their June 1 crowd-funding deadline, and the first in a series of fundraising goals to spur a mass movement towards campaign finance reform in the 2014 midterm elections.”

“Marshaling 20,000 donations between $5 and $5,000 (the average was less than $100), Lessig now has his sights set on the end of the next month for another goal: $5 million, plus another $5 million in donor money to match if the crowdfunding campaign’s successful.” [Source: here]

Two Observations

→ Dana Milbank, “This is no way to fix the problem of billionaires buying elections,” Washington Post, June 4, 2014.

“I agree with Ted Cruz. Before you stick a thermometer in my mouth or suggest that I up my meds, let me assure you that much of what the Texas Republican said at Tuesday’s Senate Judiciary Committee hearing was just as wacky and reckless as usual. Cruz alleged that Democrats, in proposing a constitutional amendment to limit campaign contributions, ‘support repealing the First Amendment,’ would ‘abandon the Bill of Rights,’ were seizing ‘the power to ban books and to ban movies,’ and favored ‘politicians silencing the citizens.’”

“But somewhere among the hysteria, the hyperbole and the hyperventilation was a good question from the tea party demagogue. ‘Where are the liberals today?’ Cruz asked. ‘Why is there not a liberal standing here defending the Bill of Rights and the First Amendment?’”

“Democrats should be asking that of themselves.”

→ Geoffery Stone, “The Supreme Court Has Given Us a Government of, By, and For the 1 Percent,” The Daily Beast, June 3, 2014.

“In case after case, the five conservative justices on the Supreme Court have held unconstitutional all efforts—state as well as federal—to restrain the corrosive influence of limitless individual and corporate expenditures and contributions in our electoral process. They do this in the name of free speech. In their view, the First Amendment absolutely guarantees the wealthiest Americans the right to spend as much as they like to manipulate the American political system to their advantage. According to these justices, as long as the wealthiest Americans do not directly bribe politicians to vote in their favor, the Constitution demands the flow of money is beyond regulation and that the rest of us must simply let the chips fall where they may. This conception of the First Amendment and of the American constitutional system is truly perverse.”

Quick Hits

Forthcoming Book

News Items & Op-Eds.

Last Scheduled FAN Column: # 17 – New Bio Reveals How Scalia Helped to Save a PBS Station

Last FAN Columns: #17.3: “Senator Cruz Introduces Two Free Speech Bills

#17.2 “Latest Snapshot of Roberts Court’s Record on Free Expression Issues This Term

Next Scheduled FAN Column: Wednesday June 11th.

FAN 19 (First Amendment News) Law Prof. Contests Ban on Note-Taking in Courtroom

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This first part of this column is about bans on note-taking in courtrooms, federal and state. To illustrate this point, I want to say a few things about a law professor and the recent hell he went through in his attempt to takes notes in a public courtroom in Cook County, Illinois. Before I get to his story, which is an incredible one, permit me to set the stage with a few bits of history.
* * * * 
There was a time, in my adult lifetime, when spectators in the Supreme Court were barred from taking notes. Yes, note-taking was not permitted unless one was a member of the press corps. One had to sit and listen in silence. In an August 18, 1997 Washington Post op-ed, Professor David M. O’Brien and I put it this way:

“It is an unwritten rule but a rule nonetheless. No ordinary citizen can take notes in the courtroom of the U.S. Supreme Court, unless granted special prior approval by the officer of the Public Information Office. . . . (For an unknown period before 1988, not even members of the Court’s bar could lift a pen.) . . . . No one really really knows when the rule, which is of contemporary vintage, began. Insofar as there is any reason for the rule, it is to protect the ‘decorum factor.’ Violate the rule and the marshals whisk you away.”

“No one, including the ever-attentive press corps, fusses over the rule, one of the few of its kind enforced in any federal or state court in this land. . . . Back in 1988, however, Justice Harry Blackmun complained about the rule in a memo to his colleagues: ‘I wonder if we go too far in our request for decorum.’ Noting came of the complaint.”

We concluded our op-ed this way: “Imagine courtroom audiences . . . taking notes about what they hear and see, as if the Court were a civic classroom. Imagine citizens exercising their First Amendment rights to further their knowledge of [the Supreme Court] and their Constitution. What is amazing is that such things can only be imagined — for now.”

Ban Silently Lifted 

And then the world changed in November 2002. As Tony Mauro reported in a May 5, 2003 article for Legal Times: The rule’s “demise came without fanfare and without public notice, but Court public information officer Kathy Arberg confirmed last week that sometime last November the policy against note-taking was ‘no longer enforced’ by Court Police officers.” And then this: “One of the weblogs that handicaps Court cases, [SCOTUSblog], first noted the change on April 25th after blogger Ted Metzler attended the arguments in Nike v. Kasky. As he and other spectators went through security, Metzler recalls, ‘The officer told us we could bring in a notebook and pen and we all looked at each other.’ Metzler is currently a law clerk at D.C.’s Goldstein & Howe . . . .”

Professor Samuel V. Jones

Professor Samuel V. Jones

12 Years Later — Enter Professor Jones (the would-be notetaker)

He doesn’t fit the typical profile of a rabble-rouser. He is a former Marine Sargent, a former U.S. judge advocate, and before that senior counsel in the Commercial Law group at AT&T Corp and later as corporate counsel for Labor and Employment for Blockbuster, Inc. He is also a former Special Advisor to the Chair of the Illinois Judicial Council. And now he is a professor at the John Marshall Law School.

He is Samuel V. Jones. This former Marine is not a man to sit on his rights, especially his First Amendment rights. And so when the deputies in a circuit court ordered his to forsake those rights, he refused.

It all happened on May 8th during the course of bail hearings in a Cook County court presided over by Circuit Judge Laura Sullivan. Apparently, the atmosphere was tense as deputies patrolled the courtroom. At one point, according to Professor Jones, a “deputy approached and impolitely inquired, ‘Are you an attorney’? I identified myself as a professor of law doing research. She responded, ‘There is no note-taking in here.’ I wondered if the deputy knew that ‘the right of the press to access court proceedings is derivative of the public’s right,’ and journalists held no greater right than I did. I informed her that the office of the chief judge had advised me that note-taking is permitted. I asked if I had violated any laws or was disruptive. ‘No,’ she replied, and walked away.”

But that was hardly the end of the matter. Shortly thereafter, two different deputies ordered the professor out of the courtroom and confiscated his notes. “One deputy approached Judge Sullivan,” recalls Professor Jones, “and the proceedings immediately stopped. I was ordered to sit on a bench, told not to move or write, and was surrounded by several deputies.”

Judge Laura Sullivan

Judge Laura Sullivan

Here is how it ended: “After roughly 30 minutes, they released me with my notes. As I left, a group of African-Americans approached, wanting to shake hands. A lady enlightened me, ‘We saw what they did to you and figured you must be important.’ ‘Why,’ I asked. She explained, ‘Because they let you go.’”

Turns out that this is a old story in Cook County courts. According to recent a Chicago Tribune editorial, “in 2004, a different Cook County judge threw a different law professor out of her courtroom for taking notes. [Now retired] Judge Gloria Coco  forbade . . . writing in her courtroom . . . . That time, it ended up in federal court. A judge said the First Amendment protects public access to the courts so that citizens can observe and critique their government, and note-taking helps ensure an informed discussion.” (Here is the case: Goldschmidt v. Coco (2006).)

Thanks to Professor Jones, the problem may now have been solved for good insofar as Chief Judge Timothy Evans has since signed an “administrative order spelling out that note-taking is permitted in court.”

→ For an earlier discussion of the same problem, see Eugene Volokh, “Ban on Note-Taking by Spectators in Court,” Volokh Conspiracy, May 24, 2013

→ The American Judicature Society has conducted a federal court and 50-state court survey of “Note-Taking Laws,” this in connection with juror note-taking.

Third Circuit to Hear Challenge to Delaware’s Voter Guide Rules

The case is Delaware Strong Families v. Biden. In his complaint filed in federal district court for DSW (a 501(c)(3) biblical civic group), attorney David E. Wilks alleges that Delaware’s election laws concerning submission of voter guides are unconstitutional. The group plans to publish a voter guide (see appendix here) 60 days before the upcoming 2014 general election.  DSF’s non-partisan voter guides list all major party candidates for federal and state offices and those candidates’ positions on various issues. The responses are collected from the candidates themselves and, failing a reply, from public sources. In 2014, DSF intends to spend more than $500 to distribute its guide via direct mail and the Internet. DSW argues that Delaware’s election laws (15 Del Code § 8002(10), § 800(27), and § 8031) force it to file unduly burdensome reports with the state and require disclosure of the group’s confidential information, including the identities and home addresses of its contributors. The group maintains that such requirements violate its First and Fourteenth Amendment rights.

The lead defendant is Joseph Biden, III, the state attorney general. The State’s brief in opposition to the motion for a preliminary injunction can be found here.

Lawyers for the Center for Competitive Politics are co-counsel (Allen Dickerson, Esq.) in the case. As the Center sees it, the issue in the case comes down to this: “Should the state have the power to regulate groups that publish nonpartisan voter guides in the same way that it regulates candidate committees, political parties and PACs? . . .  As written, the law appears to require groups to choose between publishing information on candidates or violating the privacy of their supporters who might contribute as little as $9 a month. As a result of the law, Delawareans will find it more difficult to get information about elected officials and candidates.”

→ See here reWSJ video interview the Center’s president David Keating speaking on the case.

Last April, Judge Sue L. Robinson issued a preliminary injunction barring enforcement of the challenged Delaware laws pending resolution of the case. In its earlier Memorandum Opinion, the District Court found the laws unconstitutional, relying on both Supreme Court and Third Circuit precedents.There was no discovery in the case.

Briefs are due in early July. The Third Circuit is in recess for August, so the case is likely to be calendared for September or October.

Woman Said to Lose City Job Offer over Campaign Contribution

Last month Elizabeth Riel was offered the job of Public Affairs and Communications Officer for the City of Santa Monica. But last week city officials rescinded that offer. Why? As her attorney Steven J. Kaplan told a reporter for the Santa Monica Daily Press, her contract was termintaed because of a “legal campaign contribution she made in 2006.”

“‘Ms. Riel contends that the City of Santa Monica violated her First Amendment rights of free speech and association,’ Kaplan said in a statement, ‘by rescinding her employment contract because’ of the contribution.”

At first, City Manager Rod Gould would not comment, noting that it was a personnel matter. But later he said: “‘The duties of the Communications and Public Affairs Officer are different from most other positions in that this person must interact with all members of the City Council, various community leaders, the media, other legislators and serve as the official spokesperson for City government,’ he said. ‘To have the trust of all involved, this person must be free of all political alliances.’”

According to Daily Press reporter David Mark Simpson, Kaplan’s “lawsuit would assert claims for breach of Riel’s First Amendments rights of free speech and association, violation of a state code that,” as Kaplan maintains, “‘prohibits restrictions on the political activities of any municipal employee,’ and claims relating to City Hall’s breach of her employment contract.” 

For the Record: ACLU Opposes Udall Constitutional Amendment

In a June 3, 2014 letter to Senators Patrick Leahy and  Charles Grassley, the American Civil Liberties Union formally opposed S.J. Res. 19, a proposed constitutional amendment, sponsored by Sen. Tom Udall (D-NM). The ACLU argued that “would severely limit the First Amendment., lead directly to government censorship of political speech and result in a host of unintended consequences that would undermine the goals the amendment has been introduced to advance—namely encouraging vigorous political dissent and providing voice to the voiceless, which we, of course, support.”

The 8-page letter (signed by Laura Murphy (director of the Washington Legislative Office, and Gabriel Rottman, Legislative Counsel) listed three main objections to the proposal to amend the First Amendment:

  1. The Amendment is Unnecessary and Would be Corrosive to Vigorous Political Debate About the Issues of the Day
  2. The Amendment Could Perversely Harm Freedom of the Press and Would Directly Eviscerate the Freedoms of Speech, Assembly and Petition, and
  3. Amending the Constitution to Limit a Specifically Enumerated Constitutional Right is Unprecedented in the History of the Republic 

The letter closed with the following statement:

“For all of these reasons, we strongly urge you to oppose the Udall amendment, and to focus Congress’s attention on enacting effective public financing laws, tightening up the coordination rules, ensuring prosecutors have effective resources to pursue straw donations and other common sense measures for promoting the integrity of our political system.”

“What you must not do is ‘break’ the Constitution by amending the First Amendment.”

[Hat tip to Nadine Strossen]

FAA Opens Door to Approving Commercial Drone Operations

From Holland & Knight online newsletter: “Today, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) approved the first commercial drone operation over land in the United States. The FAA, which refers to drones as unmanned aerial systems (UAS), has given energy corporation British Petroleum (BP) and UAS manufacturer AeroVironment permission to fly drones to conduct aerial surveys of BP pipelines, roads and equipment in Prudhoe Bay, Alaska – the largest oilfield in the U.S. This waiver follows the FAA’s earlier approval of drone operations to conduct aerial surveillance over Arctic waters.Current FAA regulations prohibit any use of drones for commercial or business purposes, however, the FAA will grant waivers under limited circumstances.”

“After significant deliberation, today’s approval is a concrete step by the FAA to integrate commercial and civil UAS into the national air space. The FAA is also considering requests for additional commercial UAS operations from other industries, including film and TV production, precision agriculture, power line and pipeline inspection, and oil and gas flare-stack inspection.”

Greenwald’s Surveillance Book Draws Fire

Do you agree with this statement?

“The question is who decides. It seems clear, at least to me, that the private companies that own newspapers, and their employees, should not have the final say over the release of government secrets, and a free pass to make them public with no legal consequences. In a democracy . . .that decision must ultimately be made by the government.. . . . If the leaker can go to prison, why should the leakee be exempt? . . . . I can’t see how we can have a policy that authorizes newspapers and reporters to chase down and publish any national security leaks they can find.”

– Michael Kinsley, Book Review, “Eyes Everywhere,” NYT, June 8, 2014 (reviewing Glen Greenwald’s No Place to Hide).

→ The review drew critical comments from within the Times and elsewhere.

Forthcoming Book

Quick Hits

Last Scheduled FAN Column: FAN # 18: “What to do with the First Amendment? Election Law & Free Speech

Next Scheduled FAN Column: Wednesday, June 18th

FAN 19.1 (First Amendment News) — Media Scholar Named Next Dean of GW Law School

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It’s now official: Blake D. Morant, dean of the Wake Forest University School of Law and president-elect of the Association of American Law Schools, will be the next Dean of the George Washington Law School. According to a GW press release: Dean Morant “will assume the deanship on Sept. 1 after having served seven years as dean of the Wake Forest University School of Law. ‘Blake Morant is not only a seasoned dean but also a national leader in legal education,’ said GW President Steven Knapp. ‘He brings to this important position a proven record of accomplishments, and his extensive leadership experience will make him an extremely valuable addition to our law school and the entire university.’”

Dean Blake Morant

Dean Blake Morant

“‘I have respected and admired the George Washington Law School throughout my career and consider serving as its next dean to be a distinct privilege,’ Mr. Morant said. “‘I look forward to working with the constituency of this historic institution during this time of both challenge and extraordinary opportunity.’”

Media Law Scholarship

Though his scholarship includes other areas of law (such as contracts, administrative law, and legal education), Dean Morant’s articles on media law include the following:

Advance Greeting: Welcome to Washington, D.C., Dean Morant!

FAN 19.2 (First Amendment News) — High Court Finds Art. III Standing in False Statements Case & Grants Review in Threats Case

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The Supreme Court just handed down its ruling in Susan B. Anthony List v. Driehaus. The vote was 9-0. Here is the opinion.

The issues in the case were:

(1) Whether, to challenge a speech-suppressive law, a party whose speech is arguably proscribed must prove that authorities would certainly and successfully prosecute him, as the Sixth Circuit holds, or should the court presume that a credible threat of prosecution exists absent desuetude or a firm commitment by prosecutors not to enforce the law, as seven other Circuits hold; and

(2) whether the Sixth Circuit erred by holding, in direct conflict with the Eighth Circuit, that state laws proscribing “false” political speech are not subject to pre-enforcement First Amendment review so long as the speaker maintains that its speech is true, even if others who enforce the law manifestly disagree.

The Sixth Circuit rejected the Plaintiff’s claims. The Supreme Court reversed.

Article III Standing (from Justice Thomas’ opinion)

  • “An allegation of future injury may suffice if the threatened injury is ‘certainly impending,” or there is a “‘substantial risk’ that the harm will occur.’”
  • “[W]e have permitted pre-enforcement review under circumstances that render the threatened enforcement sufficiently imminent. Specifically, we have held that a plaintiff satisfies the injury-in-fact requirement where he alleges ‘an intention to engage in a course of conduct arguably affected with a constitutional interest, but proscribed by a statute, and there exists a credible threat of prosecution thereunder.’”
  • “[P]etitioners’ intended future conduct is “arguably. . . proscribed by [the] statute” they wish to challenge. . . . The Ohio false statement law sweeps broadly, . . . and covers the subject matter of petitioners’ intended speech.”
  • “SBA’s insistence that the allegations in its press release were true did not prevent the Commission panel from finding probable cause to believe that SBA had violated the law the first time around. And, there is every reason to think that similar speech in the future will result in similar proceedings, notwithstanding SBA’s belief in the truth of its allegations. Nothing in this Court’s decisions requires a plaintiff who wishes to challenge the constitutionality of a law to confess that he will in fact violate that law.”
  • “[T]he threat of future enforcement of the false statement statute is substantial. Most obviously, there is a history of past enforcement here: SBA was the subject of a complaint in a recent election cycle. We have observed that past enforcement against the same conduct is good evidence that the threat of enforcement is not ‘chimerical.’”
  • “We take the threatened Commission proceedings into account because administrative action, like arrest or prosecution, may give rise to harm sufficient to justify pre-enforcement review.”
  • “Although the threat of Commission proceedings is a substantial one, we need not decide whether that threat standing alone gives rise to an Article III injury. The burdensome Commission proceedings here are backed by the additional threat of criminal prosecution. We conclude that the combination of those two threats suffices to create an Article III injury under the circumstances of this case.”

Ripeness (from Justice Thomas’ opinion)

  • “[W]e need not resolve the continuing vitality of the prudential ripeness doctrine in this case because the ‘fitness’ and ‘hardship’ factors are easily satisfied here. First, petitioners’ challenge to the Ohio false statement statute presents an issue that is “purely legal, and will not be clarified by further factual development.” . . .. And denying prompt judicial review would impose a substantial hardship on petitioners, forcing them to choose between refraining from core political speech on the one hand, or engaging in that speech and risking costly Commission proceedings and criminal prosecution on the other.” 

Counsel

  • Michael A. Carvin for Petitioners
  • Eric J. Feigin for United States (amicus curiae)
  • Eric E. Murphy for Respondents

Amicus Briefs

Among those filing amicus briefs were the following:

  • ACLU (Steven R. Shapiro) for Petitioners
  • First Amendment Lawyers Association (Jennifer M. Kinsley ) for Petitioners
  • American Booksellers Association, et al (Michael Bamberger) for Petitioners
  • Cato Institute & P.J. O’Rourke (Ilya Shapiro) for Petitioners
  • Republican National Committee (Michael T. Morley) for Petitioners
  •  Center for Competitive Politics (Allen Dickerson) for Petitioners
  • Student Press Law Center (Adam Charnes) for Petitioner

Court Grants Review in Threats Case 

The case is Elonis v. U.S.

The issue raised in the case was:

Whether, consistent with the First Amendment and Virginia v. Black, conviction of threatening another person under 18 U.S.C. § 875(c) requires proof of the defendant’s subjective intent to threaten, as required by the Ninth Circuit and the supreme courts of Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Vermont; or whether it is enough to show that a “reasonable person” would regard the statement as threatening, as held by other federal courts of appeals and state courts of last resort.

Counsel

  • John P. Elwood for Petitioner
  • Donald Verrilli, Jr. for United States

FAN 19.3 (First Amendment News) 9th Cir. Strikes California Requirement of Initiative-Proponent Identification on Initiative Petitions

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Earlier today the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit held unconstitutional California’s requirement that ballot initiative petition forms identify the official initiative proponents. This follows court opinions allowing anonymity at the point of petition circulation.

The opinion in Chula Vista Citizens for Jobs v. Norriscan be found here.

Opinion by Judge O’Scannlain, in which Judge Graber joins, except as to Part IV, and in which Judge Bea joins, except as to Part III. Judge Graber filed an opinion dissenting as to Part IV. Judge Bea filed an opinion concurring as to Part III.

→  Prevailing Counsel: James Bopp, Jr. for the Plaintiff-Appellant.

Prediction: Professor Richard Hasen (on Election Law Blog): “I expect this issue will go en banc and perhaps to the Supreme Court—with a decent chance of reversal.”


Richard Posner & NAACP v. Button — A Short History

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Since I had to prepare remarks for a panel discussion for today, I was unable to do my weekly First Amendment News column. Instead, I opted to present an abbreviated essay from a work-in-progerss, actually two. In the main, I  stitched together something from one of my books (We Must not be Afraid to be Free) and a future article (“The Maverick – A Biographical Sketch of Richard Posner”), this in addition to some reliance on Justice Brennan: Liberal Champion (2010) by Seth Stern and Stephen Wermiel and other works. I also benefitted from the thoughtful assistance of Judge Posner and Robert M. O’Neil. The result is this post, also a prelude to a more scholarly work on NAACP v. Button (1963). Shortly, I will say more about Judge Posner’s involvement in Button, but before I do I thought it might useful to say a few prefatory things about the history of the case.

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The case’s original name was NAACP v. Patty, which began in 1957. After cert. was granted, the case name changed to NAACP v. Gray. Later it would be changed to Button, the last name of the Virginia Attorney General at the time. The controversy involved a challenge to five Virginia laws which, according to Fourth Circuit Court Judge Morris Aimes Soper, “were enacted [in 1956] for the express purpose of impeding the integration of the races in the public schools of the state which the plaintiff corporations are seeking to promote.” The laws in question banned the encouragement of certain kinds of litigation (“barratry” statutes) and the solicitation of clients (including in pro bono cases) and/or the financing of litigation (“champerty” statutes). The lawyer who represented the NAACP was Robert L. Carter (1917-2012), Thurgood Marshall’s chief legal assistant (and later General Counsel to the NAACP). By 1957, recalled Carter in his memoir (A Matter of Law), the group was involved in 25 cases in various states employing barratry and champerty laws aimed at halting civil rights litigation. Henry T. Wickham (1920-2008) represented the state of Virginia. In his obituary it was noted that Mr. Wickham “served as a special assistant to former Virginia Attorney General J. Lindsay Almond Jr. representing Virginia in an effort to preserve segregated public schools” in Brown v. Board.

 For an informative and thoughtful account of Button, see Harry Kalven, Jr., The Negro and the First Amendment 75-90 (1965).

The Hand of Fate

Robert Button was the Attorney General of Virginia (1962-1970) who backed policies of Massive Resistance to prevent public school desegregation.

Robert Young Button was the Attorney General of Virginia (Dem. –1962-1970) who backed policies of Massive Resistance to prevent public school desegregation (see short video clip here)

When it came time for a conference vote in the Button case, Chief Justice Earl Warren, predictably, voted to reverse. “The purpose of the statute is obviously to circumvent Brown,” he said. Justice Hugo Black agreed. “This is part of a scheme to defeat the Court’s order, and sooner or later we will have to grapple with these problems in those terms. The NAACP is finished if this law stands.” But Justice Felix Frankfurter pushed back. “I can’t imagine a worse disservice than to continue being the guardians of the Negroes. . . . There is nothing in the record to show that this statute is aimed at Negroes as such.” Justices Tom Clark and Charles Evans Whittaker agreed. “To strike this law down, we would have to discriminate in favor of Negroes,” said Clark, to which Whittaker added: “We should be color blind on this law.”

Warren added up the votes. It was a five-to-four split in favor of the state of Virginia. Justice Frankfurter eagerly began work on his majority opinion upholding Virginia’s law—the laws that made the NAACP’s brand of non-pecuniary solicitation and financing of litigation a disciplinary offense that could result in disbarment. (For a discussion of Frankfurter’s early role in the case, see Mark V. Tushnet, Making Civil Rights Law 277-278 (1994).)

At the same time, Justice Black circulated drafts of a dissent in which he claimed, among other things, that perhaps the law should be renamed “[a]n Act to make it difficult and dangerous for the [NAACP] and Virginia lawyers to assert the constitutional rights of Virginia Negroes in state and federal courts.” Then Black added a passage revealing how far removed he was from his days as a hooded member of the Ku Klux Klan. “The job of lawyers under [the] Constitution is not to lead revolutions, but to lead their people in taking advantage of the American methods for correcting injustice.” And courts, Black continued, had a responsibility to serve as “sanctuaries of justice.” To ignore that role here, he concluded, was to leave the courts “a little less havens of refuge than they were before this Virginia law was sustained.”

Robert L. Carter, lawyer for the NAACP

Robert L. Carter, lawyer for the NAACP

Justice Black’s internal comments exposed just how wide the ideological chasm had grown between the members of this Court. But Robert Carter wouldn’t get a chance to read them. Nor, for that matter, would anyone else. On April 1, 1962, before the Court could announce its decision in NAACP v. Button, Justice Whittaker retired on the advice of his physician. He was sixty-one. The “great volume and continuous stresses of the court’s work,” he explained in a written statement, had brought him to the “point of physical exhaustion.” That left a four-to-four split among the remaining jurists, who scheduled a rehearing of the case the following term. Then, a few days later, seventy-nine-year-old Felix Frankfurter collapsed at his desk from a stroke. He lived, but shortly afterwards he announced his retirement. Just like that, President Kennedy could appoint two new Justices—and Robert Carter could feel new hope.

 An audio of the arguments in NAACP v. Gray can be found here.

New Faces, New Result

By the fall of 1962, President Kennedy had successfully appointed to the bench his top two choices—Byron White and Arthur Goldberg. And it promised to be a busy fall at the Supreme Court after they were both confirmed. Sometime around then, as Stern and Wermiel recount it, Justice Brennan busily circulated a 63-page memo that detailed the activities of the NAACP and its Virginia branch.

After hearing rearguments in Button, the Justices met privately to discuss the case on October 12, 1962. Chief Justice Warren had not changed his mind since first discussing the facts a year earlier. “The NAACP has a right to be in business,” he began. “If this suit goes against the NAACP, it is out of business.” Justices Black, Douglas, and Clark also maintained their original opinions. So did the typically restrained Justice John Marshall Harlan, who continued to claim that Virginia’s new law was “plainly constitutional. . . . Brown v. Board of Education will never work out if it is left in the federal domain. The states must do it. We have no reason to reverse Virginia on this law.” Justice Potter Stewart, the Eisenhower appointee from Cincinnati with the unpredictable voting record, was the first of the veteran Justices to suggest a possible change of heart. “I am not sure,” he said, “but I am inclined to reverse.” Justice White, the first of the two new members to speak at the private conference, was even less certain than Stewart. “I do not know where I stand.” Goldberg was more certain. “There is a substantial equal protection point here and I could reverse on that,” he said.

Justice William Brennan

Justice William Brennan, Jr. 

The loss of Frankfurter and Whittaker resulted in a voting shift on the Court. Once the Justices’ final votes were tallied, last year’s five-to-four defeat became this year’s six-to-three victory. While he still had some life in him, Justice Frankfurter expressed his contempt for the changed outcome.

 An audio of the arguments in NAACP v. Button (the reargued case, still listed as NAACP v. Gray) can be found here.

It was a new day for the NAACP. Justice William Brennan announced the decision on January 14, 1963. “We hold that the activities of the NAACP, its affiliates and legal staff shown on this record are modes of expression and association protected by the First and Fourteenth Amendments which Virginia may not prohibit, under its power to regulate the legal profession, as improper solicitation of legal business.”

Brennan’s opinion was notable, wrote Thomas Emerson, because it “extend[ed] the concept of expression to a point that no decision of the Court had previously reached.” Litigation, Brennan ruled, is not just “a technique of resolving private differences; it is a means for achieving the lawful objectives of equality of treatment by all government, federal, state and local, for the members of the Negro community in this country. It is thus,” Brennan concluded, “a form of political expression.”

In Robert Carter’s mind, the decision represented “a very vital civil rights victory. Button provided First Amendment protection for the activities of organizations such as the NAACP that engage in protest activities through the court process—those that use court litigation to fight racial or other forms of discrimination.”

Behind the Scenes: Brennan’s Law Clerk

Richard A. Posner, Harvard Law Review photo

Richard A. Posner, Harvard Law Review photo

Since Button was held over a year due to the change in the Court’s makeup and the rearmament of the case, work on the majority opinion did not come to Felix Frankfurter’s law clerk, David P. Currie. By the same token, fate might have deprived Brennan’s law clerk for the 1961-62 Term, Frank I. Michelman, the chance to work on the Justice’s possible dissent. Instead, fate pointed its finger to Richard A. Posner to write not a dissent but a majority opinion.

He was 23 and fresh out of Harvard Law School. His first full-time law job after graduating was as a law clerk to Justice Brennan. (Robert M. O’Neil, another Harvard Law man, was Brennan’s other clerk.) As Fortuna had it, the Button case (the one that was reargued) was assigned to Justice Brennan, who in turn passed it along to his law clerk to write the opinion. “That was one I did for Brennan,” Posner told Kenneth Durr in a 2011 interview. When I recently asked Judge Posner if his statement meant that he had written Button (or the lion’s share of it), he replied “yes.”

Aside: Given the change in the voting lineup and Justice Brennan’s majority opinion, Justice Black never found any need to render an opinion (his law clerk at the time was A. E. Dick Howard). But Justice Harlan did file a dissenting opinion (his law clerk at the time was David L. Shapiro).

According to Stern and Wermiel, Brennan “initially wrote a narrow opinion that rejected the Virginia law as overly broad, avoiding the underlying constitutional issue of whether the law interfered with the freedom of association or speech.” When Justice Black objected to that “narrow approach, . . . Brennan rewrote the opinion to address the law’s First Amendment implications.” Neither Posner nor O’Neil had any recollection of Brennan’s so-called “narrow opinion.”

→ An earlier account the internal workings of the Button Court is set out in Bernard Schwartz’s Super Chief: Earl Warren & His Supreme Court — A Judicial Biography 450-452 (1983).

“Take it to the printer”

Here is the gloss on the Button story as told to me recently by Bob O’Neil: “Immediately after the first conference at which opinions were assigned (that would have been the second week or so of October, 1962) the Justice walked into our shared office and turned to each of us. To Dick he said simply ‘Gray,’ which was, of course, the initial caption of the NAACP case), and to me “Wong Sun” (a ‘fruit of the poisonous tree’ search case).”

 Two assignments, two cases (a First Amendment case and a Fourth Amendment one), and two law clerks (that was the allotment back then). “We went immediately to work preparing drafts, which were ready by the ensuing week. Dick worked page by page toward an impeccable draft, while in contrast I revised page by page until the text seemed ready for review.  The Justice took both drafts home for careful reading.”

Brennan reviewed both draft opinions. “On Monday morning, with feigned indignation, he slammed both drafts down on our respective desks. ‘Dammit,’ he said, ‘I’ve worked on these all weekend and except for a few typos I can’t improve on either. Take them to the printer!’” Sometime around then, Posner recalled, “a chunk” of his work was “cut out by Brennan at Black’s insistence,” this while Posner was away. With that, the Posner opinion went off to the printer.

And so it was in the cases of NAACP v. Button (a 6-3 ruling) and Wong Sun v. United States (a 5-4 ruling).

Eight passages 

As Professor Emerson correctly observed, Button broke new First Amendment ground.

In addition to the passages quoted above, here are eight additional and important excerpts from the Button opinion:

  1. Beyond Labels & Abstractions to Vigorous Advocacy: “We meet at the outset the contention that ‘solicitation’ is wholly outside the area of freedoms protected by the First Amendment. To this contention there are two answers. The first is that a State cannot foreclose the exercise of constitutional rights by mere labels. The second is that abstract discussion is not the only species of communication [that] the Constitution protects; the First Amendment also protects vigorous advocacy, certainly of lawful ends, against governmental intrusion.”
  2. The Importance of Litigation: “Groups which find themselves unable to achieve their objectives through the ballot frequently turn to the courts. Just as it was true of the opponents of New Deal legislation during the 1930′s, for example, no less is it true of the Negro minority today. And under the conditions of modern government, litigation may well be the sole practicable avenue open to a minority to petition for redress of grievances.”
  3. The Right of Association: “The NAACP is not a conventional political party; but the litigation it assists, while serving to vindicate the legal rights of members of the American Negro community, at the same time and perhaps more importantly, makes possible the distinctive contribution of a minority group to the ideas and beliefs of our society. For such a group, association for litigation may be the most effective form of political association.”
  4. The Threat of Deterrence: “The objectionable quality of vagueness and overbreadth does not depend upon absence of fair notice to a criminally accused or upon unchanneled delegation of legislative powers, but upon the danger of tolerating, in the area of First Amendment freedoms, the existence of a penal statute susceptible of sweeping and improper application. These freedoms are delicate and vulnerable, as well as supremely precious in our society. The threat of sanctions may deter their exercise almost as potently as the actual application of sanctions. Because First Amendment freedoms need breathing space to survive, government may regulate in the area only with narrow specificity.”
  5. Narrowly Tailored: “Precision of regulation must be the touchstone in an area so closely touching our most precious freedoms.”
  6. Civil Rights Litigation: “Resort to the courts to seek vindication of constitutional rights is a different matter from the oppressive, malicious, or avaricious use of the legal process for purely private gain. Lawsuits attacking racial discrimination, at least in Virginia, are neither very profitable nor very popular. They are not an object of general competition among Virginia lawyers;the problem is rather one of an apparent dearth of lawyers who are willing to undertake such litigation.”
  7. No Regard to Race: “That the petitioner happens to be engaged in activities of expression and association on behalf of the rights of Negro children to equal opportunity is constitutionally irrelevant to the ground of our decision. The course of our decisions in the First Amendment area makes plain that its protections would apply as fully to those who would arouse our society against the objectives of the petitioner. For the Constitution protects expressionand association without regard to the race, creed, or political or religious affiliation of the members of the group which invokes its shield, or to the truth, popularity, or social utility of the ideas and beliefs which are offered.” [The last portion of the preceding sentence was quoted approvingly by Justice Brennan in New York Times co. v. Sullivan (1964).]
  8. Satisfying the Applicable Test: “The decisions of this Court have consistently held that only a compelling state interest in the regulation of a subject within the State’s constitutional power to regulate can justify limiting First Amendment freedoms. .  . [T]he State has failed to advance any substantial regulatory interest, in the form of substantive evils flowing from petitioner’s activities, which can justify the broad prohibitions which it has imposed. Nothing that this record shows as to the nature and purpose of NAACP activities permits an inference of any injurious intervention in or control of litigation which would constitutionally authorize the application of Chapter 33 to those activities.”

An “exciting” (but somewhat constrained?) opinion

Professor Harry Kalven, Jr.

Professor Harry Kalven, Jr.

Professor Harry Kalven (1914-1974) thought highly of NAACP v. Button and its contribution to First Amendment jurisprudence. “The Court,” he wrote in The Negro and the First Amendment, “offers a generous view of the range of First Amendment protection, a view which seems to me to be indisputably correct although the Court had never previously been given an appropriate occasion for announcing it.” He found it “exciting” that majority opinion appeared to break “new ground.”

And what was that new ground? “[T]hat litigation for the Negro today [is] a First Amendment activity. It is a kind of protest, a kind of vigorous advocacy, a kind of political expression.” Still, he thought the opinion somewhat constrained in terms of its response to Justice Harlan’s dissent. In that regard, he thought that “Brennan [did] not seem to have the courage of his First Amendment convictions . . . . ” He thus raised a rhetorical question: “Would it not have been possible for him to stand on his First Amendment point and to hold that recruiting of constitutional litigation with vigor is a protected activity, so that even Justice Harlan’s construction of the Virginia statue violates the First Amendment?” (There is more, but for now I will simply refer readers to Professor Kalven’s book.)

Vibrant Public-Interest Litigation 

Beyond the doctrine, there was the reality of the ruling, its real-world impact on a civil rights group heretofore under constant attack. In that regard, observed Hunter R. Clark in his 1995 biography of Brennan, the “ruling in Button gave a tremendous boost to NAACP efforts in the South.”

In much the same realist mindset, Professor Mark Tushnet flagged the practical and constitutional significance of the public interest-litigant aspect of Button. “In the barratry case,” he wrote, “the Court endorsed the form of public-interest law practice that [Charles] Houston, [Thurgood] Marshall, and their colleagues had created. . . . [Button] offered the Court and the profession two models of ‘reform’: a transformation of traditional standards that would have restricted the development of public-interest practice, and a transformation that promoted it.” (This general topic is explored at greater length in this article by Professor Susan Carle.)

In his book Brennan and Democracy (2005), Frank Michelman suggested that the reasoning in Button had “remarkable implications.”

“It directly attacks the notion that law stands neutrally and impartially above and apart from politics, while tossing overboard a traditional, conservative, justification of lawsuits as essentially nonaggressive and politically status actions by which people simply ask the state’s assistance in securing their entitlements under preexisting, fixed, and unquestioned rules of justice.”

In sum, young Richard Posner’s work product in Button resulted in an opinion that gave new meaning to First Amendment law and new vitality to public-interest litigation. Though it is not listed as a part of the body of his nearly 3,000 judicial opinions, Button is, nonetheless, one of Posner’s earliest and most significant opinions.

As I will discuss in a future piece on Judge Posner, there is a certain irony here, namely, that such a momentous opinion was written by a law clerk who when he became a judge refused to permit his own law clerks to write his judicial opinions. Then again, as Judge Posner once quipped, “Life is full of surprises . . . .”

FAN 19.5 (First Amendment News) — Supreme Court Decides Public Employee Speech Case: 1-A Claim Prevails 9-0

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The Supreme Court just handed down its opinion in Lane v. Franks.  The vote was unanimous and the opinion for the Court was authored by Justice Sonia Sotomayor.  The opinion can be found here. Justice Clarence Thomas filed a concurring opinion in which Justices Antonin Scalia and Samuel Alito joined.

Issues: (1) Whether the government is categorically free under the First Amendment to retaliate against a public employee for truthful sworn testimony that was compelled by subpoena and was not a part of the employee’s ordinary job responsibilities; and (2) whether qualified immunity precludes a claim for damages in such an action.

  1. Held: “The Court holds that Lane’s sworn testimony outside the scope of his ordinary job duties is entitled to First Amendment protection. His testimony was speech as a citizen on a matter of public concern.” (Amy Howe)
  2. The Court also holds that “the individual defendant has qualified immunity from this suit because prior precedent wasn’t clear enough that you could not fire an employee for sworn testimony.” (Tom Goldstein)

Tejinder Singh (Goldstein & Russell) counsel for Petitioner.

Select Excerpts from Majority Opinion

First Amendment Issues

  • Matters of Public Concern & Encouraging Public Employee Speech — “Speech by citizens on matters of public concern lies at the heart of the First Amendment, which “was fashioned to assure unfettered interchange of ideas for the bringing about of political and social changes desired by the people.” This remains true when speech concerns information related to or learned through public employment. After all, public employees do not renounce their citizenship when they accept employment, and this Court has cautioned time and again that public employers may not condition employment on the relinquishment of constitutional rights. . . . There is considerable value, moreover, in encouraging, rather than inhibiting, speech by public employees.”
  • Reserved for a Future Case: “We . . . need not address in this case whether truthful sworn testimony would constitute citizen speech under Garcetti when given as part of a public employee’s ordinary job duties, and express no opinion on the matter today.” (emphasis added)
  • Truth is a Defense: “Truthful testimony under oath by a public employee outside the scope of his ordinary job duties is speech as a citizen for First Amendment purposes. That is so even when the testimony relates to his public employment or concerns information learned during that employment. . . . When the person testifying is a public employee, he may bear separate obligations to his employer—for example, an obligation not to show up to court dressed in an unprofessional manner. But any such obligations as an employee are distinct and independent from the obligation, as a citizen, to speak the truth. That independent obligation renders sworn testi- mony speech as a citizen and sets it apart from speech made purely in the capacity of an employee.”
  • Garcetti Distinguished: “Garcetti said nothing about speech that simply relates to public employment or concerns information learned in the course of public employment. The Garcetti Court made explicit that its holding did not turn on the fact that the memo at issue “concerned the subject matter of [the prosecutor’s] employment,” because “[t]he First Amendment protects some expressions related to the speaker’s job.” In other words, the mere fact that a citizen’s speech concerns information acquired by virtue of his public employment does not transform that speech into employee—rather than citizen—speech.”
  • Key Garcetti Question: “The critical question under Garcetti is whether the speech at issue is itself ordinarily within the scope of an employee’s duties, not whether it merely concerns those duties.
  • Value of Speech by Public Employees: “It bears emphasis that our precedents dating back to Pickering have recognized that speech by public employees on subject matter related to their employment holds special value precisely because those employees gain knowledge of matters of public concern through their employment.”
  • Preventing Corruption: “It would be antithetical to our jurisprudence to conclude that the very kind of speech necessary to prosecute corruption by public officials—speech by public employees regarding information learned through their employment—may never form the basis for a First Amendment retaliation claim. Such a rule would place public employees who witness corruption in an impossible position, torn between the obligation to testify truthfully and the desire to avoid retaliation and keep their jobs.”

Justice Thomas’ Concurrence

  • Limited Application of Garcetti: Deciding this case “requires little more than a straightforward application of Garcetti. There, we held that when a public employee speaks “pursuant to” his official duties, he is not speaking “as a citizen,” and First Amendment protection is unavailable. The petitioner in this case did not speak “pursuant to” his ordinary job duties because his responsibilities did not include testifying in court proceedings, and no party has suggested that he was subpoenaed as a representative of his employer.”
  • Employee Speech re Work-Related Responsibilities: “We accordingly have no occasion to address the quite different question whether a public employee speaks “as a citizen” when he testifies in the course of his ordinary job responsibilities. For some public employees—such as police officers, crime scene techni- cians, and laboratory analysts—testifying is a routine and critical part of their employment duties. Others may be called to testify in the context of particular litigation as the designated representatives of their employers.” 

FAN 20 (First Amendment News) — New Book, New Legislation, New Study & More News

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No First Amendment cases from the Supreme Court today. Most likely tomorrow (perhaps Monday?).

→ What’s left? The only First Amendment free expression cases left to be decided this Term are:

  1. McCullen v. Coakley
  2. Harris v. Quinn

New Book — Tribe & Matz on Roberts Court & Free Speech 

Laurence Tribe

Laurence Tribe

In May of 2013 I profiled a forthcoming book, which has just been released. “Forty-five years after the publication of his first book (Technology: Process of Assessment and Choice), Laurence Tribe is preparing to release another book, tentatively titled Uncertain Justice (2014).” I wrote that in SCOTUSblog. “This forthcoming offering,” I added, “will come out six years after Tribe’s last book (The Invisible Constitution). The book will be the Harvard Law professor’s sixteenth. Like a few of his other works, Uncertain Justice will be co-authored – this time Joshua Matz is his literary partner on this work on the Roberts Court.” Well, wait no more; here it is: Uncertain Justice: The Roberts Court & The Constitution (Henry Holt, 2014). Mr. Matz is a Harvard law graduate who clerked for Judge Stephen Reinhardt and will soon clerk for Justice Anthony Kennedy.

Joshua Matz

Joshua Matz

While Uncertain Justice has received some early favorable reviews, my focus here is on only two chapters in the book: Chapter 3 (“Campaign Finance: Follow the Money”) and Chapter 4  (“Freedom of Speech: Sex, Lies & Video Games”). Together, these chapters consume 165 of the book’s 320 pages of text.

↓→ Campaign Finance

“The truth is somewhere in the middle.”

In a galvanized world of frenzied litmus-test beliefs over the role of money in our electoral system, Tribe and Matz (T&M) can be refreshingly open-minded: “It is easy to lose sight of the fact that Citizens United posed incredibly difficult questions about free speech, popular sovereignty, and political equality,” they write. “Deciding when Congress can ban certain disfavored speakers from the marketplace of ideas or limit how much they can speak is no easy task. It certainly isn’t outlandish to conclude, as the Court did, that free speech rights must prevail over hard-to-document fears that corporate wealth will distort public discourse or corrupt politicians.”

Then again, they do speak of the “Roberts Court’s broader agenda of deregulating campaign finance” reforms.  On that score, they maintain that by “reshaping the architecture of money, influence, and political organization, the Roberts Court is transforming how America conducts — and funds — politics.” In an endnote (p. 342, n. 64) they state: “While we do not purport to identify specific instances in which electoral outcomes shifted because of trends triggered by Citizens United, it seems to us highly likely that this has occurred in at least some races.”

While the authors freely offer the views of the “many critics of Citizens United,” they also concede that “Citizens United was a hard case because the Court faced a choice among evils.” With welcome objectivity and nuance, they add: “it’s extremely hard to determine whether any given campaign finance rule has a big enough impact to survive judicial scrutiny.  Judges have long implemented the First Amendment by requiring — among other things — that  restrictions on speech demonstrably achieve a legitimate goal. The causes of political corruption in America,” they stress, “and the reasons why politicians act the way they do . . . are many and complex.  Money in politics is only part of that story . . . .”

On the one hand, T&M understand how the Roberts Court’s narrow definition of corruption might be viewed as necessary in order to foster a “workable” body of First Amendment law sensitive to the concerns of free speech. On the other hand, they think that the Citizens United Court might have resorted to a “more modest” course of action that would “have left more room for politicians to use campaign finance laws, carefully reviewed by courts, as one tool among many in their efforts to restore public confidence in government integrity.” In other words, they tread cautiously in this ideological minefield.

So what should reformers do? In an endnote, Professor Tribe discloses that he “assisted Representative Adam Schiff of California in drafting a proposed [constitutional] amendment that was introduced in the 112th Congress.” That said, no defense of such radical constitutional surgery is offered in the book. In fact, the authors skip quickly past calls for constitutional amendments. Instead, they counsel that “critics of Citizens United would be well served to move past issues like corporate personhood and money’s status as speech. Instead, they might aim to ensure greater transparency in our brave new world of Super PACs and 501(c) organizations.” {See DISCLOSE Act item below}

If there were ever to be a national forum on the First Amendment and campaign finance reform, the organizers would be wise to invite Messrs. Tribe and Matz, if only to add some light in an otherwise overheated universe.

Note: Since Uncertain Justice was completed in “early 2014,” the Court’s April 2014 ruling in McCutcheon v. FEC (2014) is not discussed.

 Sex, Lies & Video Games

“There is more to the Roberts Courts First Amendment cases than meets the eye.”

T&M do, nonetheless, have some conceptual bones to pick with the Roberts Court (or at least with the conservative wing of that Court) when it comes to free speech. They argue that the Court “has rigidly adhered to categorical rules that broadly protect certain kinds of speech but occasionally undermine core First Amendment values by protecting speech that really is harmful enough to justify restrictions.” Then again, they emphasize that even as the Court “insists that these rigid rules are necessary to protect speech, it has displayed a taste for flexibility while creating new gaps in the First Amendment’s canvas.”

“The Court booms forcefully when it vindicates borderline free speech claims,” T&M maintain. “Meanwhile, much more quietly, it denies protection to some of those who most need its help . . . .” While there is merit in this claim, it is not entirely clear what makes a free speech case a “borderline” one. More importantly, and as seasoned First Amendment lawyers know, such “borderline” cases often contain important dicta that may well prove important in, if I may put it this way, “mainline” free speech cases.

Be that as it may, T&M are spot on in their critique of Holder v. Humanitarian Law Project (2010). They do their readers a service by reminding them that the government’s case was argued, and vigorously so, by none other than then S.G. Elena Kagan. (The narrative pie might have been sweeter still if they had mentioned the stellar work done by opposing counsel, Professor David Cole, who held his own during oral arguments.) In abbreviated form and in relevant part, here is how T&M assess the majority’s constitutional handiwork: “the Court [per Chief Justice John Roberts] embraced a narrow view of its role in evaluating the justifications of a speech-restrictive law.” Importantly, they add, it “did not simply defer to a questionable finding of fact by Congress or the Executive Branch about the dangers of speech; rather, it didn’t require any factual findings at all” — and all this by way of its purported use of a “strict scrutiny test! Such “super deference,” as T&M aptly put it, seems odd, to say the lest, coming from a Court that prides itself on protecting First Amendment freedoms.

Predictably, T&M take understandable aim at the 5-4 ruling in Garcetti v. Ceballos (2006), the government employee speech case. Ironically, the majority opinion was authored by Justice Anthony Kennedy, someone reputed to be quite free-speech protective. While the authors are critical of Kennedy’s opinion, some may find their critique a bit too diplomatic. (Compare Paul Scunda, “Garcetti’s Impact on the First Amendment Speech Rights of Federal Employees” (2008).) Recently, a unanimous Court, per Justice Sonia Sotomayor, appeared to temper the troubling reach of Garcetti; the case is Lane v. Franks (2014).

Equally predictable is their criticism of Morse v. Frederick (2007), the “bong hit for Jesus” student speech case.  So, too, they take issue with the Roberts Court’s ruling in Beard v. Banks (2006), a prisoner’s rights free-speech case.

Together, T&M contend, these four rulings amount to the “creation of new silos of largely unprotected speech [that] was not required by precedent.” Indeed, though in all fairness the Court has never been a friend of prisoner’s rights when it comes to free speech.

Other cases where First Amendment claims were sustained — Brown v. Entertainment Merchants Association (2011) and United States v. Stevens (2010) – “cemented a rigidly categorical approach to the First Amendment,” which T&M appear to view as both unnecessary and not as historically warranted as the authors of those opinions (Justice Antonin Scalia and Chief Justice John Roberts) would have us believe.

As for the 8-1 ruling in Snyder v. Phelps (2011), the military funerals protest case, T&M claim the opinion for the Court “reminds us that unsuspecting innocents are occasionally forced to bear the brunt of a First Amendment . . . .” In Snyder, they add, “the Court took an aggressive stand, essentially stating that the victims of this savagery must be left without protection as the price of our shared liberty. Whether one agrees or not, it is unsettling to be reminded of freedoms steep cost.” One question for the authors: So, how would you have voted in the case?

Take Note: T&M make an important point when they note that Justice “Kennedy is the only justice to have voted with the winning side every time” in a free speech case decided by the Roberts Court. While the Chief Justice has authored far more majority or plurality opinions in this area, Kennedy’s vote seems to be the one that matters most.

There is more, much more. I will, however, offer only one more statement from the authors: “the Roberts Court enjoys a strong ‘pro-speech’ reputation. Appearances deceive. A closer look reveals that the Court is deeply torn over its vision of free speech. In many ways, the Court is not as libertarian as it sometimes seems.”

While some may fairly question the T&M thesis, it is offered with enough care to provoke thoughtful debate. If that sort of thing appeals to you, then buy their book — I did.

Senator Whitehouse Re-introduces DISCLOSE Act with 49 Cosponsors 

This legislation “would ensure that voters know the identity of donors who have been secretly financing campaign expenditures in federal elections. Voters have a fundamental right to know this information. Donors funneled more than $300 million in secret contributions into the 2012 national elections through outside spending groups.”

Organizations supporting the proposed law include: Americans for Campaign Reform, the Brennan Center for Justice, the Campaign Legal Center, Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, Common Cause, Democracy 21, Demos, the League of Women Voters, People For the American Way, Public Citizen and Sunlight Foundation.

Harvard Law Review Symposium (vol. 127, issue 8)

Responses (Harvard Law Review Forum)

Commentary

One Third of Americans Polled Can’t Name any First Amendment Right

That’s the news from the Newseum Institute’s First Amendment Center’s latest survey about the state of the First Amendment in America. Some of the study’s key findings include the following three:

  1. When asked to name the five specific freedoms in the First Amendment, 68% of Americans name freedom of speech, followed by 29% who say the freedom of religion, 14% mention the freedom of the press, 7% mention the right to assemble, and 1% name the right to petition. Twenty-nine percent of those surveyed cannot name any of the rights guaranteed by the First Amendment.
  2. Those who could name freedom of speech and freedom of religion increased this year from 59% to 68% and 24% to 29% respectively. Meanwhile, the knowledge of right to petition and right of assembly decreased from 4% to 1% and 11% to 7% respectively. The percentage of Americans who can’t name any First Amendment rights dropped from 36% to 29%.
  3. In 2013, 34% stated that the First Amendment does go too far and 64% said it does not go too far in protecting rights. In the current survey, 38% say the First Amendment goes too far while 57% say it does not.

See here for video commentary by Gene Policinski of the Newseum Institute.

Quick Hits

Scholarly Articles & Commentary

 Op-eds & News Stories

Last Scheduled FAN Column: “Law Prof. Contests Ban on Note-Taking in Courtroom

Next Scheduled FAN Column: July 2nd.

FAN 20.1 (First Amendment News) – Supreme Court Hands Down Abortion Buffer Zone Case (9-0)

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Thursday, June 29, 10:28 a.m.: The Supreme Court just handed down its decision in McCullen v. Coakley (9-0).

→ The opinion can be found here.

→ Yet another First Amendment majority opinion by the Chief Justice (that makes 12).

Commentary by Tom Goldstein at SCOTUSblog: The abortion protests ruling is relatively narrow. The Court makes clear that states can pass laws that specifically ensure access to clinics. It holds that states cannot more broadly prohibit speech on public streets and sidewalks. It also notably rejects the protesters’ broadest arguments that such restrictions require strict constitutional scrutiny and are viewpoint based. A state can go beyond narrow laws that block obstructions to clinics, and more broadly ban abortion protests, only if it builds a record showing that the narrower measures don’t work. The S. Ct. majority says nothing about its prior buffer zone ruling in Hill, the validity of which now seems in real question. 

→ Harris v. Quinn (opinion to be handed down this Monday).

Review still pending in Minority Television Project, Inc. v. Federal Communications Commission, which involves a federal law that prohibits public radio and television stations from transmitting paid advertisements for for-profit entities, issues of public importance or interest, and political candidates. The 9th Circuit, sitting en banc, ruled against the broadcasters. Chief Judge Alex Kozinski (joined by Judge John Noonan) dissented, and Judge Consuelo Callahan concurred in part and dissented in part.

fce54ef58f5b9d01480f6a7067000873

Petitioner: Eleanor McCullen (pic by Steven Senne)

The Abortion Clinic Buffer Zone Case: McCullen v. Coakley

Facts: “Three of the plaintiffs regularly engage in ‘sidewalk counseling’ at the Boston clinic. McCullen parks her car on Commonwealth Avenue and festoons it with pro-life signage; Zarrella sometimes prays aloud; and Cadin from time to time holds aloft a large pro-life sign. A fourth plaintiff, Smith, has demonstrated outside the Boston clinic for many years. He has displayed a crucifix, sung religious hymns, and prayed aloud. His prayers are meant to be heard by passersby in hopes of persuading them to opt against abortion. He sometimes brings a loudspeaker to amplify group prayers that occur outside the clinic on the second Saturday of every-month and on Good Friday.” (Source: 1st Cir. opinion)

A Massachusetts law provided for a fixed 35-foot buffer zone around the entrances, exits, and driveways of abortion clinics.

The issues in the case were:

(1) Whether the First Circuit erred in upholding Massachusetts’s selective exclusion law – which makes it a crime for speakers other than clinic “employees or agents . . . acting within the scope of their employment” to “enter or remain on a public way or sidewalk” within thirty-five feet of an entrance, exit, or driveway of “a reproductive health care facility” – under the First and Fourteenth Amendments, on its face and as applied to petitioners; and

(2) whether, if Hill v. Colorado permits enforcement of this law, Hill should be limited or overruled.

The First Circuit rejected the Plaintiff’s First Amendment claims. The Supreme Court reversed.

Vote: 9-0

Majority Opinion: Chief Justice Roberts

Concurring Opinion: Justice Scalia (joined by Justices Kennedy and Thomas) concurs in judgment. Justice Alito wrote a separate opinion, concurring in the judgment.

Justice Scalia argues that Hill v. Colorado  should be overruled, which today’s opinion does not formally do.

Counsel

  • Mark L. Rienzi for Petitioners
  • Jennifer Grace Miller for Respondents
  • Ian H. Gershengorn for United States (amicus curiae for Respondents)

Amicus Briefs

Among those filing amicus briefs were the following:

  • Cato Institute (Ilya Shapiro) for Petitioners
  • American Center for Law & Justice (Jay Sekulow) for Petitioners
  • Rutherford Institute (John W. Whitehead) for Petitioners
  • Michigan & 11 other States (Bill Schuette) for Petitioners
  • ACLU (Steven R. Shapiro) for Neither Party
  • New York State, et  al (Eric T. Schneiderman) for Respondents
  • Planned Parenthood (Walter Dellinger) for Respondents
  • American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, et al (Jack R. Bierig) for Respondents
  • National League of Cities, et al (Mary Jean Dolan) for Respondents
  • Anti-Defamation League, et al (Jeffrey S. Robbins) for Respondents
  • National Abortion Federation, et al (Maria T. Vullo) for Respondents

Hat tip to SCOTUSblog for its remarkable real-time coverage of today’s decisions.

NOTE: My next scheduled FAN column will provided detailed information re the Roberts Court’s overall record in First Amendment freedom of expression cases. It will also include facts and figure re the Court’s 1-A work this term.

FAN 20.2 (First Amendment News) — 28 Briefs Filed in McCullen, Only 1 Cited by Court

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The Court in McCullen v. Coakley had plenty of help offered to it — 28 amicus briefs were filed. Those submitting amicus briefs included the following groups:

  • Cato Institute (Ilya Shapiro) for Petitioners
  • American Center for Law & Justice (Jay Sekulow) for Petitioners
  • Rutherford Institute (John W. Whitehead) for Petitioners
  • Michigan & 11 other States (Bill Schuette) for Petitioners
  • ACLU (Steven R. Shapiro) for Neither Party
  • New York State, et  al (Eric T. Schneiderman) for Respondents
  • Planned Parenthood (Walter Dellinger) for Respondents
  • American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, et al (Jack R. Bierig) for Respondents
  • National League of Cities, et al (Mary Jean Dolan) for Respondents
  • Anti-Defamation League, et al (Jeffrey S. Robbins) for Respondents
  • National Abortion Federation, et al (Maria T. Vullo) for Respondents

That said, the Court elected to reference only one amicus brief, and it did so in Chief Justice John Roberts opinion.

The brief the Chief Justice found particularly useful was one filed by New York Attorney General Eric T. Schneiderman, a brief submitted on behalf of New York and 12 other states along with the territory of the Virgin Islands.  The brief was submitted on behalf of the Respondents, who lost by way of a unanimous judgment.  

As it turned out, the Chief Justice and his colleagues referenced the New York brief  in support of the Petitioners:
The buffer zones burden substantially more speech than necessary to achieve the Commonwealth’s asserted interests. At the outset, we note that the Act is truly exceptional: Respondents and their amici identify no other State with a law that creates fixed buffer zones around abortion clinics. [fn to NY et al amicus brief]  That of course does not mean that the law is invalid. It does, however, raise concern that the Commonwealth has too readily forgone options that could serve its interests just as well, without substantially burdening the kind of speech in which petitioners wish to engage. 

And then later in the opinion, the New York amicus brief was also tapped to help defeat the case for the Respondents:

If Massachusetts determines that broader prohibitions along the same lines are necessary, it could enact legislation similar to the federal Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances Act of 1994 (FACE Act), 18 U. S. C. §248(a)(1), which subjects to both crimi­ nal and civil penalties anyone who “by force or threat of force or by physical obstruction, intentionally injures, intimidates or interferes with or attempts to injure, intim­ idate or interfere with any person because that person is or has been, or in order to intimidate such person or any other person or any class of persons from, obtaining or providing reproductive health services.” Some dozen other States have done so. See Brief for State of New York et al. as Amici Curiae 13, and n. 6.

FAN 20.3 (First Amendment News) — The Roberts Court & Unanimous First Amendment Judgments

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  • Who would have guessed the 9-0 vote in McCullen v. Coakley? Back in January there was this assessment from a veteran Court reporter:

Equally Divided: “Inside the Supreme Court, the questioning was fast and furious, with the justices apparently divided equally, and for the first time in memory, Chief Justice John Roberts asking no questions. The Chief Justice’s silence seemed to indicate that he likely will be the deciding vote in the case.” – Nina Totenberg, Jan. 15, 2014

That Catholic University Law Professor Mark L. Rienzi would have prevailed in his case in defense of the Petitioners seemed likely enough. But unanimous? The vote surely surprised many seasoned Court watchers.

Professor Mark Rienzi

Professor Mark Rienzi

Take note: It was the third time in one Term that the Roberts Court was unanimous in a free speech case, and also the first time that the Court was unanimous in sustaining a First Amendment free expression claim in two cases:

  1. Lane v. Franks (2014) [vote-9-0 on FA issue only, not on qualified immunity]
  2. McCullen v. Coakley (2014)

This is significant because in every other free speech case where there was a unanimous judgment the Court denied the First Amendment claim.  The 9 cases are:

  1. Rumsfeld v. Forum for Academic & Institutional Rights (2006) [vote: 8-0]
  2. Davenport v. Washington Educ. Association (2007) [vote: 9-0]
  3. New York State Bd. of Elections v. Lopez Torres (2008) [vote: 9-0]
  4. Pleasant Grove City, UT, et al v. Summum (2009) [vote: 9-0]
  5. Locke v. Karass (2009) [vote: 9-0]
  6. Milavetz, Gallop, & Milavetz v. United States (2010) [vote: 9-0]
  7. Nevada Commission on Ethics v. Carrigan (2011) [vote: 9-0]
  8. Reichle v. Howards (2012) [vote: 8-0]
  9. Wood v.Moss (2014) [vote: 9-0] [FA and qualified immunity]

A Princely Move?  

So what gives in McCullen? Not even a whisper of a separate opinion from any of the liberal Justices, especially the female ones. Could it be that the Chief Justice wanted unanimity enough that he stayed his hand in reversing Hill v. Coloradothis to secure four votes from the liberal bloc? Maybe Nina Totenberg was right; they were divided until, that is, the Chief Justice made his “Machiavellian” move. The result: the law is struck down, which pleases the conservatives, though on narrow grounds, which pleases the liberals. No one is really happy, but the judgment is unanimous . . . in an abortion case! 

Meanwhile, Justice Scalia (joined by Justices Kennedy, and Thomas) would have none of it:

Today’s opinion carries forward this Court’s practice of giving abortion-rights advocates a pass when it comes to suppressing the free-speech rights of their opponents. There is an entirely separate, abridged edition of the First Amendment applicable to speech against abortion. . . . This is an opinion that has Something for Everyone, and the more significant portion continues the onward march of abortion-speech-only jurisprudence. . . .  Just a few months past, the Court found it unnecessary to “parse the differences between . . . two [available] standards” where a statute challenged on First Amend­ment grounds “fail[s] even under the [less demanding] test.” McCutcheon v. Federal Election Comm’n . . . (plurality opinion) What has changed since then? Quite simple: This is an abortion case, and McCutcheon was not. . . . In concluding that the statute is con­ tent based and therefore subject to strict scrutiny, neces­sarily conclude that Hill should be overruled. 

  One more thing: this is another First Amendment majority/plurality opinion by the Chief Justice (that makes 12). In that regard, he leads all other Justices by a wide margin.

NOTE: My next scheduled FAN column will provide detailed information re the Roberts Court’s overall record in First Amendment freedom of expression cases. It will also include facts and figure re the Court’s 1-A work this Term.

Last FAN Columns

FAN 20.4 (First Amendment News) — 9 Comments on McCullen, the Abortion Buffer Zone Case

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I thought it might be interesting to share excerpts from some of the commentary on McCullen v. Coakley. Here are 9 views on the case:

#1 — The American Civil Liberties Union

“This is a hard case and the majority opinion reflects the difficulty and importance of balancing two constitutional rights: the right of women to enter and leave abortion clinics free from the harassment, intimidation, and violence they have too often suffered in the past; and the right of peaceful protestors to express their opposition to abortion on the public streets outside abortion clinics.

We agree that a fixed buffer zone imposes serious First Amendment costs, but we also think the Court underestimated the proven difficulty of protecting the constitutional rights of women seeking abortions by enforcing other laws – especially regarding harassment – outside abortion clinics.

Today’s opinion makes it more important than ever that the police enforce the laws that do exist in order to ensure that women and staff can safely enter and leave abortion clinics.” Steven R. Shapiro (press release, June 26, 2014) (ACLU amicus brief here)

#2 – Judge Richard Posner

“Lecturing strangers on a sidewalk is not a means by which information and opinion are disseminated in our society,” he wrote in Slate. “Strangers don’t meet on the sidewalk to discuss ‘the issues of the day.’ (Has Chief Justice John Roberts, the author of the opinion, ever done such a thing?). The assertion that abortion protesters ‘wish to converse’ with women outside an abortion clinic is naive. They wish to prevent the women from entering the clinic, whether by showing them gruesome photos of aborted fetuses or calling down the wrath of God on them. This is harassment of people who are in a very uncomfortable position; the last thing a woman about to have an abortion needs is to be screamed at by the godly.”

#3 – Laurence Tribe

“The great virtue of our First Amendment is that it protects speech we hate just as vigorously as it protects speech we support. On Thursday, all nine justices united to reaffirm our nation’s commitment to allowing diverse views in our public spaces — although their unanimous result belied their divided reasoning.

Cases like McCullen force us to balance competing constitutional values: free speech against the safety and autonomy of women. Here the balance tips unquestionably toward speech. A woman’s right to choose whether or not to terminate her pregnancy under Roe v. Wade guarantees her protection from the state. This protection does not include a right to be shielded by the state from fellow citizens hoping to peacefully convince her that she’s making the wrong choice.

In his quest to bring all his colleagues on board, Chief Justice Roberts wrote an opinion that implausibly described the Massachusetts statute as neutral as between anti-abortion speech and abortion rights speech — a neutrality that four conservative justices rightly dismissed as illusory, revealing a court sharply divided beneath its veneer of unanimity.

. . . [N]either empathy for their anguish, nor the need to protect the safety of women seeking such services, nor the clear need to guard against the rising tide of state laws designed to restrict access to abortions, can justify far-reaching measures that restrict peaceful conversation in public spaces.” (New York Times, June 26, 2014)

#4 – Walter Dellinger

“This case is really about the unwilling listener who is forced to submit to lectures she does not want to hear at a time of stress. (It would be easy enough to a protester standing a mere 12 yards away to hold up a sign saying, “Talk to me about your choice.”) Like many of the court’s decisions, this one draws a line across society on social and economic grounds. The wealthy elite—like Supreme Court justices—rarely if ever have to make their way through crowds that surround them and berate them or even plead with them in softer voices. Those who work at the Supreme Court (or at law firms like mine) most often drive (or are driven) into underground garages at work or at doctors’ offices. It is students, secretaries, school teachers, and other ordinary people who have to get off the bus or the subway and push their way through hostile crowds of those who may get in their faces and do everything they can to impede their entrance into a clinic. The gauntlet of the final entrance is but the final step that follows from the relentless creation of hurdles that are effectively depriving the most vulnerable women of the right that was promised to them in Roe v. Wade.

The creation of a relatively small space free of protesters in front of a clinic hardly shuts off debate. In defense of the notion that the space is relatively small, I post here one of the maps in the brief for Planned Parenthood of Massachusetts and Planned Parenthood Federation of America (a brief on which I was co-counsel.)” (Slate, June 27, 2014)

#5 – Amy Howe

“Although we often think of Justice Anthony Kennedy as the pivotal vote on the Court in high-profile cases, yesterday it was Chief Justice John Roberts who played that role, writing an opinion that had the support of the four more liberal Justices — Ginsburg, Breyer, Sotomayor, and Kagan.” (SCOTUSblog, June 27, 2014)

#6 – Kevin Russell

“In today’s decision, the Court holds unconstitutional the Massachusetts law establishing a thirty-five-foot fixed buffer zone around abortion clinics in the state.  But did it, in the process, overrule Hill?  Certainly, the majority opinion by the Chief Justice does not do so expressly (in contrast with Justice Scalia’s dissent, joined by Justices Kennedy and Thomas, which overtly calls for Hill to be overruled).  Indeed, it is notable that outside of a brief mention in describing the background of the case (noting that Massachusetts had originally enacted a narrower buffer-zone provision modeled on the statute upheld in Hill), the majority opinion makes no mention of Hill at all.

The question is whether the reasons the majority gives today would effectively render buffer zones like Colorado’s unconstitutional, despite the result in Hill.  There’s a good argument that they would.

To be sure, there is one big difference between the laws in the two cases: Hill involved an eight-foot floating buffer zone around individuals within a hundred feet of abortion clinics, while this case involved a thirty-five-foot fixed buffer zone.  One might think that the sheer size difference could be determinative – one can still talk (albeit loudly) to someone eight feet away, and offer her literature; the decision today noted that this is much harder from the distance of thirty-five feet.” (SCOTUSblog, June 26, 2014)

#7 – Dahlia Lithwick

“While the decision is not monumentally awful in ways some progressives most feared, and certainly affords the state substantial latitude in its future attempts to protect women seeking abortions from harassment, more than anything it seems to reflect a continued pattern of “free speech for me but not for thee” or, at least, ‘free speech for people who think like me, that pervades recent First Amendment decisions at the court. More importantly, I don’t know where to locate this ruling in the burgeoning doctrine of “the right to be let alone” that Justices Alito and Thomas and Breyer have espoused, nor do I know how to reconcile it with the court’s persistent second-rate treatment of any speech that threatens to harass the justices themselves. . . .

In a gorgeously un-self-aware way, the same Supreme Court that severely limits speech and protest in a buffer zone all around its own building, extolls the unique and wonderful properties of the American boulevard in today’s opinion . . . .

But it is exhausting to keep hearing from the pro-life movement that women seeking abortions are magical pixie princesses, who must be—thank you Justice Kennedy—babied and soothed and gently counseled for the brief moments in which they contemplate abortion. As though these “difficult conversations” are really only for their own benefit. Unlike mourners, or voters, or Supreme Court justices, they simply need to be told what to do. That’s why this case is harder than a simple “yay, speech wins” reaction can capture: Privileging “gentle counseling” for some isn’t quite the same as promoting free speech for all.”  (Slate, June 26, 2014)

#8 – Hadley Arkes

“The outcome in McCullen v. Coakley may not be as bad as Justice Scalia thinks it sounds. For my own part, I think that Justice Scalia is inescapably right in seeing the statute in Massachusetts as part of a scheme to close down, in the public forum, speech that is critical of abortion. But that critique may distract us from seeing what has been accomplished in this case. John Roberts, in his opinion for the majority, has picked up on some of the critical points that Scalia himself made during the oral argument in McCullen v. Coakley — most notably, that it was quite wrong to describe the speech of Eleanor McCullen as a “protest.” For Roberts it was as critical here, as it has been for Scalia, to put the accent on the fact that Eleanor McCullen works by quietly offering information to women entering an abortion clinic.” (National Review, June 26, 2014)

#9 – Geoffrey Stone

“Critics of the decision regard [the plurality's] approach as fundamentally naïve and unrealistic about what actually happens when anti-abortion protesters gather near the entrances to these facilities. These critics maintain that the image of the grandmotherly woman calmly approaching a young woman heading into the clinic in order to have an abortion and asking her if they might chat a bit about whether this is really a good idea is wholly fanciful and blinks the reality of what actually happens at these moments. . . .

In their view, a clean, simple rule, like the one enacted by Massachusetts, is a perfectly reasonable way to deal with the world as it is, rather than the world as Chief Justice Roberts imagines it to be. In the view of the critics, the more ‘narrowly-tailored’ restrictions that Roberts would approve are not really responsive to the complex, highly emotional, and often intimidating and even dangerous situations that actually arise in these settings.

The critics maintain that requiring people to stand 35 feet away from the entrance, while still allowing them to speak from there, is a sound and reasonable compromise between the free speech rights of those who oppose abortion and the rights of those who wish to exercise their constitutional right to reproductive freedom free of intimidation by others.

Although reasonable persons can differ about how best to reconcile these competing interests, I am inclined to agree with the critics of the decision that it unnecessarily and inappropriately set aside a reasonable and sensible compromise that better adjusted the competing interests than the more ‘narrowly-tailored’ alternatives that Chief Justice Roberts held would pass constitutional muster.

. . . . [I]t is worth noting that this case must have been especially difficult for the Court’s four ‘liberals,’ all of whom are strong protectors of both the freedom of speech and the right of a woman to terminate an unwanted pregnancy. For them, Justice Roberts’ moderate, middle-ground probably gave them a resolution that, although perhaps not ideal, they could live with.” (Huffington Post, June 27, 2014)


FAN 20.5 (First Amendment News) — Move to Amend First Amendment Continues

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imagesAccording to a June 26, 2014 Bloomberg BNA news story by Nancy Ognanovich & Kenneth P. Doyle:

“Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid’s (D-Nev.) priority list for Senate action in July includes plans to schedule votes on a constitutional amendment to protect the authority of Congress to regulate campaign finance, as well as a separate campaign finance disclosure measure—known as the DISCLOSE Act—that failed in previous years, aides said. . . .”

Vote in Subcommittee: “The proposed campaign finance amendment to the Constitution was approved by the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on the Constitution, Civil Rights and Human Rights June 18th on a 5-4, party-line vote. The measure was set to be considered June 26th by the full Judiciary Committee, but was held over.”

Substituted language: “The subcommittee adopted a substitute to Sen. Tom Udall’s (D-N.M.) proposed amendment (S. J. Res. 19) offered by panel Chairman Richard Durbin (D-Ill.). The measure would allow Congress and the states to set ‘reasonable limits on the raising and spending of money by candidates and others,’ and would further permit Congress and the states to prohibit campaign spending by ‘corporations or other artificial entities.’”

See also this op-ed by Josh Blackman: “Democrats are Trying to Rewrite the First Amendment,” American Spectator, June 25, 2014

→ For earlier coverage of this proposed constitutional amendment, see:

FAN 21 (First Amendment News) — Looking Back on the 2013-2014 Term & on The Roberts Court’s Overall Free Speech Record

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What a term it has been for the Roberts Court and free speech – Election campaign laws, union dues, government employee speech, abortion clinic buffer zones, and a presidential protest case. Also set out below are some related First Amendment events that occurred this Court Term along with a list of new books on free speech. Further down are some facts and figures concerning the Roberts Court’s overall record on free speech.

Disorder in the Court: Recall, too, that back in May there was a disruption inside the Court: “I arise on behalf of the vast majority of the people of the United States who believe that money is not speech,” the protester said, “corporations are not people and that our democracy should not be for sale to the highest bidder.” Before he was arrested, Noah Newkirk of Los Angeles also got in a few more words of protest: “overturn Citizens United” and “the people demand democracy.” Even more incredible, it was captured on video and released on the Web.

35 Cases: This Term the Roberts Court decided five First Amendment free expression cases along with three related free speech cases. The Justices also denied review in a campaign finance case while granting review in “true threats” case. All in all, the Roberts Court has now decided 35 free speech cases on First Amendment grounds.

→ “In Group Bias”: And then there was the empirical study by Professors Lee EpsteinChristopher M. Parker, & Jeffrey A. Sega entitled “Do Justices Defend the Speech They Hate? In-Group Bias, Opportunism, and the First Amendment.”

Amending the 1st?: While much of this was going on, Justice John Paul Stevens released a book urging, among other things, that the First Amendment be amended. In the same vein, a Senate subcommittee first heard and then voted in favor of an amendment to the First Amendment.

→ New Books: Here are some of the new books that were published during this Court Term:

  1. Lee Levine & Stephen Wermiel, The Progeny: Justice William J. Brennan’s Fight to Preserve the Legacy of New York Times v. Sullivan
  2. Ronald Collins & David Skover, When Money Speaks: The McCutcheon Decision, Campaign Finance Laws, and the First Amendment
  3. Shaun McCutcheon, Outsider Inside the Supreme Court: A Decisive First Amendment Battle
  4. Robert Post, Citizens Divided: Campaign Finance Reform and the Constitution
  5. Robert E. Mutch, Buying the Vote: A History of Campaign Finance Reform (2014)
  6. Richard Fossey & Todd A. DeMitchell, Student Dress Codes and the First Amendment: Legal Challenges and Policy Issues (2014)
  7. Laurence Tribe & Joshua Matz, Uncertain Justice: The Roberts Court & The Constitution (2014)

→ Law Review: A Harvard Law Review Symposium on free speech was published recently.

→ Flashback: Cass Sunstein on the 50th Anniversary of NYT v. Sullivan

“[A]mid the justified celebration, we should pay close attention to the dark side of New York Times vs. Sullivan. While it has granted indispensable breathing space for speakers, it has also created a continuing problem for public civility and for democratic self-government. . . . False accusations are hardly new. But New York Times vs. Sullivan can claim at least some responsibility for adding to a climate of distrust and political polarization in the U.S.” [Source: here]

→ The Play’s the Thing: Arguendo, a play about Barnes v. Glen Theatre, Inc. was performed earlier this year. 

Remember: This year we also lost a noted First Amendment figure with the passing of Professor George Anastaplo.

Supreme_Court_US_20102013-14 Term: First Amendment Cases

  1. [JR: 5-4]          McCutcheon v. FEC
  2. [RBG: 9-0]      Woods v Moss
  3. [SS: 9-0]         Lane v. Franks (commentary)
  4. [JR: 9-0]         McCullen v. Coakley
  5. [SA: 5-4]         Harris v. Quinn (symposium)

→ Here is the lineup of Justices writing majority opinions this term in First Amendment free expression cases:

  • Chief Justice Roberts             McCutcheon v. FEC   (vote: 5-4) &
  •                                                McCullen v. Coakley   (vote: 9-0)
  • Justice Ginsburg                    Wood v. Moss              (vote: 9-0)
  • Justice Sotomayor                 Lane v. Franks            (vote: 9-0)
  • Justice Alito                           Harris v. Quinn            (vote: 5-4)

Erin Murphy

Erin Murphy

Successful Lawyers in First Amendment Free Expression Cases Where Claim was Sustained

Related Cases

  1. [SS: 6-3] Air Wisconsin v. Hoeper (statutory question re malice)
  2. [JR: 9-0] United States v. Apel (military base: statutory interpretation)
  3. [CT: 9-0] Susan B. Anthony List v. Driehaus (Art. III standing re false political speech standard)

Review granted:

Elonis v. United States (true threats case)

Review denied: Some of the more notable First Amendment cases in which the Court denied review:

  1. Iowa Right to Life v. Tooker (campaign finance)
  2. Risen v. United States (reporter’s privilege)
  3. Minority Television Project, Inc. v. FCC (fairness doctrine) (see here)
  4. Pickup v. Brown (ban on “conversion therapy”)

Two+ Cases to Watch

  1. Republican National Committee v. Federal Election Commission (see post here) (*Rick Hasen’s pick of the campaign finance cases to watch — as Hasen said after McCutcheon came down: “the Court seems to open the door for a future challenge to what remains of the McCain-Feingold law: the ban on large, ‘soft money’ contributions collected by political parties. These contributions were banned because it had become clear that political parties were becoming conduits for access between elected officials and big donors. Today Roberts rejects ingratiation and access as a problem, and says that this funnel of significant money to parties could serve the purpose of strengthening political parties and thus be a good thing. He writes: ‘When donors furnish widely distributed support within all applicable base limits, all members of the party or supporters of the cause may benefit, and the leaders of the party or cause may feel particular gratitude. That grati­tude stems from the basic nature of the party system, in which party members join together to further common political beliefs, and citizens can choose to support a party because they share some, most, or all of those beliefs.… To recast such shared interest, standing alone, as an opportunity for quid pro quo corruption would dramatically expand government regulation of the politi­cal process.’”) > For a companion case, see Libertarian Party of Indiana v. Federal Election Commission
  2. American Meat Institute v. AGR (see story here: “The U.S. Court of Appeals in Washington today threw out a March 28 ruling by a three-judge panel upholding the Department of Agriculture’s labeling requirements so all 11 judges on the court can reconsider a constitutional question of corporate free speech: Can regulators require labels only that ‘correct a deception’ such as false advertising or can they demand data for other purposes such as addressing consumer confusion?”)

Note: It is also possible, as Prof. Hasen’s opines, that we might see a return of Susan B. Anthony List v. Driehaus in “some kind of emergency basis” posture.

Most Revealing Lines of the Term:

→ From the Chief Justice’s majority opinion in McCullen v. Coakley

The Court does sometimes assume, without deciding, that a law is subject to a less stringent level of scrutiny, as we did earlier this Term in McCutcheon v. Federal Election Commission (plurality opinion) But the distinction between that case and this one seems clear: Applying any standard of review other than intermediate scrutiny in McCutcheon—the standard that was assumed to apply—would have required overruling a precedent. There is no similar reason to forgo the ordinary order of operations in this case.

Most Suggestive Lines of the Term:

→ Justice Scalia dissenting in McCullen v. Coakley:

“I prefer not to take part in the assembling of an apparent but specious unanimity. I leave both the plainly unnecessary and erroneous half and the arguably correct half of the Court’s analysis to the majority.”

First Amendment Precedents in Jeopardy after 2013-2014 Term:

Number of Amicus Briefs Filed: 81

20       McCutcheon v. Federal Election Commission

02        Wood v. Moss

12       Lane v. Franks

28        McCullen v. Coakley

19        Harris v. Quinn

Amicus Briefs Quoted or Cited: 9 (3 majority, 2 plurality, & 4 dissents)

McCutcheon v. Federal Election Commission

  1. National Republican Congressional Committee (plurality opinion)
  2. Cause of Action Institute (plurality opinion)
  3. Campaign Legal Center, et al. (Breyer, dissenting)
  4. Democratic Members of the US House of Representatives (Breyer, dissenting)

Lane v. Franks

  1. United States (majority opinion)

McCullen v. Coakley

  1. State of New York, et al. (majority opinion)

Harris v. Quinn

  1. United States (majority opinion)
  2. Paraprofessional Healthcare Institute (Kagan, J., dissenting)
  3. State of California, et al (Kagan, J., dissenting)

Roberts Court’s First Amendment Free Expression Record: 2006-2014

Number of First Amendment Free Expression Decisions: 35

  • First Amendment Claims Sustaine =         16 (46%)
  • First Amendment Claims Denied =           19 (54%)

Most Majority/Plurality Opinions

  1. Chief Justice Roberts    12
  2. Justice Kennedy            05
  3. Justice Scalia                05
  4. Justice Alito                   04
  5. Justice Breyer                03
  6. Thomas                          02
  7. Ginsburg                        02
  8. Sotomayor                     02
  9. Kagan                             0

5-4 Judgments by Roberts Court: 9 out of 35 Opinions

  1. Garcetti v. Ceballos (2006)
  2. F.E.C. v. Wisconsin Right to Life, Inc. (2007)*
  3. Morse et al. v. Frederick (2007)
  4. Davis v. Federal Election Commission (2008)*
  5. Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission (2010)*
  6. Arizona Free Enterprise Club’s Freedom Club PAC v. Bennett (2011)*
  7. McCutcheon v. FEC (2014)*
  8. McCullen v. Coakley (2014)
  9. Harris v. Quinn (2014)

* Indicates a campaign finance case (total of 5-4 judgments = 5)

The Anthony Kennedy Factor (AKF)

In their book Uncertain Justice: The Roberts Court and the Constitution (2014), Laurence Tribe and Joshua Matz note that Justice “Kennedy is the only justice to have voted with the winning side every time” in a free speech case decided by the Roberts Court.”

While true, it is well to note that Justice Kennedy was on the losing side of the majority opinion (though not the judgment) for the Court in McCullen v. Coakley.

Unanimous Judgments by Roberts Court: 11 out of 35 Opinions

→  Denying First Amendment Claim

  1. Rumsfeld v. Forum for Academic & Institutional Rights (2006) [vote: 8-0]
  2. Davenport v. Washington Educ. Association (2007) [vote: 9-0]
  3. New York State Bd. of Elections v. Lopez Torres (2008) [vote: 9-0]
  4. Pleasant Grove City, UT, et al v. Summum (2009) [vote: 9-0]
  5. Locke v. Karass (2009) [vote: 9-0]
  6. Milavetz, Gallop, & Milavetz v. United States (2010) [vote: 9-0]
  7. Nevada Commission on Ethics v. Carrigan (2011) [vote: 9-0]
  8. Reichle v. Howards (2012) [vote: 8-0]
  9. Wood v.Moss (2014) [vote: 9-0]

 Sustaining First Amendment Claim

  1. Lane v. Franks (2014) [vote-9-0 on FA issue only]
  2. McCullen v. Coakley (2014) [vote: 9-0]

Majority Opinions Authored by Female Justices: 4 out of 35 Opinions

→ Justice Sotomayor

  1. Milavetz, Gallop, & Milavetz v. United States (2010) [vote: 9-0]
  2. Lane v. Franks (2014) [vote: 9-0]

→ Justice Ginsburg

  1. Golan v. Holder (2012) [vote: 6-2]
  2. Wood v.Moss (2014) [vote: 9-0]

Lone Dissent: 4 out of 35 Opinions 

  1. Justice Alito                United States v. Stevens (2010)
  2. Justice Thomas           Doe v. Reed (2010)
  3. Justice Alito                Snyder v. Phelps (2011)
  4. JusticeScalia               Borough of Duryea v. Guarnieri (2011)*

* Justice Scalia filed an opinion concurring in the judgment in part and dissenting in part.

First Amendment Cases re Employees: 5 Cases

  1. Garcetti v. Ceballos (2006) [vote: 5-4, per AK]
  2. ™Locke v. Karass (2009) [vote: 9-0, per SB]
  3. Knox v. Service Employees International Union [vote: 7-2, per SA]
  4. Lane v. Franks (2014) [vote: 9-0 per SS]
  5. Harris v. Quinn (2014) [vote: 5-4, per SA]

Last Scheduled FAN Column: # 20 — “New Book, New Legislation, New Study & More News

Last FAN Column: # 20.5 — “Move to Amend First Amendment Continues

Next Scheduled FAN Column: Wednesday, July 9th

FAN 21.1 (First Amendment News) — Group Launches Litigation Campaign to Challenge Campus Speech Codes

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L to Rt: Paul Gerlich & Erin Furleigh (Iowa St. U.), Robert Corn-Revere (DWT), Greg Lukianoff (FIRE) & Isaac Smith (Ohio U.)

L to Rt: Paul Gerlich & Erin Furleigh (Iowa St. U.), Robert Corn-Revere (DWT), Greg Lukianoff (FIRE) & Isaac Smith (Ohio U.)

July 1, 2014, National Press Club, Washington, D.C. Today, two powerhouses — one a free speech activist, the other a noted First Amendment lawyer — joined forces to challenge campus free speech codes that run afoul of the First Amendment. Greg Lukianoff, president of the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE) and Robert Corn-Revere, a partner at Davis Wright Tremaine (DWT), announced that the group and the law firm would work together in a litigation campaign to change the free speech culture on many campuses across the nation.

“Unconstitutional campus speech codes have been a national scandal for decades. But today, 25 years after the first of the modern generation of speech codes was defeated in court, 58% of public campuses still hold onto shockingly illiberal codes,” said Lukianoff. “For 15 years, FIRE has fought for free speech on campus using public awareness as our main weapon, but more is needed. Today, we announce the launch of the Stand Up for Speech Litigation Project, an expansive new campaign to eliminate speech codes nationwide.”

“We at Davis Wright Tremaine,” said Corn-Revere, “are honored to be asked to participate on the important work of helping to safeguard First Amendment and due process rights of America’s college campuses as part of FIRE’s Stand Up for Speech Litigation Project. It is a privilege to represent the courageous young women and men, and the faculty members, who have opted not to follow the path of least resistance, but instead have chosen to challenge the exercise of arbitrary and illegal authority. These are acts of civic virtue . . . .”

→ The DWT litigation team will include input from two seasoned First Amendment lawyers — Ronnie London and Lisa Zycherman.

Text of T-shirt banned at Ohio University.

Text of T-shirt banned at Ohio University.

The litigation campaign was launched to challenge speech codes at public institutions on behalf of students, student groups, and faculty members. Four lawsuits were filed today in federal district courts:

  1. Ohio University — Smith v. McDavis et al 
  2. Iowa State University — Gerlich & Fuleigh v. Leath et al
  3. Chicago State University – Berry & Bionaz v. Chicago State University Board of Trustees
  4. Citrus College — Sinapi-Riddle v. Citrus Community College et al

Three of the student plaintiffs in the lawsuits — Paul Gerlich and Erin Furleigh (Iowa State Univ.) and Isaach Smith (Ohio Univ.) — took part in the press conference. Mr. Smith and his group, Students Defending Students, were told by Ohio University officials that they could not wear certain T-shirts (see photo above) because such actions would violate a school policy that prohibits any “act that degrades, demeans, or disgraces” another student, in this case women. “I’m tired of having my university work so hard to stop people from speaking,” said Mr. Smith.

Ronald London (DWT)

Ronald London (DWT)

Over at Iowa State University the fight centered around another objectionable T-shrt, this time one that purportedly violated a school owned trademark (see here).  “I feel bad and I don’t think I should feel bad about it,” Ms. Furleigh complained about censorship against her and her group, the NORML chapter at ISU. “Our university administration has prevented us from even putting the word marijuana on our designs,” Furleigh added.

Lisa Zycherman, DWT lawyer

Lisa Zycherman (DWT)

The challenges concern:

  1. restrictions on the design of T-shirts for campus organizations at Ohio University and Iowa University,
  2. engaging in expressive political activities outside a “free speech zone” while seeking signatures for an anti-NSA petition at Citrus College, and
  3. retaliation against professors for statements on a blog, purportedly in violation of Chicago State University’s broad cyberbullying policy.

→ Starting with Doe v. University of Michigan in 1989, there has been a virtually unbroken string of victories in court challenges to various college campus speech codes.

Meanwhile, Mr. Corn-Revere and his DWT team await a decision in another campus speech case he argued in the 11th Circuit on June 13th of this year — Barnes v. Zaccari. 

FAN 22 (First Amendment News) — New Documentary on Mr. First Amendment — Nat Hentoff

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imagesPerhaps no person alive better embodies the spirit of the First Amend — robust, rebellious, free-flyin’ and straight-talking — than Nat Hentoff. Fuse the life spirit of Lenny Bruce together with that of the early Bob Dylan and add a dollop of Miles Davis’ jazz and Allen Ginsberg’s poetry and you’ll get a sense of Hentoff’s persona. There is also a Tom Paine quality about him — feisty in his defense of freedom, no matter how unpopular it makes him. Some liberals love him, some conservatives admire him, and some libertarians applaud him — but very few come along for the full Hentoff monty. And that’s the way he likes it! If you have an open mind and a tolerant side, you gotta love the guy . . . if only at a First Amendment distance.

If any of this strikes a chord in your free-speech consciousness, then check out the new documentary on Nat — The Pleasures of Being out of Step, directed by David L. Lewis. Here is a description of the documentary:

Pleasures profiles legendary jazz writer and civil libertarian Nat Hentoff, whose career tracks the greatest cultural and political movements of the last 65 years. The film is about an idea as well as a man – the idea of free expression as the defining characteristic of the individual. . . . Pleasures wraps the themes of liberty and identity around a historical narrative that stretches from the Great Depression to the Patriot Act. Brought to life by actor Andre Braugher, the narration doesn’t tell the story – it is the story, consisting entirely of writings by Hentoff and some of his subjects. With a potent mix of interviews, archival footage, photographs and music, the film employs a complex non-linear structure to engage the audience in a life of independent ideas and the creation of an enduring voice.

At the core of the film are three extraordinarily intimate interviews with Hentoff, shot by award-winning cinematographer Tom Hurwitz. The film also includes interviews with Floyd Abrams, Amiri Baraka, Stanley Crouch, Dan Morgenstern, Aryeh Neier, Karen Durbin, Margot Hentoff and John Gennari, among others. It features music by Duke Ellington, Miles Davis, John Coltrane, Bob Dylan and Charles Mingus, and never-before seen photographs of these artists and other cultural figures at the height of their powers.

 Here is the trailer.

→ Here is the bookThe Pleasures of Being Out of Step: Nat Hentoff’s Life in Journalism, Jazz and the First Amendment.

 Screenings have been in New York and are now happening on the West Coast.

Nat Hentoff on Bill Buckley's Firing Line

Nat Hentoff on Bill Buckley’s Firing Line

Hentoff Books

Some of Nat Hentoff’s books on free speech and related topics include the following:

→ As if that were not enough (and I left out all the jazz books), I gather that the 89-year-old Hentoff is working on a new book.

Video clips

See and hear the man himself on this Brian Lamb, C-SPAN (YouTube) interview with Nat (go here).

→ And go here, too, for Richard Heffner’s Open Mind interview with Nat.  (See also here for a Cato Interview)

→ One more — this is precious: The young Nat debating the young Bill Buckley on Firing Line.

Shaun McCutcheon Launches Litigation Group

The petitioner in the landmark McCutcheon v. FEC (2014) case has decided he wants to do more to further the cause of the First Amendment as he understands it. To that end, Shaun McCutcheon has launched a foundation – the Coolidge-Reagan Foundation.

→ Its purpose? “The Foundation is dedicated to defending, protecting, and advancing political speech.”

→ Its activities? “Its broad activities include preparation of Advisory Opinion Requests (“AORs”) to the Federal Election Commission (“FEC”), as well as commentary on any or all federal Proposed Regulations. Through such initiatives, the Foundation works to compel government adherence to the restraints of the Constitution.” And, of course, litigation, too: “Beyond the regulatory process, the Foundation engages in litigation to advance speech and associational rights, including through Amici Curiae – Friend of the Court – briefs in support of such efforts.”

Shaun McCutcheon (photo credit: NYT)

Shaun McCutcheon (photo credit: NYT)

 Its backer & advocates? “The Foundation is chaired by Shaun McCutcheon. Dan Backer is the Foundation’s President who worked with Shaun from the beginning of his battle with the FEC to guide McCutcheon v FEC through the courts. Dan is founder of DB Capitol Strategies, a premiere boutique campaign finance litigation firm. Numerous outstanding attorneys serve as Directors, Advisors, or litigators for the Foundation, including Paul Kamenar, former Chief Counsel to the Washington legal Foundation; Michael Morley, recently a Harvard fellow and a key part of the McCutcheon v FEC team; and Jerad Navjar, another original attorney on McCutcheon v FEC.”

→ Current Cases: go here

I will have more information re Mr. McCutcheon and his new Foundation in a future column.

First Amendment Salon 

This Wednesday evening the law firm of Levine Sullivan Koch & Schulz will host its second First Amendment salon, this one in Washington, D.C. The event (by invitation) will involve and exchange between Erin Murphy and Paul M. Smith with David Skover as the moderator.  The topic centers around the Supreme Court’s latest campaign finance case, McCutcheon v. FEC (2014).

Cruz vs Chemerinsky  

Writing in The Hill this week, Texas Senator Ted Cruz began his op-ed this way: “Erwin Chemerinsky is a passionate liberal and a distinguished scholar and dean. We have been opposing counsel before the Supreme Court, and I consider him a friend.Sadly, last week he wrote a column in The Hill that called me a liar and attacked my effort to defend the First Amendment from Democrats who are seeking to regulate political speech.”

In his earlier op-ed, Dean Chemerinsky wrote: “Reasonable people can disagree on whether it would be good to amend the Constitution to overcome the Supreme Court’s decision in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, but Sen. Ted Cruz’s (R-Texas) false claims about the proposed amendment have no place in an informed debate. In a series of speeches and writings, Cruz has lied about what the amendment would do. Surely we can and must expect more from our elected officials.”

→ Suggestion: Might the two gentlemen debate the matter publicly, say in a venue like the Newseum? Stay tuned.

Obama Signs Whistleblower Protection Legislation

” President Barack Obama on Monday signed into law legislation concerning spending for the US intelligence community that increases protections for intelligence agency whistleblowers. The bipartisan legislation authorizes $564 million in spending over five years and specifies that employees who divulge information about possible misconduct within their agencies to intelligence committees will be protected. Supporters of the law hope that it will encourage whistleblowers to report issues through channels and discourage unauthorized leaks. The legislation expands upon whistleblower protection proposals made by the president in 2012, but it does not protect intelligence agency contractors like National Security Agency whistleblower Edward Snowden.”

Taylor Gillan, “Obama signs intelligence bill increasing protections for whistleblowers,” Jurist, July 8, 2014

Forthcoming Books 

Quick Hits

Scholarly Articles

Symposia

  • Heritage Foundation: Scholars & Scribes panels (Panel I: (11:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m.) Noel Francisco, Mark Rienzi, Paul M. Smith, and John Malcolm (moderator), and Panel II:  Jess Bravin, Adam Liptak, David Savage, and  James Swanson (moderator))
  • SCOTUSblog, Harris v. Quinn Symposium (contributors: Catherine Fisk, Tom McCarthy, Charlotte Green, Terry Pell, Jason Walta, Samuel Bagenstos, & John Eastman)

Commentary & Analysis 

Op-eds & News Stories

Last Scheduled FAN Column: #21: “Looking Back on the 2013-2014 Term & on The Roberts Court’s Overall Free Speech Record

Next Scheduled FAN Column: Wednesday, July 16th.

FAN 23 (First Amendment News) — Paul Smith & Erin Murphy Debate Campaign Finance Law

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Paul Smith & Erin Murphy

Paul Smith & Erin Murphy

It was quite an evening as Paul Smith and Erin Murphy went back-and-forth in a lively exchange discussing the McCutcheon case, campaign financing law, and the First Amendment. Professor David Skover moderated as the two one-time case foes — Erin represented Shaun McCutcheon & Paul filed an amicus brief on the other side — debated the pros and cons of government regulation. In his own casual, confident, and witty way, Paul pushed his views while Erin took it all in stride, always calm, cautious, and pointed. The exchange took place at the Washington, D.C. offices of Levine, Sullivan, Koch & Schulz (there was a live videocast feed to the firm’s New York office). This was the latest First Amendment salon. The discussion ranged from the technical to the philosophical as the two advocates and the discussants teased out various arguments. In the end, Smith and Murphy came together with big smiles and a firm handshake (the pair worked on the same side in the recently decided Aero case.)

Among others, the discussants included: Lee LevineBenjamin GinsbergLaura Handman, James Swanson, Joel Gora, Adam Liptak, David Savage, Jess Bravin, Stephen WermielKatherine Bolger, and Jeff Bowman (former AA to FEC Chairman Scott Thomas).

John Seigenthaler (1927-2014) – the Man Who Loved Light 

“His commitment to the First Amendment was unflagging.” Ken Paulson

“A champion of the First Amendment, giant of journalism,  and a wonderful human being.”              – Judy Woodruff 

We lost John Seigenthaler last week — he was 86. I was privileged to have worked with John while I was at the Newseum’s First Amendment Center, first in Arlington, Va. and then in Washington, D.C. John founded the Center in 1991.

In a recent USA Today column, Ken Paulson (John’s friend and longtime colleague) observed:

John Seigenthaler

John Seigenthaler

“John was . . . the first editorial page editor of the then-new USA TODAY in 1982, developing the most balanced opinion pages in the country. For every USA TODAY editorial there would be a countervailing view. John embraced light instead of heat.”

“He was fueled by his passion for the First Amendment, the sense that every voice has value. He liked to tell the story of a liberal woman who found conservative radio deeply offensive. He told her ‘whenever I want to hush Rush, I turn the knob.’ With a pained expression she responded, ‘Then I get G. Gordon Liddy.’ John would roar with each retelling.”

“In 1991 John retired from his newspaper role to found the First Amendment Center. It was a role he was born to. Long an advocate for the underdog, John was a passionate champion for the five freedoms that few Americans knew much about and inevitably took for granted.”

Gene Policinski, a friend who worked with John since 1981, offered this life assessment of his colleague: “John’s passion for the First Amendment was driven by a belief in equality and in the ‘marketplace of ideas.’ He had a lifelong commitment to the idea that this nation would not just endure but would prosper if its citizens could freely discuss, debate, and decide public issues without the burden of the heavy hand of government.” (see here, too)

→ For more about John and his remarkable life, see:

High Court Agrees to Hear Sign Ordinance Case 

The case is Reed v. Town of Gilbert. The Court granted cert. on July 1, 2014. The issue in the case is whether the Town of Gilbert’s mere assertion that its sign code lacks a discriminatory motive renders its facially content-based sign code content-neutral and justifies the code’s differential treatment of petitioners’ religious signs.

By a 2-1 vote, the Ninth Circuit upheld the city sign ordinance in an opinion by Circuit Judge Consuelo María Callahan joined by District Court Judge James Singleton. Circuit Judge Paul Watford dissented.

→ Facts: “For a time, Good News placed about 17 signs in the area surrounding its place of worship in Gilbert announcing the time and location of its services. In 2005, Good News received an advisory notice from [the township of] Gilbert that it was violating the town’s sign ordinance because ‘the signs were displayed outside the statutorily-limited time period.’ For a while thereafter, Good News reduced the number of signs it erected and the amount of time its signs were in place, but friction with Gilbert persisted. In March 2008, Good News filed suit in federal court in Arizona alleging that Gilbert’s Sign Code violated the Free Speech Clause of the First Amendment and the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.” (from 9th Cir. opinion)

David A. Cortman, counsel for Petitioners

David A. Cortman, counsel for Petitioners

→ Held: “Applying [the applicable First Amendment case law] to the Town of Gilbert’s Sign Code’s treatment of different types of noncommercial speech, we conclude that the treatment is content-neutral. That is to say, each exemption allowing for the erection of temporary signs and its restrictions are based on objective factors relevant to the creation of the specific exemption and do not otherwise consider the substance of a sign. We further conclude that the exemptions are narrowly tailored because they serve significant governmental interests and leave open ample alternative channels of communication. We also conclude that the Sign Code does not violate Good News’ (or its members’) right to the free exercise of religion or right to equal protection of law, and is not unconstitutionally vague or overbroad. The district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the Town of Gilbert isAffirmed.”

→  Petitioning Counsel: David A. Cortman of the Alliance Defending Freedom is the counsel of record and filed the cert. petition in the case on behalf of the Petitioners. (Mr. Cortman also filed the cert. petition and merits brief on behalf of the Petitioners in Conestoga Wood Specialities Corp. v. Sebelius (2014).)

Senate Committee Approves Proposed Amendment to First Amendment & House Begins Action

Last Thursday the Senate Judiciary Committee approved a proposed amendment to the First Amendment. The proposed amendment provides:

SECTION 1: To advance democratic self-government and political equality, and to protect the integrity of government and the electoral process, Congress and the States may regulate and set reasonable limits on the raising and spending of money by candidates and others to influence elections.

SECTION 2. Congress and the States shall have power to implement and enforce this article by appropriate legislation, and may distinguish between natural persons and corporations or other artificial entities created by law, including by prohibiting such entities from spending money to influence elections.

SECTION 3. Nothing in this article shall be construed to grant Congress or the States the power to abridge the freedom of the press.

“The committee,” wrote John Eggerton, “following a debate rancorous even when measured against the high bar set in this bitterly divided Congress, passed along pure party lines (10-8) a proposal to adopt a constitutional amendment allowing Congress and the states to essentially restore the limits on direct funding of electoral speech—as in TV ads—by corporations and unions, limits the Supremes ruled an unconstitutional restriction on speech in the Citizens United decision.” The matter now goes to the full Senate where 67 votes are needed.

→ Lauren French, “House Democrats to Unveil Campaign Finance Amendment,” Politico, July 14, 2014

→ Professor Josh Blackman has some noteworthy observations on both the proposed amendment and Senator Ted Cruz’s views on related matters.  (See here and here.)

→ See also Senator Chuck Schumer & Representative Ted Deutch, “What Ted Cruz Gets Wrong About the First Amendment,” Politico, July 15, 2014

Scrutinizing the Language of Scrutiny 

Over at the Volokh Conspiracy, Professor William Baude has some insightful observations concerning the various ways of expressing the degree of scrutiny analysis in First Amendment free expression cases. In this regard, there are phrases such as the following:

  1. “an urgent objective of the highest order.” (Holder v. Humanitarian Law Project)
  2. “exacting scrutiny” (Buckley v. Valeo re contribution limits & disclosure)
  3. a “rigorous standard of review” (Buckley v. Valeo, echoed in McCutcheon v. FEC)

According to what Chief Justice Roberts wrote in McCullen, and as Professor Baude also notes, the Holder phrase is synonymous with strict scrutiny. In the McCutcheon plurality we are told that “exacting scrutiny” required a government showing of a “compelling interest,” one that “is the least restrictive means to further the articulated interest.”

To add to the mix, there is also this passage from McCullen:

The Court does sometimes assume, without deciding, that a law is subject to a less stringent level of scrutiny, as we did earlier this Term in
 McCutcheon v. Federal Election Commission, (plurality opinion). But the distinction between that case and this one seems clear: Applying any standard of review other than intermediate scrutiny in McCutcheon—the standard that was assumed to apply—would have required overruling a precedent.

In other words, as Professor Richard Hasen puts it, “McCutcheon purported to use the same ‘exacting scrutiny’ standard it has used for contribution limits in other cases, and because the measure failed exacting scrutiny, there was no need for the Court to decide whether it failed strict scrutiny.”

It is odd that the plurality opinion seemed so concerned about respecting precedent that, on the one hand, it declined to invoke Buckley’s “rigorous” review, yet, on the other hand, freely breached the Buckley dichotomy between contributions and expenditures, at least when it came to aggregate contributions. Still, the Chief Justice felt confident enough to declare that the plurality saw “no need in this case to revisit Buckley’s distinction between contributions and expenditures and the corollary distinction in the applicable standards of review.”

In that respect, Justice Thomas made a telling point in his McCutcheon dissent: “I regret only that the plurality does not acknowledge that today’s decision, although purporting not to overrule Buckley, continues to chip away at its footings.” But even on that score, the plurality went out of its way to state that it was not overruling McConnell v. FEC, let alone Buckley (see fn 6 of the plurality opinion).

Professor Rick Hasen

Professor Rick Hasen

In his just-relaased book Examples & Explanations: Legislation, Statutory Interpretation, and Election Law (Aspen Law, July 2014), Professor Hasen makes the following helpful points, among others:

  1. “The plurality did not decide to apply strict scrutiny to contribution limits, finding the issue unnecessary to reach in this case. Only Justice Thomas, in a separate opinion, urged application of strict scrutiny. (Interestingly, Justices Scalia and Kennedy, who had in the past agreed with Justice Thomas on strict scrutiny, did not join the opinion.) Four justices, in an opinion by Justice Breyer, dissented.”
  2. “Despite the Court’s failure to adopt strict scrutiny for review of campaign contribution limitations in McCutcheon (something the Court left the door open to in a future case), the plurality opinion is doctrinally very significant and makes it much more likely that other campaign contribution limits could be struck down as unconstitutional going forward. To begin with, the opinion incorporated the narrow definition of corruption from the spending limits case, Citizens United, ignoring the much broader definition in cases such as Shrink Missouri. ‘Ingratiation and access’ or ‘undue influence’ do not count as ‘corruption’ for purposes of determining the constitutionality of contribution limits.”
  3. “Similarly, the opinion read ‘appearance of corruption’ narrowly, to apply only to an ‘appearance of quid pro quo corruption,’ much narrower than Buckley’s language about ‘‘appearance of improper influence.’
  4. “Finally, the Court ratcheted up the meaning of ‘exact scrutiny’ so that it is apparently a much more ‘‘rigorous’’ test for reviewing the constitutionality of contribution limits. How close it is to strict scrutiny is uncertain.”
  5. “Also of note is dicta appearing in McCutcheon extolling the virtues of money flowing through political parties, perhaps laying the groundwork for a renewed attack on the soft money limitations in the McCain-Feingold law.”

Fifth Circuit Strikes Down License Plate Law

confederateplates-300x150This past Monday the Fifth Circuit ruled, by a 2-1 vote, that a Texas ban on Confederate battle flags for placement on license plates violated the First and Fourteenth Amendments in that the law amounted to “viewpoint discrimination.”

The case is Texas Division, Sons of Confederate Veterans, Inc. v. Vandergriff. Circuit Judge Edward Prado wrote for the majority and was joined by Judge Jennifer Elrod. Judge Jerry E. Smith dissented.  (Hat tip to David Horowitz)

First Amendment Lawyers Association Meets in Toronto 

Catherine Sevcenko and others at FALA conference

Catherine Sevcenko and others at FALA conference

They savor free-speech freedom so much so that they make a career of it — the lawyers of the First Amendment Lawyers Association, that is. They gathered last week in Toronto for their summer meting. The topics of discussion for the various panels included:

  1. Recent First Amendment Cases (Gary Edinger, Edward Rudofsky & Reed Lee)
  2. The First Amendment & the Canadian Charters of Rights & Freedoms (Larry Walters, Reed Lee & Kevin J. Weber)
  3. The Death of “Alternative Avenue” Cases (Bruce McLaughlin, Gary Edinger & Michael Kahn)
  4.  Arguing State Constitutional Provisions (Brad Shafer)
  5. “Inside the Beltway” (Robert Corn-Revere & Ronnie London)
  6. Project Hurricane — A Blueprint for Free Expression on Campus (Catherine Sevcenko & Robert Corn-Revere)
  7. Defamation Law — U.S. vs. Canada (Marc Randazza & Antonin Pribetic)
  8. Ethics — Recent Developments (Paul Cambria)
  9. The Ivory Tower vs Trench Warfare — The First Amendment Understood by the Academy and as Applied by Practitioners (David Skover & Ron Collins)

Robert Corn-Revere is the outgoing president and Allan Rubin is the incoming one. Keep your eyes on this organization as it has some big plans in the works. Stay tuned.

Forthcoming Book

Quick Hits

Last Scheduled FAN Column #22: “New Documentary on Mr. First Amendment — Nat Hentoff

Next Scheduled FAN Column #24: Wednesday, July 23rd.

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