Posted by Eugene Volokh:
Strange First Amendment Decision:
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2007_07_08-2007_07_14.shtml#1184358731


   The Second Circuit just handed down [1]Husain v. Springer, which
   strikes me as quite odd. The case is complex, but the short version is
   this:

   A college student newspaper endorsed a slate of candidates for student
   government. The university president thought this was unfair and a
   violation of student government election rules, so she canceled the
   election, suggesting that she would cancel future elections if the
   student newspaper made similar endorsements in the future. The Second
   Circuit held that this cancellation of the election violated the
   student newspaper's First Amendment rights, because it was "designed
   to chill the speech contained in future editions."

   What makes this a strange First Amendment case, of course, is that the
   newspaper wasn't ordered to stop speaking. Nor was it threatened with
   loss of funding or any other tangible loss for not speaking. Rather,
   it was threatened with frustration of its purpose -- "if you keep
   endorsing candidates, we'll make sure that your endorsed candidates
   don't get elected."

   I'm unaware of any First Amendment case that remotely reaches this
   sort of "chill[ing of] speech"; and such behavior by the government
   seems quite far from the sort of government actions that the law has
   recognized as triggering the First Amendment. This alone, it seems to
   me, should have led to the conclusion that the president enjoyed
   qualified immunity (something the Second Circuit did not conclude).

   But let's turn to the merits: Does your right to urge result X really
   include the right to prevent the government from making result X
   impossible (even when the government is retaliating against your
   speech)?

   Say, for instance, that a newspaper -- not even a student newspaper --
   urges the government to do something. A government official doesn't
   like what it sees as improper meddling (perhaps the government thinks
   the newspaper's justification interferes with government
   decisionmaking, or is based on some improper reason, such as someone's
   race, religion, sexual orientation, or what have you). The official
   then says "You want us to hire [or not hire] a gay candidate because
   he's gay. [Assume, just for the sake of simplicity, that there's no
   legal prohibition on sexual orientation discrimination.] I disapprove
   of this argument, and I feel it taints the entire selection process.
   Instead, we will just start the hiring process over in six months."

   Or "You want us to hold a State History Appreciation Day event -- we
   were planning to, but now that you've started a campaign aimed at
   characterizing the event as partly a commemoration of our state's
   Confederate history, we feel that the event would be tainted in
   people's minds, so we'll cancel it." Or "You threatened to use our
   Veteran Appreciation Day event as a vehicle for your [2]'God Hates
   Fags' / 'Thank God for Dead Soldiers' demonstration, so we'll cancel
   the event altogether and deprive you of your excuse."

   Does that really violate the First Amendment rights of the speakers
   whom the government disapproves of? It seems to me the answer is no,
   but the Second Circuit's decision would suggest that the answer would
   be yes.

   Nor is there something special here about canceling the student
   election. As far as the opinion is concerned, there was nothing
   otherwise illegal about the president's decision to cancel the
   election -- the decision was within the president's power.

   If the cancellation decision was illegal, then it would have had to be
   challenged under whatever state law made the decision illegal, not as
   a violation of the newspaper's First Amendment rights. For instance,
   if a governor canceled a statewide election because he disapproved of
   some newspaper endorsements, I'm sure this would be illegal, because
   governors generally aren't allowed to cancel elections at their own
   discretion. But the illegality would be a violation of state law, not
   of the newspaper's First Amendment rights.

   The Second Circuit decision basically reasons that the government may
   not "engag[e] in conduct designed to chill the speech contained in
   future editions" of the speaker's speech, even when the "conduct" is
   simply the government's decision not to allow its government processes
   to be used to accomplish the results the speaker urges. Doesn't seem
   quite right to me, but I'd love to hear what others think.

References

   1. 
http://www.ca2.uscourts.gov:8080/isysnative/RDpcT3BpbnNcT1BOXDA0LTUyNTAtY3Zfb3BuLnBkZg==/04-5250-cv_opn.pdf
   2. http://volokh.com/posts/chain_1159824375.shtml

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