The Volokh Conspiracy
Mostly law professors | Sometimes contrarian | Often libertarian | Always independent
Judge Kavanaugh's Free Speech Cases
Ken White (Popehat) summarizes them.
Ken White (Popehat) summarizes them, and, with his permission, I'm including the body of his analysis below:
Kavanaugh has been an appellate judge for 12 years and has written many opinions on free speech issues. They trend very protective of free speech, both in substance and in rhetoric. His opinions are consistent with the Supreme Court's strong protection of free speech rights this century. People who buy into the "conservatives are weaponizing the First Amendment" narrative will see him as a strong advocate of that movement, in that he has applied the First Amendment to campaign finance laws, telecommunications regulation, and other aspects of the regulatory state. But he's also demonstrated fidelity to free speech principles in classic speech scenarios. Even when he concurs in a First Amendment decision, he frequently writes a separate opinion to clarify his analytical approach to the problem. He's quoted First Amendment guru Eugene Volokh — one of the leading voices in free speech analysis and a strong defender of speech rights.
Free Speech and Elections Law. Kavanaugh has voted to strike down campaign financing laws and regulations under the First Amendment. Because he's a judge on the D.C. Circuit, which tends to get cases challenging federal regulations, he's done so multiple times. In Emily's List v. Fed. Election Comm'n, 581 F.3d 1, 4 (D.C. Cir. 2009), he ruled in favor of the progressive EMILY's List, striking down the Federal Election Commission's regulations of political expenditures by nonprofits. He concurred wtihout writing a separate opinion in Pursuing America's Greatness v. Fed. Election Comm'n, 831 F.3d 500, 510–11 (D.C. Cir. 2016), which struck down an FEC regulation prohibiting unauthorized political committees from using candidates' names in the titles of their web sites and social media pages.
Classic Speech Scenarios. In cases involving "classic free speech scenarios" — the sort of thing that's not derided as "weaponizing the First Amendment" — Kavanaugh has applied the First Amendment vigorously to protect speech. In Initiative & Referendum Inst. v. U.S. Postal Serv., 794 F.3d 21, 24 (D.C. Cir. 2015), he ruled that a Postal Service regulation that barred collecting signatures outside of post offices chilled speech and violated the First Amendment even though the Postal Service had stopped enforcing it. In Boardley v. U.S. Dep't of Interior, 615 F.3d 508, 523–24 (D.C. Cir. 2010), he wrote a strong concurring opinion in a case that struck down a National Park Service regulation requiring a permit for demonstrations on national park grounds, in which he focused both on the burden on speakers and the right to protest anonymously. On the other hand, Kavanaugh has not hesitated to apply traditional First Amendment exceptions when supported by the record. For instance, in Al Bahlul v. United States, 767 F.3d 1, 75–76 (D.C. Cir. 2014), he agreed that Al Qaeda recruitment videos aimed at inciting viewers to kill Americans were not protected under the classic Brandenburg test because they were directed to inciting and likely to incite imminent lawless action. (This led him to quote the somewhat infamous "the Constitution is not a suicide pact" line, one of my least favorite First Amendment rhetorical tropes.) And in Mahoney v. Doe, 642 F.3d 1112, 1114 (D.C. Cir. 2011), he took a somewhat you-kids-off-my-lawn tone in a concurring opinion agreeing that the government could prohibit "defacing government property" — in this case, by chalking sidewalks outside the White House — so long as it did so in a way that was neutral as to subject matter and viewpoint.
Commercial Speech. Courts treat "commercial speech" as somewhat less protected than other speech; the scope of that carve-out is a matter of dispute. Kavanaugh's opinions suggest that the "commercial speech" doctrine should be interpreted narrowly and in favor of speech. For instance, in Am. Meat Inst. v. U.S. Dep't of Agric., 760 F.3d 18, 30–32 (D.C. Cir. 2014), he wrote a concurring opinion offering a more narrow grounds for upholding a regulation requiring labeling of foreign-made goods. He rejected the government's broad argument that it had a substantial interest in forcing vendors to inform customers of the foreign origin of goods, because doing so is not tied to avoiding deception or promoting health and safety. He accepted the government's narrower argument that it had a substantial interest in promoting American-made goods.
Government Speech. The government is allowed to regulate speech on its own behalf; when the message is from and by the government it can determine its content in a way it cannot when it's someone else's speech. The government frequently invokes this doctrine at the margins to defend speech regulation — for instance, in Matal v. Tam, the government argued unsuccessfully that it could ban "offensive" trademarks because issuing a trademark is government speech. Judge Kavanaugh reads government speech fairly broadly. In DKT Int'l, Inc. v. U.S. Agency for Int'l Dev., 477 F.3d 758, 764 (D.C. Cir. 2007), he agreed that the government could fund only those NGOs that adopted a message of anti-sex-trafficking on the grounds that the government could fund the message it chose. In Bryant v. Gates, 532 F.3d 888, 898 (D.C. Cir. 2008), he wrote that the government could restrict who can advertise in military newspapers because such papers are government speech.
Net Neutrality and Telecommunications Regulation. Oh, people will flip out over this one. In short, Kavanaugh believes in applying the First Amendment to telecommunications regulation. He's written in numerous opinions that the government can't restrict the "editorial discretion" of internet service providers or content networks absent a showing that a particular provider "possesses market power in a relevant geographic market." Put another way, he believes that the First Amendment prohibits the government from telling ISPs and other communications providers that they have to carry competitor's content unless the government's made a showing that they have an anti-competitive level of power in a market. He's blunt about it. "[T]he net neutrality rule violates the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution," he wrote in one dissent, pointing out that the government had not even tried to make a market power argument to support the regulation in that case. United States Telecom Ass'n v. Fed. Commc'ns Comm'n,855 F.3d 381, 418 (D.C. Cir. 2017). In Comcast Cable Commc'ns, LLC v. F.C.C., 717 F.3d 982, 994 (D.C. Cir. 2013), he wrote a concurring opinion emphasizing that the FCC could not tell Comcast or other programming distributors what content to carry absent a showing of market power requiring it. "[T]he FCC cannot tell Comcast how to exercise its editorial discretion about what networks to carry any more than the Government can tell Amazon or Politics and Prose or Barnes & Noble what books to sell; or tell the Wall Street Journal or Politico or the Drudge Report what columns to carry; or tell the MLB Network or ESPN or CBS what games to show; or tell SCOTUSblog or How Appealing or The Volokh Conspiracy what legal briefs to feature." He sounded similar notes in his dissent in Cablevision Sys. Corp. v. F.C.C., 597 F.3d 1306, 1316 (D.C. Cir. 2010) Put another way, Kavanaugh is unwilling to assume that the goal of competition justifies regulating what content networks must provide absent specific evidence of anti-competitive circumstances.
Limited To Textual and Historical Grounds. Kavanaugh has declined to find new rights within the First Amendment. For instance, in We the People Found., Inc. v. United States, 485 F.3d 140, 141 (D.C. Cir. 2007), he agreed that the First Amendment's right to petition the government does not carry with it a right to have the government respond.
Unions. After Janus, everybody's arguing that judges have "weaponized" the First Amendment against unions, so it's worthwhile to note a union case. In Venetian Casino Resort, L.L.C. v. N.L.R.B., 793 F.3d 85, 87–88 (D.C. Cir. 2015), Kavanaugh wrote that an employer did not violate the National Labor Relations Act by calling the cops on a union protest on its premises. This was a fairly straightforward application of something called the Noerr–Pennington doctrine, which says that behavior doesn't violate federal antitrust or labor law when it amounts to petitioning the government as protected by the First Amendment. This was an unremarkable application of that doctrine. Kavanaugh noted that other conduct by the employer could violate the NLRA, and remanded the case for a determination of whether an exception for "sham petitions" applied, so it takes effort to force this into an "anti-union" narrative.
Discrimination and Employment. Kavanaugh applies, in a straightforward fashion, existing doctrines limiting lawsuits claiming discrimination or retaliation based on speech. For instance, in LeFande v. D.C., 841 F.3d 485, 496–97 (D.C. Cir. 2016), he agreed that the standard Pickering-Connick "balancing test" for whether a government employee's speech is protected permitted a police department to fire a cop for derogatory emails sent to supervisors. In Moore v. Hartman, 704 F.3d 1003, 1004 (D.C. Cir. 2013), he agreed that the law was unsettled about whether an arrest in retaliation for speech is insulated from suit when there is probable cause for the arrest, and therefore the officers enjoyed qualified immunity because the right was not "clearly established." (Notably, the Supreme Court just accepted cert to resolve that question of law.) This application of existing doctrine, though unremarkable, has the impact of making it more difficult to vindicate free speech rights.
Defamation and Anti-SLAPP. Kavanaugh has applied familiar First Amendment doctrine to limit defamation suits, and in doing so has explicitly recognized that defamation litigation can chill speech. In 2017 he wrote "[t]he First Amendment guarantees freedom of speech and freedom of the press. Costly and time-consuming defamation litigation can threaten those essential freedoms. To preserve First Amendment freedoms and give reporters, commentators, bloggers, and tweeters (among others) the breathing room they need to pursue the truth, the Supreme Court has directed courts to expeditiously weed out unmeritorious defamation suits." Kahl v. Bureau of Nat'l Affairs, Inc., 856 F.3d 106, 109–10 (D.C. Cir.), cert. denied sub nom. Von Kahl v. Bureau of Nat. Affairs, Inc., 138 S. Ct. 366, 199 L. Ed. 2d 269 (2017). In Kahl, he rejected a defamation case by a prisoner who claimed that a press summary of his case falsely attributed a prosecutor's harsh statements to the sentencing judge. Kavanaugh applied speech-protective First Amendment doctrines familiar to defamation lawyers and found that the prisoner had not offered any evidence that the publication acted with the requisite actual malice. Similarly, in Abbas v. Foreign Policy Grp., LLC, 783 F.3d 1328, 1332 (D.C. Cir. 2015), he held that questions posed in an article could not be treated as assertions of fact, and therefore could not be defamatory. He again used fairly sweeping rhetoric about the application of the First Amendment to defamation cases.
But Abbas is controversial because Kavanaugh found that the District of Columbia's local anti-SLAPP statute did not apply in federal court. That ruling has made some people — including some colleagues and friends — fear that he's not sufficiently protective of free speech. They are, with respect, wrong. State anti-SLAPP statutes provide a procedural vehicle for defendants to get rid of meritless attacks on speech and recover attorney fees. Kavanaugh is clearly in favor of anti-SLAPP statutes in concept — in Abbashe acknowledges their purpose and importance. His ruling that state (or, in this case, District) anti-SLAPP laws don't apply in federal court is based on a rather wonky and esoteric area of law — which state laws apply in federal courts when state-law claims are tried there? Put extremely broadly, substantive state laws apply, but procedural state laws do not. There have long been disputes over how to treat state anti-SLAPP laws under this analysis, because they have both substantive and procedural elements. Other smart judges — including ones quite protective of the First Amendment — agree with Kavanaugh on this. I like anti-SLAPP laws very much, and from a result-oriented perspective I like to see them apply in federal court, but Kavanaugh's take here is not extreme and has to be viewed in the context of his strong defense of First Amendment rights in defamation cases. We need a federal anti-SLAPP law.
Conclusion. In conclusion, Kavanaugh's work on the D.C. Circuit show a judge strongly protective of free speech rights, and part of the trend of applying free speech doctrines both to classic scenarios and to government regulation. His stance on telecommunications and elections laws will get him painted as part of the "weaponize free speech" movement by results-oriented thinkers. He's strong on First Amendment limits on defamation law and his approach to anti-SLAPP statutes do not, as some have suggested, signal that he wants to make defamation cases easier. But though he might help upset applecarts by applying the First Amendment to regulatory schemes, and will not uphold broad speech restrictions, he will likely not overturn doctrines that make it hard for individuals to recover for speech violations.
UPDATE: I originally just linked to the original post, but then got Ken's permission to simply quote his entire post.
Editor's Note: We invite comments and request that they be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of Reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Not one word about Abortion. The nerve of that guy! OWW....my desires.
I don't think I have any real complaints. Looks like a good 1st amendment judge.
The ACLU is going to come out against him, I take it?
I'd make a very large wager that the ACLU will strongly oppose him. After all, from what I'm hearing, his appointment to the Supreme Court would mean certain death and devastation to millions of women in this country.
Ha! I didn't see your post immediately below until after I posted my comment.
Of course they did.
"Brett Kavanaugh may bring the requisite experience, but given Donald Trump's promise to overturn Roe v. Wade, the decision that recognized the right to an abortion, and efforts to reverse progress on civil rights and civil liberties, that's not enough. It's incumbent on Congress to determine whether Kavanaugh's legal views are compatible with the powerful role he will play for generations.
If confirmed, Kavanaugh could very well be the decisive vote Trump needs in the Supreme Court to give his concerted campaign to undermine civil liberties and civil rights long-term impact. And in light of President Trump's promise to appoint justices who would overturn Roe, this nomination could jeopardize the right to an abortion millions of women and families have relied on for more than four decades.
"Justice Kennedy kept the court in the mainstream by having an open mind and a commitment to an evolving Constitution. Senators should ask Kavanaugh whether he agrees that constitutional law evolves with the times, as it did in recognizing that segregation is unconstitutional, that sex discrimination violates the Equal Protection Clause, and that marriage equality is constitutionally guaranteed."
Note that the only 'civil liberty' cited as threatened is one you can't actually find in the Constitution.
If this doesn't cause Nadine Strossen to burn her ACLU card, nothing will.
It would be interesting to see what the ACLU had to say about Kennedy after he was nominated. I have a hunch that it was very close to the above quote.
It would be, but I can't find anything. The internet is kind of patchy that far back.
Senators should ask Kavanaugh whether he agrees that constitutional law evolves with the times, as it did in recognizing that segregation is unconstitutional, that sex discrimination violates the Equal Protection Clause, and that marriage equality is constitutionally guaranteed."
What's the standard response now by an originalist to the question as to whether constitutional "evolution" as found in Brown v. Board of Education is permissible? Just a deflection that Brown is settled law? A bogus explanation of how Brown really was an originalist decision? I noticed that Amy Barrett referred to certain cases as "super precedents," the reversal of which would generate major disruption, providing an exception to the rule that judges are bound to enforce the Constitution's original public meaning.
The standard response is that the Brown court overturned previous living constitution rulings which had rendered the 14th amendment effectively a dead letter. That it was perfectly legitimate to overturn the cases that had permitted Jim Crow in the first place.
There's more to it, of course. Several generations had established that, as a practical matter, "separate" would never be "equal", because only people who didn't want equal would demand separate.
I wouldn't say the Brown decision was perfect, and it wasn't originalist in the details. But an originalist court could certainly have arrived at the same general result, without saddling us with "substantive due process" in an effort to avoid admitting the Court had gotten it wrong before.
The standard response is that the Brown court overturned previous living constitution rulings which had rendered the 14th amendment effectively a dead letter. That it was perfectly legitimate to overturn the cases that had permitted Jim Crow in the first place.
There's more to it, of course. Several generations had established that, as a practical matter, "separate" would never be "equal", because only people who didn't want equal would demand separate.
I wouldn't say the Brown decision was perfect, and it wasn't originalist in the details. But an originalist court could certainly have arrived at the same general result, without saddling us with "substantive due process" in an effort to avoid admitting the Court had gotten it wrong before.
I wouldn't say the Brown decision was perfect, and it wasn't originalist in the details.
You're saying that the original public meaning of the 14th Amendment was that it would require all public schools to be integrated?
No, I'm saying that the original public meaning of the 14th amendment was that it required blacks and whites to be treated equally by the government. "Separate but equal" would likely have passed an originalist reading of the 14th amendment if it had actually been equal.
This is rather like the Supreme court ruling that literacy tests for voting were constitutional if impartially administered. But, of course, they never were, so this meant they effectively were not constitutional.
And I was only responding to the question about Brown. Obviously original public meaning of the 14th had nothing to do with voting at all, or else there would never have been a 15th amendment.
No, I'm saying that the original public meaning of the 14th amendment was that it required blacks and whites to be treated equally by the government.
Are you saying that the original public meaning of the 14th amendment was that an equal amount of money would have to be spent per pupil on black education as on white?
If you acknowledge that "equality of rights" was limited and did not include all rights, for example it didn't include the right to vote, then what makes you say that, nevertheless, the original understanding was that with respect to public education, literal equality would be required? Did they intend to require literal equality in the schools and at the same time intend to provide no such literal equality? What would be their motivation for such a thing?
Are you also saying that the original public meaning of the 14 Amendment was that women would be allowed to vote?
The standard honest response is that Brown vs. Bd was a terrible DECISION according to originalist principles; but that the RESULT may have been nevertheless reachable via originalist analysis.
An originalist opinion would have occasioned a too sharply divided Court though, and Warren wanted a firm statement.
but that the RESULT may have been nevertheless reachable via originalist analysis.
Can it be reasonably claimed that the original public meaning of the 14th Amendment was that segregated schools would be outlawed while at the same the more basic right of voting would not be guaranteed? Can it be argued that a majority of legislators in a supermajority of the States supported mandatory integrated schools at the time of ratification of the 14th Amendment? (Or more to the point, since the Southern states ratified it against their will, that a supermajority of Northern state legislatures supported it?)
And then let me modify the original question. What's the standard response now by an originalist to the question as to whether constitutional "evolution" as found in Reynolds v. Sims (one person one vote) is permissible (since that amendment clearly did not include voting rights among the rights protected)? Just a deflection that Reynolds is settled law? A bogus explanation of how Reynolds really was an originalist decision?
Reynolds vs Sims was simply wrongly decided.
Harlan's dissent is correct.
There is nothing inherently unconstitutional about a state having the same governmental structure as the US House and Senate.
If you want to change that, amend the Constitution.
Reynolds vs Sims was simply wrongly decided.
Yes, but can a Supreme Court nominee say that to the Senate Judiciary Committee without being Borked?
Rehnquist was semi-borked when he got the nom for CJ because when he was Jackson's clerk he wrote a memo that the 14th amend did not prohibit segregated public schools.
Jackson and Frankfurter were both very lukewarm to the Browns' constitutional claim.
I'm not sure what would happen today if someone gave an honest analysis of this area of the law.
If you give any credit to most of the leftist hacks who comment here, Trump could nominate Judge Roy Moore and the Senate would just roll over.
Rehnquist was semi-borked when he got the nom for CJ because when he was Jackson's clerk he wrote a memo that the 14th amend did not prohibit segregated public schools.
But Rehnquist had to prevaricate to get out of the jam, by claiming that his memo represented the opinion of the justice, not his own opinion. It's too bad that nominees have to hide behind the Ginsburg Rule or behind deflections such as that Case X is precedent and they respect precedent, but it was probably inevitable once the Court began setting public policy.
He's quoted First Amendment guru Eugene Volokh ? one of the leading voices in free speech analysis and a strong defender of speech rights
I wonder what those quotes were.
No one, in today's climate is going to get credit for being Hugo Black on the 1st Amendment, or William Brennan on the 4th.
Abortions, gay marriage, and guns are all that matter. A nominee could be the perfect combination of John Marshall, Holmes and Warren; but those 3 topics will always be dispositive.
White still does good work, even if The Road To Popehat posts are few and far between these days
"Limited To Textual and Historical Grounds. Kavanaugh has declined to find new rights within the First Amendment. For instance, in We the People Found., Inc. v. United States, 485 F.3d 140, 141 (D.C. Cir. 2007), he agreed that the First Amendment's right to petition the government does not carry with it a right to have the government respond."
One important exception is the Freedom of Information Act.
"Since 1967, the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) has provided the public the right to request access to records from any federal agency. It is often described as the law that keeps citizens in the know about their government. Federal agencies are required to disclose any information requested under the FOIA unless it falls under one of nine exemptions which protect interests such as personal privacy, national security, and law enforcement."
Note that federal agencies are REQUIRED to respond (with exceptions).
That's not an exception; it's a statute. It gives a statutory right to a response; it doesn't create a constitutional right to one. (And of course it's not about responses to petitions generally, but only to requests for information.)
The net neutrality is puzzling.
Are cable TV markets not generally dominated by one or very few providers? I suppose customers can switch to satellite as well, but any idea that there are generally competitive markets for cable service is a fantasy. Besides, cable TV service may be a natural monopoly many places.
What exactly would be required to show market power?
"[T]he FCC cannot tell Comcast how to exercise its editorial discretion about what networks to carry any more than the Government can tell Amazon or Politics and Prose or Barnes & Noble what books to sell; or tell the Wall Street Journal or Politico or the Drudge Report what columns to carry;
One of these things is not like the others. And is it the claim that the telephone company - often Comcast - is free to exercise editorial discretion over phone calls its customers get?
Kavanaugh stretches logic past the breaking point here.
I don't know about you, but I've got access to several different providers.
Local cable isn't a natural monopoly in most places, it's a negotiated monopoly: The first cable company in arranges to get monopoly access to right of ways by bribing local government in one way or another. In areas where local government doesn't go along with this, you'll typically have a choice.
Having three or four providers does not make for a competitive market.
Go find out what a natural monopoly is.
I know quite well what a natural monopoly is, and if you persistently have three or four providers in a local area absent government imposed monopoly, you clearly do not have one.
I dunno. That sounds like a natural monopoly which is running inefficiently. And probably laying off avoidable costs on customers in markets elsewhere, where customers get nothing in exchange for the increase.
Are you sure "natural monoply," as a concept, requires business monopoly in fact? I don't think that is correct.
For whatever reason, the U.S. pays a lot more for internet than the rest of the world.
A market lacking either competition or regulation is one possible cause. Or maybe American companies just aren't good at this internet stuff. The former seems more likely to me.
(FWIW, my amateur opinion is that the part that is a natural monopoly is the wire/fiber/whatever to your house. That part of the business - transmitting packets from the internet at large to my doorstep - is probably best handled as a regulated common carrier. What channels I want to pay some content provider for is a different thing that shouldn't be regulated.)