The Volokh Conspiracy
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The Supreme Court Was Right to Consider Andrew Cuomo's Unconstitutional Motives in NRA v. Vullo - and the same Principle Applies to Trump and Other Presidents
Chief executives' illicit motives can render their subordinates' actions unconstitutional. There is good reason for courts to enforce that rule.

In its recent decision in NRA v. Vullo, the Supreme Court unanimously ruled against the Superintendent of New York's Department of Financial Services in a case where that agency undertook various enforcement actions against financial institutions pressuring them to stop doing business with the NRA, because of that group's advocacy of gun rights. While these actions were seemingly neutral, evidence indicated that the motive behind them was an attempt to suppress the NRA's political speech.
Co-blogger Josh Blackman does not object to this result, but criticizes Justice Sonia Sotomayor's opinion for the Court for relying, in part, on tweets and other statements by then-New York Governor Andrew Cuomo. Josh complains that it's wrong to rely on Cuomo's statements because "he wasn't even a party" to the case, and fears this part of the opinion is "laying the groundwork for some future Trump litigation, where the chief executive's social media posts can be used to taint the action taken by some cabinet member…. it is almost a given that people would allege that President Trump and his administration will engage in some sort of retaliatory or coercive actions against protected speech."
As Josh notes, Trump's tweets and other statements promising a "Muslim ban" were central elements of the case against his travel ban policy, eventually upheld by the Supreme Court in Trump v. Hawaii (2018). I think the Court got that decision badly wrong. Significantly, however, Chief Justice John Roberts' majority opinion did not hold that statements like Trump's were irrelevant, merely that they would not get much weight in the context of immigration policy where the Court concluded (wrongly, in my view) that the executive should get special deference. Thus, statements indicating illicit intent could still potentially be decisive in other types of cases.
The Court was right to consider Cuomo's statements. And it should do the same in potential similar future cases involving Trump or other presidents.
Longstanding Supreme Court precedent holds - for good reason - that facially neutral policies can be unconstitutional if evidence indicates they were adopted for purposes of engaging in discrimination prohibited the Constitution, such as discrimination on the basis of race, religion, or - as in NRA v. Vullo - protected political speech. If such facially neutral policies were immune from challenge, the government could target almost any group for discrimination by focusing on some seemingly neutral characteristic that is correlated with group membership. Instead of explicitly targeting blacks, they could target people who live in majority-black neighborhoods. Instead of openly targeting Muslims, they could (as Trump did) target migrants from various Muslim-majority nations. And so on.
Such tactics were extensively used by advocates of Jim Crow segregation, when courts started striking down explicit segregation laws. More recently, educational institutions have used them as a tool for engaging in racial preferences banned by Supreme Court rulings.
Why consider a governor's or president's statements in cases challenging policies enacted by subordinate officials? The obvious answer is that the former often influence the latter. As Justice Sotomayor notes, Governor Cuomo was "Vullo's boss." Absent his advocacy and support, it is likely she would not have targeted the NRA so aggressively. This is even more clear in the case of Trump's travel ban, a policy which almost certainly would never have been enacted absent his "Muslim ban" campaign promises.
The case for focusing on presidential motives is even more compelling if - like many conservatives - you endorse the "unitary executive" theory of presidential power, under which the president is entitled to near-total control of other executive branch officials. In that framework, subordinates have even more incentive to try to implement the "boss's" directives than in Andrew Cuomo's New York. Officials who refuse to do the boss's bidding aren't likely to be around for long.
The case for scrutinizing presidents' unconstitutional motives is often even stronger than with state governors. In many states, the executive branch is less unitary than in the federal government. For example, New York, like many other state governments, has a separately elected attorney general who is independent of the governor. This played a major role in Andrew Cuomo's eventual downfall. In late 2021, he was forced to resign in large part because of an investigation into accusations of sexual harassment conducted by the New York AG's office. Although AG Letitia James is a Democrat, her independence enabled her office to do the investigation, and Cuomo could not prevent it. The president exercises far more control over the federal Department of Justice, and other parts of the federal executive branch.
In the case of both state and federal officials, the government can still successfully defend a challenged policy if it can prove they would have enacted it even in spite of the chief executive's illicit motives. Vullo has advanced that argument in the NRA case. But Supreme Court precedent rightly shifts the burden of proof to the government in a case where evidence of unconstitutional discriminatory motivation is found.
Back in 2018, during the travel ban litigation, Josh Blackman argued courts can afford to ignore presidents' unconstitutional motives because "I don't know that we'll ever have a president again like Trump, who says such awful, awful things on a daily basis." I was skeptical of such optimism at the time. And I think that skepticism has been vindicated by later events.
Obviously, Trump himself may well be elected again in 2024. And he has already promised to use the power of the federal government to punish his critics. If he does indeed return to power and subordinate officials take actions that appear to implement that promise, courts can and should consider Trump's statements when assessing their legality. Meanwhile, other Republican politicians have increasingly imitated Trump's behavior and policies. Even if he loses again and disappears from the political scene, this problem is unlikely to fully go away.
As NRA v. Vullo shows, left-wing officials also sometimes engage in such behavior. The Democrats may not be as far-gone as the Republicans. But they, too, aren't above using facially neutral policies to cloak unconstitutional motives, including in cases where the latter are evident from various public statements. Particularly in an age of severe polarization, where many on both sides are eager to use the power of government to target their enemies, such behavior is unlikely to go away anytime soon. Judicial review cannot completely prevent such abuses of power. But by paying due attention to illicit unconstitutional motives, it can help curb them substantially.
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Guess Biden's student loan forgiveness is Constitutional since you didn't see fit to mention it as an example.
Read the OP, Bumble.
I did. He did not mention it.
The OP isn’t a grand theory of constitutionality across all issues Bumble is pissed off about.
It seemed weird to me that Josh was, I think, just assuming that liberals were as hypocritical as Josh is, and would have two different standards. Pretty much everyone I know--liberal, conservative, and non-political--agree that an executive's tweets (emails, public announcements, et al) are absolutely relevant re showing good or improper motive, as that related to a court's Constitutional analysis. Just as true for a Dem as for a Rep. And, of course, just as good for a Rep and for a Dem.
It ain't rocket science. I'm glad that at least one of his fellow Conspirators is willing to post about, and to comment about, Josh's hot-take.
"As NRA v. Vullo shows, left-wing officials also sometimes engage in such behavior. The Democrats may not be as far-gone as the Republicans."
What color is the sky in your universe? Have you forgotten, for instance, Operation Choke Point? The IRS targeting scandal? It would be closer to the truth to say they lead in this area.
How's the diving?
Fantastic! Done now, but all told I spent nearly six hours underwater in the reefs here in El Nido.
The Submariner dive shop does a great job, and everybody is very friendly. If you're looking to dive in the Philippines, I highly recommend them.
My diving days are long ago.
Glad you had a good time. Plenty of good diving along the East coast of the US.
In the OP, Prof. Somin contemplates actual evidence of animus - tweets and other statements.
That's important so that people like you don't just confuse stuff in your head, based less on statements and more on connections just made up by types who don't understand how reasonable people can differ in good faith.
Hey Ilya, is this Constitutional? (Asking for a friend)
Biden Admin Gives 'Mass Amnesty,' NY Post Reports
https://www.newsmax.com/newsfront/amnesty-immigration-joe-biden/2024/06/02/id/1167179/
Tell your friend it is perfectly constitutional, as it was done by a democrat.
It also allows for easier illegal immigration, so Ilya would say it was constitutional even if Trump did it.
As far as I know, Ilya never responds to comments. He just shit-posts and runs.
I think a person's analysis of Trump's "Muslim ban" is useful as a litmus test for whether they are worth listening to regarding, well, anything. Commentators such as Ilya never have an explanation for why 1) the ban included several non-Muslim countries, or 2) the ban did NOT include the majority of Muslim countries. All they do is say "nevermind all that, look at his tweet where he said he was going to do it!" It's a shame that people with such an utter lack of analytic ability have found ways to infect the public discourse with their nonsense.
Well, the actual process was that the first EO was seven countries (all majority Muslim).
That was blocked.
The second EO was six countries (all majority Muslim), removing Iraq.
It wasn't until eight months after the first travel ban (and court battles) that the ban was revised to include Venezuela, North Korean, and six majority Muslim Counties.
But it is true- not every single Muslim majority country was targeted. I think the fact that Trump called for a ban on Muslims prior to entering office, and then signed a ban targeting only Muslim countries, probably played a role in the way people rightfully talked about it.
The seven nations identified in Donald Trump's travel ban were "identified by the Obama administration as the seven most dangerous countries in the world in regard to harboring terrorists."
Shhh. We aren't supposed to talk about that. It gets in the way of the narrative.
As noted just above, that should be prefaced by In its third version, the first two having been overturned by the courts,
Seems if that was important to its constitutionally, it would have been included in the first.
The polifact article refers to the first iteration of the ban.
So what? He just wanted to ban Muslims.
Yes, people talked about whether it is desirable to import Muslims to the USA, especially when the world has a Muslim terrorism problem.
Depending on the source, there are right around 50 countries that are majority Muslim. None of Trump's E.O.'s targeted more than a small percentage of Muslim countries, and notably, the largest countries weren't included. Can you brainstorm any other reason why these particular countries were selected for the E.O.? Try really hard.
No one seems really engaged with the OP, which is about public evidence of animus, not just Constitutional things posters are angry about.
Okay, I'll engage.
"While these actions were seemingly neutral, evidence indicated that the motive behind them was an attempt to suppress the NRA's political speech."
In just what universe is targeting a group that you don't like even "seemingly neutral"?
What's meant by that is that the threatened enforcement actions facially had a neutral basis. But only facially, as they were told outright that only companies doing business with the NRA would see any enforcement.
Only companies dealing with the NRA would have their daily 3 felonies prosecuted. That IS, after all, the point of having so many laws that everyone unavoidably violates one of them: So that you can point to a real violation of the law when you persecute your enemies.
More Constitutional Calvinball. SCOTUS rubber stamped Trump's Mulsim ban even though he overtly said it would be a Muslim ban.
Wouldn't matter, even if true. (Which it wasn't, since the ban applied to everybody from those countries, not just Muslims.) Non-Americans outside America have no US constitutional rights.
Somin's analogy is this: Cuomo's tweets showed that he unconstitutionally wanted to suppress the political speech if the NRA. Trump's tweets showed that he wanted to keep Moslem terrorists from entering the USA and committing crimes here.
So, the President cant ban immigration of members of Hamas? Or the Taliban? Or Iranians? All of whom want to kill ALL of us and impose sharia law, burkas and all. And you yahoos are all for this.
Iranians?
One of these things is not like the other.
You're a bigot. Iran is not like the Taliban or Hamas.
I know segments of the far right have a huuge blue-balls boner for war with Iran, but this is just bullshit.
Not the Iranian people.
Given half a chance they’d have the Mullahs and Revolutionary Guards heads on spikes given half a chance.
But the regime and their supporters?
Damn right.
People may differ on how Taliban adjacent Iran is, here is a 2023 report of a woman sentenced to death for adultery in Iran.
https://apnews.com/article/iran-death-penalty-adultery-39ac846801400d8d1399ca05f1053ac8
Kazinski, I remember when the Cuban people were so disaffected that it would take only one warlike nudge from the U.S. to get them to rise up and overthrow Castro.
Compared to Cuba, or even Afghanistan, Iran would be the mother of all quagmires. Iran is two-and-a-half times the size of Afghanistan, and just as inaccessible. (It's 15-times larger than Cuba, by the way.) Iran has more than twice the population of Afghanistan. Most of Iran is mountainous plateau. Even the Soviet Union was never stupid enough to try to subdue Iran.
Iranians are Moslems.
Well I know nothing takes a second seat to your prejudice against Jews except maybe for your hatred of Muslims.
Immigration policy by Congress is only subject to limited judicial review, even weaker than rational basis.
If a President were to go after immigration advocacy groups the same way the NYAG went after the NRA, social media posts by the President would be far more relevant.
It’s one thing to explain your disagreemwnt with Supreme Court precedents you disagree with. It’s quite another to simply pretend they don’t exist and caper on as if they weren’t there.
As Trump v. Hawaii and other recent cases found, extraterritorial aliens have no constitutional rights, including no right to enter this country, and no right to contest executive entry decisions, and no right to be free from discrimination of any kind, religious or otherwise. A foreigner no more has a constitutional right to enter this country than a fetus has a constitutional right to be born.
So while intent can be relevant where people’s constitutional rights are involved, that doesn’t mean it’s relevant in immigration or for that matter abortikn matters, where they are not.
Professor Somin’a argument is like taking earlier civil cases holding that government officials cannot abet lynchings even when the actual killing is done by private individuals and concluding that the Constitution prohibits government aid to facilitate abortion. Such an argument pretends the state of the law is completely different from what it actually is. It doesn’t engage the Court’s abortion cases or its holdings about the constitutional rights of the pre-natal as distinct from the post-natal. It pretends the whole field of abortion constitutional law never existed and the analogies to non-abortion cases work by hoping the audience is naive and ignorant enough not to be aware of their irrelevance. This is a similar approach.
Yes, we can legally exclude black people from entering this country, and not white.
Do you know what you’re saying? Fortunately Congress decided otherwise in 1965.
The 1965 immigration regime is constitutional. But the previous immigration regime is also constitutional. It’s Congress’ choice. And, if they decide to grant him discretion, the President’s.
That's right. And it would be constitutional to say no Moslems.
While these actions were seemingly neutral
I bet 2+2 seemingly equals 5 also.