The Volokh Conspiracy
Mostly law professors | Sometimes contrarian | Often libertarian | Always independent
"Viewpoint Diversity" Requirements as a New Fairness Doctrine: Regulators' Motivations
I have an article titled "Viewpoint Diversity" Requirements as a New Fairness Doctrine forthcoming in several months in the George Mason Law Review, and I wanted to serialize a draft of it here. There is still time to edit it, so I'd love to hear people's feedback. The material below omits the footnotes (except a few that I've moved into text, marked with {}s, as I normally do when I move text within quotes); if you want to see the footnotes—or read the whole draft at once—you can read this PDF. You can see the opening sections drawing the Fairness Doctrine / viewpoint diversity requirements analogy here; here is a brief section that dismisses one argument against viewpoint diversity requirements:
[IV.] Regulators' Motivations
[It does not matter for purposes of my analysis] that modern viewpoint diversity mandates come out of a desire to promote certain viewpoints (today, conservative ones) that their backers think are unfairly discriminated against.
Many regulations stem from perceived problems caused by particular groups that express particular views. The 36-foot bubble zone around abortion clinics in McCullen v. Coakley, for instance, was enacted in response to speech that expressed anti-abortion views. The bubble zone disproportionately affected anti-abortion speech. The legislators who voted for it were likely abortion rights supporters. But the Court treated the restriction as viewpoint-neutral and even content-neutral because the government's stated purposes were sufficiently neutral: protecting safety and preventing obstruction of passageways.
One could say the same of other restrictions, such as the residential picketing ban in Frisby v. Schultz, which was enacted in response to picketing outside an abortion provider's home, or the bans on picketing near funerals, which appear to have been prompted by the actions of the Westboro Baptist Church.
Likewise, a stated purpose of protecting the "widest possible dissemination of information from diverse and antagonistic sources" should be seen as sufficiently viewpoint-neutral as well. And that would be so even if Republican government officials considered the underlying imbalance in dissemination as skewed against Republicans.
To be sure, Moody v. NetChoice, LLC, rejected the government's attempt to provide ideological balance on social media platforms by restricting the platforms' ability to curate their news feeds. But this involved direct regulation of privately funded speakers. The Court didn't speak to whether the government may try to promote viewpoint diversity through conditions on government spending.
I will argue below that viewpoint diversity mandates are necessarily viewpoint-discriminatory in operation. But the argument will not turn on the likelihood that the backers were likely concerned about the underrepresentation of viewpoints that the backers favored and thought had been treated unfairly.
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
One of Prof. V's incidental points:
"The 36-foot bubble zone around abortion clinics in McCullen v. Coakley, for instance, was enacted in response to speech that expressed anti-abortion views. The bubble zone disproportionately affected anti-abortion speech. The legislators who voted for it were likely abortion rights supporters. But the Court treated the restriction as viewpoint-neutral and even content-neutral because the government's stated purposes were sufficiently neutral: protecting safety and preventing obstruction of passageways."
Here of course we're not just dealing with freedom of speech but with the 1st Amendment right to peaceable assembly. *Non*-peaceable assembly is already against the law whether it takes place in a "bubble zone" or not. But this law seems to ban even peaceful assembly if it's in a bubble zone. Unless you think that *nothing* pro-lifers do in bubble zones is peaceful - not even handing out information to pregnant women about the assistance available to them.
"Time, place and manner" restrictions on peaceable assembly have to be neutral, but I don't see how it's neutral to categorically exclude peaceful protesters from the sidewalks in front of an abortion clinic, but not from the sidewalks in front of a business involved in animal slaughter. The only difference is that the kind of people who support bubble zones are more sympathetic to "animal rights" protesters than to supporters of human rights.
I don't think the government should require political or racial discrimination, not even in the name of "diversity," "affirmative action," or other euphemism.
The presumption of innocence means that various employers which discriminate against blacks, conservatives, etc. may sometimes get away with it because of a plaintiff's difficulty in finding proof. But that's a general cost of the presumption of innocence: it's easier for the guilty to escape than under a regime presuming guilt - which is what "remedial" discrimination does.
Conservatives' ideas are so bad they need ideological affirmative action in order to compete. It's not a good look guys.
Plus, we have thousands of hours of footage of you all explaining why affirmative action actually undermines the viability of the thing it's trying to affirm.
Whether I would label myself a conservative or not, I'm against political or racial discrimination in secular universities - whether that discrimination be used to promote wokeness or Trumpismo or whatever.
Though in theory, I might be open to discriminating against professors with *really* bad ideas, in practice - under current circumstances - the best course politically is to put up with the badness if that's the price to be paid for rejecting discrimination.
But all this talk about "the supporters of viewpoint diversity are hypocritical for opposing race-based affirmative action" - well, flip that around and the *opponents* of viewpoint diversity, if they support race-based affirmative action, are at least as hypocritical.
flip that around and the *opponents* of viewpoint diversity, if they support race-based affirmative action, are at least as hypocritical.
False. Viewpoints are canonically not immutable characteristics. It's trivially distinguishable.
Do you think religious affiliation is immutable? If not, should religious discrimination be legal?
Religious discrimination is legal in many contexts where other sorts of discrimination is not.
I'm not sure how that helps you - unless you say (for example) that religious colleges get to practice religious discrimination because religion is an immutable characteristic. But single-sex colleges can practice sex discrimination, despite sex being an immutable characteristic.
Wait, you don't think sex is an immutable characteristic, do you?
Read the compact for excellence.
It's not actually for viewpoint diversity. Unless you trust MAGA kommissars to be evenhanded.
Is it OK if I just read the Wikipedia article?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compact_for_Academic_Excellence_in_Higher_Education
So, let's see -
"Prohibits considering "sex, ethnicity, race, nationality, political views, sexual orientation, gender identity, religious associations, or proxies for any of those factors" in admissions decisions, scholarship, or programming. Requires the use of a standardized test for all undergraduate admissions. Universities must publish standardized test scores for admitted undergraduates by "race, national origin, and sex."... [With exceptions for "single-sex institutions and religious institutions"]
I hesitate to sign onto this, because it would use "sexual orientation" and "gender identity" as protected classes.
Which parts do you object to? Do you, like me, object to the inclusion of sexual orientation and gender identity as protected classes?
"Calls for ideological diversity, not just at the campus level, "but within every field, department, school, and teaching unit.""
Monitoring and enforcing ideological diversity would entail discrimination, contrary to the earlier provision which would ban discrimination based on political views. By requiring *and* forbidding discrimination, this "compact" violates the law of non-contradiction.
And there's some other stuff I haven't had a chance to look at, so maybe you can tell me which parts to be OUTRAGED about.
Check out the exceptions and the enforcement sections.
What I see in the article is the following provision for exceptions:
"Notwithstanding commitments to fairness above, single-sex institutions and religious institutions may favor a single sex or religious belief in hiring and admissions. Any university may preference American citizens over others."
Is that what you're referring to, or did Wikipedia cover up damaging information about the Trump administration?
Those are viewpoints. Kind of gives the neutrality game away.
And then the enforcement is through an 'external organization.' 1 guess what the ideological bent of such organizations will be.
It's not about neutrality, and you diminish yourself by playing dumb to pretend otherwise.
OK, but Congress made similar exemptions long before Trump. Shouldn't you condemn Congress along with Trump, rather suggesting some unique Trumpian evil in this matter?
If you noticed, I've been *criticizing* key provisions of this "compact."
However, on two specific points you and the other guy raised: I just don't see how it's uniquely Trumpian to punish aid to federally-designated terrorist organizations, or to give exemptions to religious and single-sex colleges.
You don't have to agree with these two specific policies, simply don't pretend Trump invented them.
Seriously, you've moved the peas under the shell. You said there was something wrong about exempting religious and single-sex colleges, and that's what I responded to. Then you shifted to your hysterical straw-man denunciations.
Congress doesn't purport to be fighting for viewpoint diversity.
That is, if you recall, the thesis you are defending - that the compact is seeking viewpoint diversity.
I see you criticize some parts of the compact...on your way to criticizing me for criticizing the compact.
I think you need to clarify what you're arguing about here.
Trump is calling whatever he doesn't like a terrorist organization (https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2025/09/countering-domestic-terrorism-and-organized-political-violence/ - "anti-Americanism, anti-capitalism, and anti-Christianity...extremism on migration, race, and gender; and hostility towards those who hold traditional American views on family, religion, and morality")
Calling your political opposition terrorists, and thus threatening schools? That sure as heck is uniquely Trumpian.
I'm pretty clear; you're all over the map. I have no idea about much but that you're defending Trump...somehow.
"That is, if you recall, the thesis you are defending - that the compact is seeking viewpoint diversity."
Seriously? Are you that stupid? That's what you got from my *criticism* of the proposed diversity policy? You can't seem to take "yes" for an answer. You think even *criticism* of Trump is bad if the denunciation isn't angry and spittle-flecked enough.
What on earth is wrong with you?
"I see you criticize some parts of the compact...on your way to criticizing me for criticizing the compact."
I never said there was anything inherently wrong with the mere fact of you criticizing the compact. Even you finally admit I criticized it, too. My beef is with the poor quality of your arguments.
It helps to read the
actual compact
.It seems to be yearning for ideological quotas...
... despite acknowledging the damage it would do...
Of course it puts its thumb on the scale for conservatives...
And even dictates some ideology that Universities are required to sign on to.
"Signatories shall adopt policies prohibiting... support for entities designated by the U.S. government as terrorist organizations."
Wait, isn't such support a crime? I mean, you can go to prison for it, so why would it be a new principle for a university to use disciplinary sanctions for it?
The context in the compact is restrictions on speech.
OK, but the same behavior is already, independently, a crime - whether you like this or not, President Trump didn't invent the idea of punishing supporters of federally-designated terrorist organizations.
(Note: I think that in *criminal* cases (not university disciplinary proceedings) a jury, not the President, should decide whether the group which the defendant assisted is a terrorist organization or not).
Speech supporting terrorists is not a crime. "Material support" means money or weapons or whatever, not just, like, moral support.
OK, I see your point now, but to be fair, you hadn't been specific before about the differences between the criminal code and the "compact" concerning aid to federally-designated terrorist organizations.
Bear in mind that criminal prosecutions for aiding alleged terrorists have been criticized before Trump, precisely for the reasons you mention: critics said that these prosecutions were punishing people merely for pro-terrorist speech.