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Vol. 73, No. 6, June 2000 |
The Price of Free Speech:
Regents v. Southworth
In Regents v. Southworth the U.S. Supreme Court
determined that so long as access to student fees is allocated
to registered student organizations on a viewpoint-neutral basis,
the First Amendment compelled speech doctrine does not prohibit
a university from imposing a mandatory student fee.
by Jon G. Furlow
he First Amendment forms
the foundation for what many consider to be defining American
traits: individualism, boundless creative expression, and the
spirit of protest. The right to speak freely is a cornerstone
of the U.S. Constitution, even when that speech could legitimately
be considered vulgar.1 Justice Black
captured the point in his defense of the Communist party: freedom
of speech "must be accorded to the ideas we hate or sooner
or later they will be denied to the ideas we cherish."2
So
too the First Amendment protects the rights of individuals from
being compelled to speak or support causes that violate our freedom
of conscience. This right not to speak has been jealously guarded
since Thomas Jefferson's pointed warning in the early days
of our democracy:
"[T]hat to compel a man to furnish contributions of money
for the propagation of opinions which he disbelieves, is sinful
and tyrannical."
This principal finds its contemporary application in the endless
litigation over payment of mandatory dues to unions and bar associations,
including our own State Bar of Wisconsin.3
The Southworth Dispute
These two principles collided in Board of Regents of the
University of Wisconsin System v. Southworth.4
Southworth was a dispute over whether students at the
U.W.-Madison could be compelled to pay a mandatory student fee
that is used in part to fund student groups that engage in political
and ideological speech.
Like many public universities, the University of Wisconsin
requires students to pay a student fee as a condition of graduation.
A portion of the fee is used to fund registered student organizations,
known as RSOs. All RSOs are eligible to receive funding by submitting
an application, and many do. The system also allows for a referendum
process that can be used to fund or de-fund RSOs at the ballot
box. Except for the referendum process, the parties agreed that
the process for an RSO to obtain funding was viewpoint neutral;
that is, funding was available equally to all RSOs, without regard
to the RSO's particular views.
The Clash of First Amendment Principles
The objecting students were three U.W.-Madison law school
students. They advanced a basic First Amendment claim well known
to Thomas Jefferson: the mandatory fee system compelled them
to subsidize political and ideological speech of RSOs that they
found offensive. Either the mandatory student fee system must
go or, like union and state bar members, the students had a First
Amendment right to withhold their student fee from these groups.
The University of Wisconsin posited an equally compelling
First Amendment defense. The use of student fees to subsidize
RSOs serves a core purpose of the University to facilitate a
wide range of speech on innumerable subjects. This essential
purpose had been recognized by the U.S. Supreme Court5,
and was explicitly defined in Wisconsin Statutes
section 36.01.
Far from infringing free speech, the subsidy system advanced
First Amendment goals by facilitating more speech.
Beneath the Constitutional principles, the underlying dispute
in Southworth was political. The law students were self-described
Christian conservatives who were reportedly funded and represented
by a conservative organization dedicated to de-funding the left.
The students wanted to win the right to withhold funding from
groups at the U.W.-Madison campus such as the U.W. Greens (a
left-leaning environmental group), the Wisconsin Public Interest
Research Group (a left-leaning public policy group), the Women's
Center, Lesbian/Gay/Bisexual Campus Center, and the Madison AIDS
Support Network. At bottom, the dispute recognized the direct
relationship, well known in political circles, between funding
and effective speech.
The Legal Landscape
The debate over mandatory fees was not new. The question had
been squarely addressed in the union and bar association context
where use of mandatory fees was limited. Mandatory fees also
were at issue and upheld for generic advertising that arose from
the Agricultural Marketing Agreement Act.6
As to student fees, there was a healthy split of authority, both
in state and federal courts, on whether mandatory student fee
programs were constitutional. The California Supreme Court and
the Third Circuit had ruled that such programs were unconstitutional7, the Second, Fourth, Fifth, and Ninth
Circuits, joined by the Washington Supreme Court, had found similar
student fee programs constitutional.8
The U.S. Supreme Court had acknowledged the difficulty of
this issue in a student fee case involving the University of
Virginia, Rosenberger v. Rector & Visitors of the University
of Virginia.9 The question there
was not whether students could be compelled to pay a mandatory
fee; the question was whether the University of Virginia could
prevent the use of the funds to defray costs of a student-run
religious publication on the basis that the funding would violate
the First Amendment Establishment Clause.
In a splintered 5-4 opinion, the U.S. Supreme Court decided
against the University of Virginia. The Court concluded that
the fee system was akin to a public forum. As such, withholding
funds from a participant in the forum was impermissible viewpoint
discrimination that was not otherwise justified by the Establishment
Clause concerns that arose from providing funds to support a
religious viewpoint.10 The teaching
from Rosenberger was that once a university opened a forum,
it was required by the First Amendment to allow all student groups,
regardless of viewpoint, to participate in the forum, even if
it meant that funds would be used for defraying printing costs
for a religious publication.
The Lower Court Decisions in Southworth
The students in Southworth prevailed in both the district
court and the Seventh Circuit. Both courts adopted the analysis
from the union and bar association cases to protect students
from being compelled to support organizations that engage in
political and ideological speech with which the students objected.11
The Seventh Circuit denied the motion for rehearing and suggestions
for rehearing en banc, although three members of the Seventh
Circuit, Judges Rovner, Wood, and Evans, dissented from the denial
of rehearing on the basis that the fee system that makes a subsidy
available to all student groups alike furthers the purpose of
the First Amendment by enhancing speech.12
The Supreme Court Decides
The Supreme Court granted certiorari and, in a unanimous
decision with a concurrence, reversed on the merits and remanded
the portion of the case that involved the referendum process.
The Supreme Court did not abandon the compelled speech doctrine
from the union and state bar cases, but used them as the "beginning
point of the analysis"13 to
highlight the need to provide First Amendment protection to the
students. In the union and bar cases, the members' First
Amendment rights were protected by limiting the use of the mandatory
dues to only those activities "germane" to the functions
of the bar or union. This requirement ensured that members would
be required only to contribute to the core facets of the organization
from which they draw some benefit.14
They would not be forced to violate their freedom of conscience
by making compelled contributions to objectionable partisan political
or ideological causes.
Defining the core mission of a university in Southworth
posed a more difficult problem, and the Supreme Court decided
that the "germaneness" standard was unworkable in the
University context. Already the Supreme Court had been experiencing
difficulty applying the germaneness test to union and state bar
activity, as demonstrated by the fractured opinion in Lehnert
v. Ferris Faculty Ass'n.15
To now export that standard to the university setting would compound
the difficulty. Unlike the relatively focused missions of a union
or a state bar, the mission of a university is far broader, more
undefined and is "distinguished not by discernable limits
but by its vast unexplored bounds."16
Another form of protection was needed for the objecting students,
and it came in the form of viewpoint neutrality. So long as access
to the pool of funds generated by the student fees is allocated
to RSOs on a viewpoint neutral basis, the Supreme Court concluded
that the First Amendment compelled speech doctrine does not prohibit
a university from imposing a mandatory student fee. This rule
directly addressed the concern of the compelled speech doctrine:
to protect an individual's freedom of conscience by preventing
the state from forcing an individual to become associated with
an objectionable message.
The paradigm is the New Hampshire statute that prohibited
motorists from obscuring the motto "Live Free or Die"
on their license plate.17 The motorist
prevailed, and the statute was struck down because the state
had forced the motorist to carry the state's ideological
message. Likewise, in the union and state bar cases the members
won the right to limit the use of funds to prevent the organization
from using their funds to support a singular, partisan objective.
By contrast, imposing a viewpoint neutral requirement on a
student fee system eliminated the concern of a student being
misidentified with an objectionable message. It is just as likely
that the funded speech supports one viewpoint (for example, a
Campus Republican rally or Federalist Society Meeting) as it
does another, conflicting viewpoint (for example, Campus Democrats
or the U.W. Greens). Put another way, the constitutional links
between the individual and the message that it required in a
compelled speech case does not exist if the message is a babel.
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