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Monday, July 01, 2024

Thoughts on NetChoice

I decided to begin the day with NetChoice, the case about which I would have something to write. Then I can read about how the framers, 11 years removed from a revolution against a king, created a monarch (more powerful than the one it replaced) who is selected and serves for a few years at a time but otherwise can do no wrong.

Anyway, NetChoice. The argument somewhat previewed the result, but the internal dynamics may have been messy.

• The Court is unanimous on the disposition of this appeals--vacate both lower courts and tell them to do the analysis over, because this is a facial challenge. Justice Kagan writes for six (the Chief, Sotomayor, Kavanaugh, Barrett, Jackson) to explain a proper approach to facial challenges and to trace the Court's editorial-judgment jurisprudence (Tornillo, PG&E, Turner, Hurley, Pruneyard, and FAIR). She writes for five (loses Jackson) to explain how that jurisprudence applies to render the core provisions of the laws constitutionally invalid and to highlight how badly the Fifth Circuit messed up. Justice Barrett concurs to complain about the complexities of facial challenges and to suggest plaintiffs would have an easier time with a narrower as-applied challenge. Justice Jackson does not join the parts of Kagan's opinon (III-B and C) that explain how that jurisprudence ought to apply to these laws, deeming it premature. Justice Thomas concurs in the judgment to explain why facial challenges should not be allowed. Justice Alito concurs in the judgment for three (Thomas and Gorsuch) to explain why the Court should not have opined on the First Amendment questions and then to offer a contrary First Amendment analysis.

• This will be lost in the procedural mud and the news of the day, but: Five-and-a-half Justices offered a strong vision of First Amendment protection for curators of all kinds and of the limits of government trying to balance the market in ways it deems proper or in ways that will help the speakers and speech it likes.

• Justice Jackson's choice is odd. She joins Kagan's summary of the jurisprudence (III-A) but not its application (III-B and C). But Kagan completes that summary with three general points--1) the First Amendment protects curation of third-party speech; 2) that does not change when the compiler allows most speech or only excludes a small amount of speech; and 3) the government does not have an interest in balancing the expressive marketplace. Those three principles imply the resolution as to the core provisions--the sites have a First Amendment right to do this and Florida and Texas cannot rely on the only interest either has offered for these provisions. So if Jackson believes the statement of legal principles (with their obvious implications) is proper, I am not sure why she departed from the actual application.

• Justice Thomas explains everything that is wrong with facial challenges, including that they enable universal injunctions. But this is wrong, as Dick Fallon has argued. A declaration of facial invalidity is a statement about the law that has preclusive effect on the parties and precedential effect on future parties. It does not disappear the law, it does not adjudicate the rights of non-parties, and it does not stop future enforcement against non-parties. Although facial resolution from SCOTUS dictates the outcome of that future enforcement as a matter of precedent, that is how precedent is supposed to work. Perhaps apprehensiveness about facial challenges is of a piece with the idea (observed more in the breach) that the Court should decide no more than necessary to decide the case. But that is a prudential rule, not grounded in Article III or separation of powers. Of course, the Court could get to the same place if it did not insist on judicial supremacy, on it having the final word on the constitutional question that binds all other actors.

• The Court limits (majority view) or rejects (Thomas view) facial challenges as a way to keep the Court from wielding too much power at the expense of the other branches, where those branches would be stymied by the Court's pronouncements on the Constitution to make or enforce the laws against non-parties in the future. But the Court would not need that limit if it did not assume that a declaration of facial validity binds the executive in the future.

Murthy v. Missouri held that states and users lack standing to challenge the Biden Administration's jawboning of social-media sites, reflecting the Court's distaste for "massive kitchen-sink, lots-of-plaintiffs/lots-of-defendants/lots-of-bad-conduct constitutional claims." Something similar might be at work here. These laws have core provisions raising constitutional problems (limits on curation and notice requirements) for specific actors (Facebook and YouTube) for specific conduct (their home pages or news feeds). Litigation by a trade association challenging all provisions of the law goes too far. Again, that limit might have cross-ideological effects.

• It will be interesting to see what happens going forward. Might it be worth it for NetChoice (or just Facebook and YouTube) to rework this as an as-applied challenge to the moderation and notice provisions (which a majority of the Court said violate the First Amendment) and leave the rest for another day? There is an argument (Ilya makes it) that the invalidity of these core provisions is sufficient to create the necessary overbreadth compared with any legitimate sweep of the law (such as Gmail or Uber reviews).

• Florida AG Ashley Moody took to Twitter to announce that the Court unanimously sided with it--"We are pleased that SCOTUS agreed with Florida and rejected the lower court’s flawed reasoning—invalidating our social media law. While there are aspects of the decision we disagree with, we look forward to continuing to defend state law." This is impressive in its understatedness and in its cynicism that my fellow Floridians will not read the opinion or get their news from an accurate source. "Aspects of the decision we disagree with"--the Court rejected the entire First Amendment edifice on which Florida relied. Kagan's opinion sees "the First Amendment issues much as" the Eleventh Circuit did in Judge Newsom's excellent opinion. Moreover, in emphasizing the Fifth Circuit's wrongness, the Court impliedly announced the Eleventh Circuit's correctness as to the constitutional invalidity of the core provisions.

Posted by Howard Wasserman on July 1, 2024 at 02:46 PM in Civil Procedure, Constitutional thoughts, First Amendment, Howard Wasserman, Judicial Process | Permalink

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