| Oral
argument of the Secretary
of State's appeal of
our trial court victory
in Choose Life,
Inc. v. Jesse White is
scheduled for Tuesday,
November 27, at 9:00
am before the U.S.
Court of Appeals
for the Seventh Circuit. Last
January, 2007, Judge
David Coar ruled for
our side, granting
our motion for "summary
judgment" (i.e., the
case was decided on
paper, as there were
no material factual
disputes between the
parties and thus the
case could be, and
was, resolved strictly
on legal issues).
Judge
Coar ruled that Secretary
of State White himself
had been given authority
by the Illinois statutes
to approve and issue
specialty license
plates.
TMS
Press Release
• Choose
Life
Press
Release
for Court
of Appeals,
Nov.
27, 2007
(90
KB PDF)
Briefs
and Court
Documents
• Judge
Coar's
Memorandum
and Order
for Choose
Life
license
plate,
Jan. 19,
2007
(400
KB
PDF)
• Choose
Life
v.
White – Brief
of
Illinois
Attorney
General,
Lisa
Madigan,
on
behalf
of
Jesse
White,
to
overturn
ruling
for
Choose
Life
plate,
Feb.
8,
2007
(2,000
KB
PDF)
• Choose
Life
v.
White – Brief
of
Thomas
More
Society
and
co-counsel,
defending
the
trial
court
ruling
for
the
Choose
Life
plate,
July
27,
2007 (2,000
KB
PDF)
• Choose
Life
v.
White – Reply
Brief
of
Illinois
Attorney
General,
Aug.
24,
2007 (408
KB
PDF)
• Choose
Life,
Inc.
letter
regarding
statutory
issues,
Oct. 1,
2007 (459
KB
PDF)
• Illinois
Attorney
General's
letter
regarding
statutory
issues,
Oct. 4,
2007 (460
KB
PDF)
• Supplemental
Brief
and Appendix
of Jesse
White,
Secretary
of State
of the
State
of Illinois,
on the
effect
of two
new Illinois
laws
just
passed
by the
Illinois
General
Assembly,
Nov. 21,
2007 (450
KB
PDF)
• Supplemental
Brief
of the
Choose
Life
plaintiffs
on the
effect
of the
two new
laws,
Nov. 21,
2007 (60
KB
PDF)
Media
Coverage
• Choose Life License Plate MP3s from Court of Appeals:
>Argument in favor: Damon Taaffe, Esq., of the firm Robbins, Russell, Englert, Orseck, Untereiner & Sauber LLP of Washington DC — (Audio, 10 min.)
>Full Argument: Choose Life v. White — (Audio, 59 min.)
• "Choose
Life" license
plate
controversy,
Nov.
27,
2007, WIFR.com
• Struggle
about
plates
may be
near
end, Southtown
Star,
Nov.
18, 2007
(800
KB PDF)
• "Choose
Life" opposing
viewpoint,
by Tom
Brejcha, USA
Today,
Feb.
27, 2007
(900
KB PDF) |
|
His
punting of the ball
(so to speak) into
the General Assembly
was a ploy to allow
a political veto
of those viewpoints
deemed controversial. That
is, and these are
the Judge's words
in paraphrase, the
defense was guilty
of "viewpoint discrimination" in
violation of the
plaintiffs' First
Amendment rights. Judge
Coar went further
and ordered that
the Secretary approve
the "choose life" plate,
subject only to minor
details as to design,
and then begin producing
them and making them
available to the
public.
Over
25,000 Illinois citizens
had signed petitions
for issuance of these
plates. If
each "choose life" plate
would yield a modest
premium of $10 to
$25 for the benefit
of adoption agencies
in our state, renewable
annually, you can
see that a great
deal is hanging in
the balance — in
terms of promoting
adoption in Illinois
as well as in political
and financial terms.
Illinois
Attorney General
Lisa Madigan's office
has been handling
the appeal for Secretary
of State White. On
appeal, the State
has argued that the
messages on Illinois
specialty license
plates are "government
speech," not private
speech, and therefore
that the government
— the State of Illinois
— is free to advocate
in favor of some
causes and to reject
advocacy in favor
of others. Here,
the Attorney General
argues, the State
has decided against involvement
in "controversial" topics, such
as the "choose life" plate.
Also,
the State argues
that the statutory
scheme does
not vest authority
in the Secretary
of State to make
the final decision
on approval and issuance
of specialty plates. That
decision is reserved
for the General Assembly,
which must pass a
specific law approving
each and every specialty
plate — as has been
the practice for
many years.
Moreover,
the State has
cited a new bill
that was passed
at the last session
of the General Assembly
and which went into
effect last summer
when the deadline passed
without the Governor
signing it. This
new law now provides
that the General
Assembly must approve
each plate. The
Secretary has written
the Court a letter
urging that this
new law confirms
its position as it
clarifies the legislative
intent behind the
license plate statutes
at the time when
Judge Coar handed
down its decision.
On our
side of the argument,
we insist that specialty
license plates rather
obviously involve "private
speech" — just as
if a private speaker
were standing on
a soapbox in Daley
Plaza , advocating
a point of view. No
government — city,
state or federal
— may censor that
speaker on account
of the content of
his or her views
absent some compelling
government interest
and then only when
government narrowly
tailored its restrictive
rule to serve on
that specific compelling
interest — except,
of course, in cases
where private speech
is either obscene
or an incitement
to imminent,
lawless violence
or 'fighting words'
(a category that
many argue has been
undermined by later
free speech precedents). Here,
the Secretary's practice
of 'passing the buck'
to the General Assembly allowed
blatant "viewpoint
discrimination" against
this specific pro-adoption
message in defiance
of fundamental First
Amendment principles. The
State has made license
plates into a public
forum, letting all
variety of private
groups promote their
favored causes —
from the environmental
bird to the peace
dove, and so forth. The
alleged avoidance
of 'controversial'
subjects is transparently
bogus as so many
of the plates that
have been approved
and in production
and use all over
our Illinois
highways are 'controversial.'
As
for the new law,
we say this only
confirms our position
as adopted by the
Court below,
namely, that the
Illinois statutes
had vested full authority
in the Secretary
of State to approve
specialty license
plates. If
this were not so,
why then would there
be any need to pass
this new law? In
fact, given that
the Secretary's passing
the buck to
the legislature had
been ruled unconstitutional
by the district court,
isn't passage of
this law akin to
illicit state refusal
to remedy a federal
constitutional violation? That
is, doesn't this
put Illinois in a
role similar to that of
Governor Faubus and
Governor Wallace
who refused federal
orders to integrate
schools in obedience
to Brown v. Board
of Education and
other federal decisions
banning race discrimination
by state law and
ordering integration
of the public schools? Such
resistance to Judge
Coar's federal decree
only exacerbates
the constitutional
violation that was
committed here. |