Student Fees Upheld/Santa Fe
Michael McConnell
Mcconnellm at LAW.UTAH.EDU
Wed Mar 22 11:58:29 PST 2000
I think Marty Lederman identifies the right issue -- whether a
student vote for a speaker is equivalent to a student vote on the
content of the speaker's presentation -- but I think he may be wrong
about the answer. Analogy: it would be unconstitutional to pass a law
limiting a particular office to members of a particular religion, but
it is not unconstitutional to allow an election, even if some (many)
voters choose to vote on the basis of religion. That, it seems to me,
is the difference between Southworth and Santa Fe.
> Priority: 3
> Importance: Normal
> Date: Wed, 22 Mar 2000 14:32:32 -0400
> Reply-to: Discussion list for con law professors
> <CONLAWPROF at listserv.ucla.edu>
> From: "Lederman, Marty" <Marty.Lederman at USDOJ.GOV>
> Subject: Re: Student Fees Upheld/Santa Fe
> To: CONLAWPROF at listserv.ucla.edu
> Michael McConnell agrees with the Court that a student vote for
> which private speakers should be preferred is not viewpoint-neutral.
> (And the vote is attributable to the state, according to the Court
> (see slip op. p.2); if it weren't, there would be no reason to
> question its viewpoint-neutrality.) But that's precisely what's at
> issue in the Santa Fe prayer case. Accordingly, I would think that
> the student vote for a football-game "speaker" could be justified
> under the Free Speech Clause *only* if the student who wins the vote
> is thought to be speaking on behalf of the school. But if *that's*
> the case, then any resulting prayer by that student/state actor is
> unconstitutional, right?
>
> Marty Lederman (in my private capacity)
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Michael McConnell
> Sent: Wednesday, March 22, 2000 11:06 AM
> To: CONLAWPROF at listserv.ucla.edu@inetgw2
> Subject: Re: Student Fees Upheld
>
>
> I have not read the entire opinion, but it appears to hold that the
> majority referendum method, under with the PIRG group is funded, is
> unconstitutional. The theory, presumably, is that this method is not
> viewpoint neutral but rather favors the majority.
>
> That seems right to me. But it also seems at tension with the
> assumption that allocation of funds by the student representative
> body is viewpoint neutral. That assumption was predicated on the
> stipulation of the parties. I don't understand the stipulation. The
> case appears to have been decided on the basis of a stipulation that
> has no conceivable relation to reality. What is the precedential
> effect of this decision in the next case, where the plaintiffs
> allege that funds are distributed not in a viewpoint-neutral manner
> but according to the political preferences of the majority?
>
>
> -- Michael McConnell (U of Utah)
-- Michael McConnell (U of Utah)
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