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WISCONSIN RIGHT TO LIFE, INC. v. BARLAND, 10-C-0669. (2015)

Court: District Court, E.D. Wisconsin Number: infdco20150202c22 Visitors: 26
Filed: Jan. 30, 2015
Latest Update: Jan. 30, 2015
Summary: DECLARATORY JUDGMENT AND PERMANENT INJUNCTION FOLLOWING THE SEVENTH CIRCUIT REMAND IN WISCONSIN RIGHT TO LIFE, INC. V. BARLAND (" BARLAND-II ") 1 C.N. CLEVERT, Jr., District Judge. Plaintiffs Wisconsin Right to Life, Inc. ("WRTL") and Wisconsin Right to Life State Political Action Committee ("WRTL-SPAC") filed this action challenging the constitutionality of Wisconsin law. Defendants are Thomas Barland, in his official capacity as chair and member of the Wisconsin Government Accountability
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DECLARATORY JUDGMENT AND PERMANENT INJUNCTION FOLLOWING THE SEVENTH CIRCUIT REMAND IN WISCONSIN RIGHT TO LIFE, INC. V. BARLAND ("BARLAND-II")1

C.N. CLEVERT, Jr., District Judge.

Plaintiffs Wisconsin Right to Life, Inc. ("WRTL") and Wisconsin Right to Life State Political Action Committee ("WRTL-SPAC") filed this action challenging the constitutionality of Wisconsin law.

Defendants are Thomas Barland, in his official capacity as chair and member of the Wisconsin Government Accountability Board ("GAB"); Harold Froehlich, in his official capacity as vice chair and member of GAB; John Franke, Elsa Lamelas, Gerald Nichol, and Timothy Vocke, in their official capacities as members of GAB; and John Chisholm, in his official capacity as Milwaukee County District Attorney.

The court enters the following declaratory judgment and permanent injunction pursuant to Barland-II.

* * *

Defendants shall immediately and conspicuously post, on the homepage of GAB's website, valid hyperlinks to file-stamped copies of Barland-II2 and this order, both of which the public shall be able to access free of charge. Defendants shall do the same for Wisconsin Right to Life State Political Action Committee v. Barland ("Barland-I"),3 the Seventh Circuit's previous opinion in this action. Valid hyperlinks shall remain conspicuously on GAB's homepage for four years4 after official publication of legislation and GAB rules — whichever is later — bringing Wisconsin law into compliance with Barland-I and Barland-II.

* * *

First, Wisconsin bans corporations such as WRTL from making disbursements.5 The court grants declaratory judgment and permanently enjoins Defendants from administering or civilly enforcing Wisconsin's corporate-disbursement ban against any person,6 or criminally investigating or prosecuting (or referring for investigation or prosecution)7 any person under this ban, because the ban is facially unconstitutional.8

Second, Wisconsin law triggers what Citizens United v. FEC9 recognizes are political-committee and political-committee-like burdens for WRTL when it engages in its speech. These burdens are (1) registration,10 (2) recordkeeping,11 and (3) periodic12 reporting,13 and Wisconsin triggers them in multiple ways.

One way is through Wisconsin's statutory political-purposes definition,14 which turns on what is for the "purpose of influencing" elections.15 This definition is part of Wisconsin's statutory contribution and disbursement definitions.16 These statutory contribution and disbursement definitions are part of Wisconsin's statutory committee-or-political-committee definition.17 This committee-or-political-committee definition "triggers" political-committee burdens.18

Meanwhile, Wisconsin's regulatory political-committee definition19 also turns on what is "to influence elections" and "triggers" political-committee burdens.20

Because they turn on what influences elections, Wisconsin's statutory political-purposes definition and Wisconsin's regulatory political-committee definition are unconstitutionally vague under Buckley v. Valeo.21

Therefore, to resolve this vagueness "[a]s applied to political speakers other than candidates, their campaign committees, and political parties, the [statutory political-purposes and regulatory political-committee] definitions are limited to express advocacy and its functional equivalent as those terms were explained in Buckley" and FEC v. Wisconsin Right to Life, Inc.22 As applied to such speakers, this law reaches no further than "express advocacy and its functional equivalent as those terms were explained in Buckley" and WRTL-II.23

The court therefore grants declaratory judgment and permanently enjoins Defendants from administering or civilly enforcing Wisconsin's statutory political-purposes definition and Wisconsin's regulatory political-committee definition against any person, or criminally investigating or prosecuting (or referring for investigation or prosecution) any person under this law, in any way inconsistent with the previous paragraph.

Third, another way in which Wisconsin triggers political-committee-like burdens is through GAB 1.28(3)(b).

The second of two sentences in GAB 1.28(3)(b) turns on what "[s]upports or condemns" candidates' positions on issues, stances on issues, and public records.24 Because "[s]upports or condemns" is unconstitutionally vague,25 the court grants declaratory judgment and permanently enjoins Defendants from administering or civilly enforcing the second of two sentences in GAB 1.28(3)(b) against any person, or criminally investigating or prosecuting (or referring for investigation or prosecution) any person under this sentence.

However, the court holds the first of two sentences in GAB 1.28(3)(b)26 is not unconstitutionally vague.27

Fourth, Wisconsin triggers political-committee and political-committee-like burdens not only through the statutory committee-or-political-committee definition28 and GAB 1.2829 but also through GAB 1.91.30

To resolve as-applied and facial overbreadth31 challenges — as opposed to as-applied and facial vagueness challenges — Buckley holds that government may trigger political-committee or political-committee-like burdens only for "organizations" that (a) are "under the control of a candidate" or candidates in their capacities as candidates, or (b) have the "the major purpose" of express advocacy under Buckley.32

Referring to organizations that are not under the control of any candidate(s) in their capacities as candidates, Barland-II holds that Wisconsin may trigger political-committee or political-committee-like burdens33 only for organizations that have the "major purpose" of "express advocacy."34

The court therefore grants declaratory judgment and permanently enjoins Defendants from administering or civilly enforcing the statutory committee-or-political-committee definition, GAB 1.28, and GAB 1.91 against any person, or criminally investigating or prosecuting (or referring for investigation or prosecution) under these laws any person, in any way inconsistent with the previous two paragraphs.

Fifth, WRTL-SPAC — not WRTL — challenges Wisconsin's regulatory attribution and disclaimer requirements35 as applied to WRTL-SPAC's thirty-second radio ads, saying the requirements take up most of the thirty seconds and distract the listeners from WRTL-SPAC's message. The court holds that Wisconsin's regulatory attribution and disclaimer requirements are overbroad as applied to radio speech of thirty seconds or fewer.36 The court grants declaratory judgment and permanently enjoins Defendants from administering or civilly enforcing these requirements against any person, or criminally investigating or prosecuting (or referring for investigation or prosecution) any person under these requirements, for radio speech of thirty seconds or fewer.

Sixth, WRTL-SPAC's purely official-capacity challenge to Wisconsin's twenty-four-hour reporting requirements37 is moot, because Wisconsin amended the law in 2014, after the Seventh Circuit oral argument in Barland-II and before the Seventh Circuit opinion in Barland-II, and changed twenty-four-hour reporting to forty-eight-hour reporting.38

Seventh, the court upholds Wisconsin's oath-for-independent-disbursements requirement,39 which WRTL-SPAC also challenged.

Eighth, WRTL and WRTL-SPAC challenged Wisconsin's limit on what organizations spend to solicit contributions to their own political committees40 as applied to WRTL and WRTL-SPAC, because WRTL-SPAC engages in only independent spending for political speech. However, Barland-II strikes the limit facially.41 The court grants declaratory judgment and permanently enjoins Defendants from administering or civilly enforcing Wisconsin's limit on what organizations spend to solicit contributions to their own political committees42 against any person, or criminally investigating or prosecuting (or referring for investigation or prosecution) any person under this law.

* * *

SO ORDERED.

FootNotes


1. 751 F.3d 804, Nos.12-2915/12-3046/12-3158 (7th Cir. May 14, 2014).
2. Thus, for the public's convenience, this order includes both F.3d cites and slip-op. cites.
3. 664 F.3d 139, No.11-2623 (7th Cir. Dec. 12, 2011).
4. Two state-election cycles and one gubernatorial-election cycle.
5. WIS. STAT. § 11.38(1)(a)1.; Barland-II, 751 F.3d at 816, slip op. at 22.
6. Including "person" as defined in WIS. STAT. § 990.01(26). Throughout this order, "person" includes a combination of two or more persons.
7. See, e.g., O'Keefe v. Chisholm, 769 F.3d 936, 937 (7th Cir. 2014) (dismissing "a judicially supervised criminal investigation into the question whether certain persons have violated the state's campaign-finance laws"); id. ("The ongoing criminal investigation is being supervised by a judge, in lieu of a grand jury. Wis. Stat. § 968.26. Prosecutors in Wisconsin can ask the state's courts to conduct these inquiries, which go by the name `John Doe proceedings' because they may begin without any particular target. The District Attorney for Milwaukee County[, a Defendant in this action,] made such a request"); id. at 938 ("Wisconsin's Government Accountability Board, [whose members are Defendants in this action and] which supervises campaigns and conducts elections, likewise called for an investigation. District Attorneys in four other counties made similar requests.").
8. Barland-II, 751 F.3d at 831, 843, slip op. at 55, 83. To be clear: The ban in WIS. STAT. § 11.38(1)(a)1. on direct and indirect contributions that corporations make is not at issue in Barland-II, so the court issues no holding on, and expresses no opinion on, the constitutionality of this ban.
9. 558 U.S. 310, 337-38 (2010).
10. WIS. STAT. §§ 11.05 (registration), 11.10(3) (treasurer), 11.12(1) (same), 11.14 (bank account), 11.16(1), (3) (treasurer and bank account), 11.19 (termination); WIS. ADMIN. CODE §§ GAB 1.28(2) ("the applicable requirements of Ch. 11, Stats."), GAB 1.91(3) (bank account, treasurer, and registration), GAB 1.91(4), (6) (registration), GAB-1.91(8) (citing WIS. STAT. § 11.19 (termination)).
11. WIS. STAT. § 11.12(3); GAB 1.28(2) ("the applicable requirements of Ch. 11, Stats."), GAB 1.91(8) (citing W IS. STAT. § 11.12, which includes recordkeeping requirements in § 11.12(3)).
12. FEC v. Mass. Citizens for Life, Inc., 479 U.S. 238, 255 (1986) ("MCFL").
13. WIS. STAT. §§ 11.06, 11.12(4), 11.20; GAB 1.28(2) ("the applicable requirements of Ch. 11, Stats."); GAB 1.91(8) (citing a subset of political-committee reporting requirements).
14. WIS. STAT. § 11.01(16); Barland-II, 751 F.3d at 815, slip op. at 20.
15. WIS. STAT. § 11.01(16); Barland-II, 751 F.3d at 815, 833, slip op. at 20, 59.
16. WIS. STAT. § 11.01(6), (7); Barland-II, 751 F.3d at 815, slip op. at 19.
17. WIS. STAT. § 11.01(4); Barland-II, 751 F.3d at 812, slip op. at 12-13.
18. Barland-II, 751 F.3d at 812, 815, 832, slip op. at 13, 19, 59.
19. GAB 1.28(1)(a); Barland-II, 751 F.3d at 826, slip op. at 43.
20. Barland-II, 751 F.3d at 826, slip op. at 43.
21. 424 U.S. 1, 77 (1976). Barland-II, 751 F.3d at 833, 843-44, slip op. at 60, 83.
22. 551 U.S. 449 (2007) ("WRTL-II"). Barland-II, 751 F.3d at 844, slip op. at 83.
23. Citizens United v. FEC re-labels "the functional equivalent of express advocacy" as the "`appeal to vote' test." 558 U.S. 310, 335 (2010) (quoting WRTL-II, 551 U.S. at 470).
24. Barland-II, 751 F.3d at 826, slip op. at 45.
25. Id. at 837-38, 843-44, slip op. at 70-71, 83.
26. Id. at 826, slip op. at 45.
27. Id. at 838, slip op. at 71.
28. WIS. STAT. § 11.01(4); Barland-II, 751 F.3d at 812, slip op. at 12-13.
29. Barland-II, 751 F.3d at 826, slip op. at 43-45.
30. Id. at 839-40, 844-46, slip op. at 74, 84-86.
31. Id. at 839, slip op. at 72.
32. 424 U.S. at 79, followed in MCFL, 479 U.S. at 252 n.6, 262, and McConnell v. FEC, 540 U.S. 93, 170 n.64 (2003).
33. Wisconsin has no non-political-committee reporting requirements. See Barland-II, 751 F.3d at 841-42, slip op. at 77-80.
34. Id. at 834, 839, 841, 842, 844, slip op. at 62, 72-73, 77, 79-80, 84.
35. WIS. ADMIN. CODE § GAB 1.42(5) ("GAB 1.42"); Barland-II, 751 F.3d at 816, slip op. at 21. Barland-II correctly understands the difference between an "attribution" and a "disclaimer[.]" 751 F.3d at 815-16, slip op. at 21.
36. Id. at 832, 843, slip op. at 57-59, 83.
37. WIS. STAT. § 11.12(5)-(6); Barland-II, 751 F.3d at 842-43, slip op. at 80-81.
38. Barland-II, 751 F.3d at 842-43, slip op. at 80-81.
39. WIS. STAT. § 11.06(7); GAB 1.42(1); Barland-II, 751 F.3d at 843, slip op. at 82.
40. WIS. STAT. § 11.38(1)(a)3.; Barland-II, 751 F.3d at 816, slip op. at 22.
41. Barland-II, 751 F.3d at 831, 844, slip op. at 56-57, 83.
42. Although WRTL and WRTL-SPAC also challenged a corresponding provision, WIS. STAT. § 11.38(1)(b), Barland-II addresses only § 11.38(1)(a)3. 751 F.3d at 831, slip op. at 56-57. Because § 11.38(1)(a)3 limits what organizations spend to solicit contributions for their own political committees, and because § 11.38(1)(b), inter alia, bans political committees from accepting what § 11.38(1)(a)3 disallows, the facial holding on § 11.38(1)(a)3 provides the necessary relief here. Cf. id.
Source:  Leagle

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