Monday, January 15, 2024

Judge Newsom awarded "judge of the week" by David Lat...

 ...in his excellent newsletter Original Jurisdiction here.  You all should subscribe.  It's worth it.  Here's the section on Judge Newsom:

Judge of the Week: Judge Kevin Newsom.

I’m a fan of the First Amendment, and I’m a fan of Judge Kevin Newsom (11th Cir.). So I was a happy camper this week, with Judge Newsom writing two noteworthy concurrences in First Amendment cases (and joining an opinion by Judge Britt Grant in a third case that vindicated free-speech rights).

First, Judge Newsom joined the majority opinion of Judge Jill Pryor in Warren v. DeSantis. After Andrew Warren, State Attorney for Florida’s Thirteenth Judicial Circuit, signed statements issued by a criminal-justice nonprofit articulating progressive positions on transgender rights and abortion, Governor Ron DeSantis (R-Fla.) suspended Warren from office. Warren sued, claiming that his suspension constituted retaliation for protected speech, in violation of the First Amendment.

The district court upheld the suspension, but the unanimous Eleventh Circuit panel vacated and remanded, concluding that Judge Robert Hinkle (N.D. Fla.) analyzed the relevant factors incorrectly. Judge Newsom joined Judge Pryor’s opinion in full but also wrote an excellent concurrence, which ended as follows (citations omitted):

The First Amendment is an inconvenient thing. It protects expression that some find wrongheaded, or offensive, or even ridiculous. But for the same reason that the government can’t muzzle so-called “conservative” speech under the guise of preventing on-campus “harassment,” the state can’t exercise its coercive power to censor so-called “woke” speech with which it disagrees. What’s good for mine is (whether I like it or not) good for thine.

Amen. As Mark Joseph Stern wrote in Slate, this ruling won’t help Judge Newsom’s chances for being appointed to the Supreme Court in a Republican administration—but it shows that he’s a principled and independent jurist.

Second, Judge Newsom joined the unanimous opinion of Judge Adalberto Jordan in Young Israel of Tampa, Inc. v. Hillsborough Area Regional Transit Authority (HART), which addressed HART’s policy of rejecting advertisements that “primarily promote a religious faith or religious organization.” Judge Jordan’s opinion concluded that “HART’s policy, even if viewpoint neutral, is unreasonable due to a lack of objective and workable standards.”

Judge Newsom authored a vintage Newsom concurrence, scholarly and thoughtful, exploring a profound question in the First Amendment context: “What, exactly, is religion?” The concurrence isn’t easily summarized, but his bottom line is that it’s exceedingly difficult “to settle on a precise, necessary-and-sufficient definition of ‘religion,’ and thus of ‘religious’ speech”—and thus many cases decided as First Amendment “religious speech” cases might be “better handled under the Free Exercise Clause.”

Finally, turning to another thorough, learned opinion that doesn’t lend itself to easy summary, Judge Newsom joined Judge Britt Grant’s opinion for a unanimous panel in McDonough v. Garcia. The opinion undertakes a very Newsom-esque project, trying to make sense of confusing and conflicting precedents about different types of public forums and how they should be analyzed under the First Amendment. As noted by John Ross of Short Circuit, “[t]here’s a lot going on in this retaliatory arrest case arising out of Florida”; I’ll just highlight my favorite part (citations omitted):

[M]ere words of anger, including profanity, directed at a police officer are not enough to sustain a disorderly conduct arrest. Nor are obscene gestures, whether alone or combined with verbal antagonism. Raising one’s middle finger or the equivalent is simply another way of saying “f**k you”—rude, but not illegal.

Judge Grant, like Judge Newsom, is a generally conservative Trump appointee; she’s definitely not anti-law-enforcement. But she is, like Judge Newsom, very pro-First Amendment—and her McDonough opinion reminds police officers that the Amendment applies to them too.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Both the majority and Newsome's opinion in Young Israel are deeply flawed as neither appears to take into account the very first words of the first amendment: "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion." The 14th Amendment applies this to all levels of government in our society.

The Hillsborough Area Regional Trust Authority is presumably a government arm. Their policy prohibiting advertisements that "primarily promote a religious faith or religious organization" is arguably consistent with the requirements of the Establishment Clause.

To be fair to judges Jordan and Newsome, Establishment Clause jurisprudence is crap top to bottom. I'm also not saying that their ultimate conclusions are necessarily wrong. Newsome gets to some of the good stuff asking the question "what is religion." But his answer that, essentially, it is an unanswerable question is not satisfactory in light of the plain command of the Establishment Clause. The founders understood the importance of the issue and telegraphed that importance by making it the very first words of the first amendment.

Young Israel was as good a place as any to make some tough decisions and to stop ignoring the very first words of the first amendment.

A side note for some of you, google "Jefferson Bible."