Lead Opinion
Thе question on these appeals is whether the Federal Communications Commission abused its discretion in holding that a 25-minute program broadcast by the Democratic National Committee, setting forth views on public issues in response to views previously presented by the President and presidential spokesmen in a number of broadcast appearances, gave rise to an obligation on the part of the Columbia Broadcasting System to provide comparable reply time to partisan Republican spokesmen. For reasons that follow, we reverse the Commission’s order.
I
Television has become, in recent years, a principal vehicle by which the President presents to the public his views on important issues of the day. Indeed, no single fact of our changing political life overrides the significance of the expansion of the President’s ability to obtain immediate and direct access to the people through the communications media. For the words of the President, speaking as he does both in his constitutional roles of chief executive and commander-in-chief and in his extra-constitutional role as head of his party, carry an authority, a prestige and a visibility that have a counterpart in no other institution.
Moreover, there is an inherent newsworthiness in anything the President says. In addition to his huge direct audiences, in most cases over all nationwide commercial television and radio networks simultaneously, all of what he says is later reported somewhere and something of what he says is reported almost everywhere. In the case of the incumbent administration, these built-in advantages of the presidency in forging public opinion have been used to an unprecedented degree. In his first 18 months in office, President Nixon appeared on network prime time (7:00 to 11:00 P.M.) television as often as Presidents Eisenhower, Kennedy and Johnson combined in a comparable period during their administrations.
The President’s extensive use of the media cannot, of course, be faulted, for there can be no doubt that in the distillation of an informed public opinion such appearances play a very basic role. But if the words and views of the President become a monolithic force, if they constitute not just the most powerful voice in the land but the only voice, thеn the delicate mechanism through which an enlightened public opinion is distilled, far from being strengthened, is thrown dangerously off balance. Public opinion becomes not informed and enlightened, but instructed and dominated.
To minimize the risks of such imbalance and to preserve the essential integrity of “politics through communication,” the television networks, under the occasional prodding of the courts and the Federal Communications Commission, have attempted to achieve a balanced presentation of opposing opinions. This balancing process has extended not only to regularly scheduled news broadcasts, specials and documentaries, but also to
In this spirit, on June 22, 1970 CBS offered Lawrence O’Brien, Chairman of the Democratic National Committee (DNC), 25 minutes of broadcast time for presentation of views of the Democratic Party on public issues. The offer was made in light of the “cumulative impact of broadcast appearances of representatives of the party in office” and “the disparity between presidential appearances and the opportunities available to the principal opposition party” in order to achieve “fairness and balance in the treatment of public issues.”
Mr. O’Brien accepted the CBS offer and the broadcast was aired on July 7, 1970. The format employed involved presentation of excerpts of previously broadcast presidential statements on various issues, followed by a critical commentary or rebuttal by Mr. O’Brien as to each presidential statement.
On July 8, 1970, the chairman of the Republican National Committee (RNC) requested CBS to provide free time to RNC comparable to that afforded for the July 7 broadcast.
In substance, RNC argued that a national committee such as DNC was an inappropriate spokesman “to discuss specific political, economic and social issues — the ‘gut issues.’ ”
On July 23, 1970, CBS submitted a letter in opposition,
Although the Commission agreed that “CBS has acted in good faith” and “is to be commended for its concern,”
Having found the broadcast to be “unresponsive,” however, the Commission then concluded that it therefore fell within the ambit of the Commission’s recent Zapple ruling,
On August 20, DNC filed a petition for reconsideration of the Commission’s initial opinion.
The RNC opposition to the CBS petition for reconsideration
The Commission conceded also that its August 18 ruling “did not take into ac
Finally, the Commission never addressed itself to the contentions advanced by CBS concerning the Hays ruling. The citation of Hays in a footnote,
One last matter must be mentioned before turning to our resolution of the issues presented on this appeal. Although the Commission’s brief, in line with the opinions below, strenuously argued that the “unresponsiveness” of the O’Brien broadcast gave rise to a right of reply in favor of RNC, at oral argument, to the astonishment of this court, counsel for the Commission urged that we disregard the responsiveness issue and, rather, that we uphold the Commission’s order on a totally new ground — that an RNC reply is mandated simply because CBS failed to dictate to DNC the precise issues to be discussed, without regard to the actual content of the broadcast. We return to this matter below.
II
Much of our evolving body of administrative procedure rests upon the cornerstone requirement of reasoned decision making. 2 K. Davis, Administrative Law Treatise § 16.12 (1958). Without such a requirement, effective judicial review would be impractical if not impossible, and administrative litigants and the public generally would be set adrift on a potential sea of unconscious preference and irrelevant prejudice. Moreover, judicial vigilance to enforce the rule of law in the administrative process is particularly crucial where, as here, the area under consideration is in a constant state of flux. Greater Boston Television Corp.
We do not challenge the Commission’s well established right to modify or even overrule an established precedent or approach, for an administrative agency concerned with furtherance of the public interest is not bound to rigid adherence to its prior rulings.
The Hays ruling arose in the context of President Johnson’s 1968 State of the Union address.
The Commission, however, sustained CBS’ refusal to provide time to Democratic congressional leaders to reply to the 1968 Republican broadcast. In so dоing, the Commission relied upon traditional fairness doctrine principles, stating that its role was not to substitute its own judgment for that of the broadcaster, but rather to determine whether the licensee could be said to have acted in good faith in discharging its obligation to provide a balanced presentation of opposing viewpoints. The Commission concluded that CBS had acted within the wide discretion afforded it under the fairness doctrine, and therefore held that the Republican broadcast did not give rise to any reply-to-reply rights in favor of Democratic spokesmen.
Although Hays’ relevance to the instant controversy is readily apparent, the Commission failed even to mention it in its initial order of August 18. In an effort to rectify this situation and to compel the Commission to face up to Hays, the CBS petition for reconsideration dealt at length with the Hays question, asserting vigorously that Hays was a controlling precedent which must be squarely confronted by the Commission.
Faced with two facially conflicting decisions, the Commission was duty bound to justify their coexistence. The Commission’s utter failure to come to grips with this problem constitutes an inexcusable departure from the essential requirement of reasoned decision making. The rule of law is intended to eliminate the appearance as well as the reаlity of arbitrariness, and if the public’s faith in its administrative agencies is to be maintained, it is imperative that these agencies act in a wholly rational, logical fashion, completely free from even the appearance of bias, prejudice and improper influence. This is particularly true where, as here, the agency is functioning in the midst of a fierce political battle, where the stakes are high and the outcome can affect in a very real sense the political future of our nation.
The Commission’s handling of this case does not mark its finest hour. Put to the test under pressure it waffled. Unable to articulate reasons for overruling or distinguishing Hays, the Commission effectively ignored its own obvious precedent. Under the circumstances, its arbitrary action may not stand.
Ill
Our reversal of the decision below, however, is not premised solely upon the Commission’s mistreatment of Hays, for we find serious fault with other aspects of the opinion as well. In an apparent effort to' avoid a direct confrontation with its earlier ruling in Hays, the Commission adopted a wholly unreasonable view of the factual setting of this controversy. By selecting rigid and arbitrary blinders, thе Commission failed to see beyond Mr. Nixon’s five speeches on Vietnam in evaluating the “responsiveness” of the O’Brien broadcast. The result, of course, was an arbitrary and therefore impermissible application of the Commission’s own “responsiveness” doctrine.
Congress has delegated to the Commission the responsibility to ensure that broadcast licensees “operate in the public interest and * * * afford reasonable opportunity for the discussion of conflicting views on issues of public
Cognizant of the potential hazards of unbridled administrative discretion, Congress has wisely devised a scheme whereby “agencies and courts together constitute a ‘partnership’ in furtherance of the public interest.”
In granting RNC a right to reply to the “Loyal Opposition” telecast, the Commission shunned all reliance on the traditional balancing principles of the fairness doctrine. Generally, the fairness doctrine requires “that discussion of public issues be presented on broadcast stations, and that each side of those issues must be given fair coverage.” Red Lion Broadcasting Co. v. F.C.C.,
This carte blanche licensee discretion has, however, been circumscribed in certain areas where it has been felt that an “equal opportunities” approach might better serve the end of fairness. Thus in Section 315 of the Communications Act,
Section 315, however, applies only “to campaign appearances by candidates, and not by family, friends, campaign managers, or other supporters.” Red Lion Broadcasting Co. v. F.C.C., supra,
Arguing that “ ‘electioneering’ is a continuing process,”
The July 7 “Loyal Opposition” broadcast was structured around presentation of excerpts of previously aired presidential statements on various issues, followed by critical commentary or rebuttal by Mr. O’Brien as to each presidential state-
As a result, the Commission held that, since Mr. Nixon’s televised speeches “had by far concentrated on the Indochina war issue,” the DNC broadcast should “first and foremost” have been geared to a discussion of that issue.
We fail to see the logic underlying the Commission’s decision to limit its consideration solely to presidential speeches televised between November 3, 1969 and June 3, 1970. Indeed, the only discernible purpose served by such a decision is the creation of an illusion that Mr. Nixon had not previously addressed himself to the other six issues discussed in the O’Brien broadcast. Thus the Commission never even attempted to justify its choice of June 3, 1970 as the cutoff date. The O’Brien broadcast was aired on July 7, 1970, and CBS offered the time for the broadcast on June 22. This being so, we see no sense whatever in the Commission’s refusal to consider a 22-minute appearance by Mr. Nixon on June 17, 1970,
Similarly, the Commission offered no explanation for its choice of November 3, 1969 as the starting date for its analysis. The July 7 presentation was, after all, the first “Loyal Opposition” type program to be carried by CBS during the Nixon administration other than the traditional response by Democratic congressional leaders to Mr. Nixon’s 1970 State of the Union address.
Moreover, the Commission’s analysis of the “responsiveness” issue was limited solely to an evaluation of presidential speeches. The opinions below made no attempt to explain why other types of presidential broadcasts — such as televised press conferences — should be ignored. In a footnote to its brief,
“* * * [N]ot only the scheduling, but in significant part, the content andformat of the press conference is not under the control of the network. Thus, the candidate determines what portion of the conference is to be devoted to announcements and when the conference is to be thrown open to questions.” 82
Thus we see no reason why press conferences should not also be taken into account in the “political party” situation. Here, Mr. Nixon’s press conferences broadcast over CBS both before
Finally, although the Commission noted in a somewhat cursory fashion that appearances by Republican Party leaders “on news-type programs [do] not satisfy the fairness requirement in the ‘political party’ situation,”
While we do not here rule on the propriety of the Commission’s new “responsiveness” doctrine itself, we do note that in many instances its application, by creating a right to reply under Zapple even though no fairness doctrine imbalance actually exists, may have extremely harsh consequences, not only for the litigants themselves, but for society generally. It can hardly be doubted that the power of the media in shaping public opinion plays a paramount role in our present political process. Yet any misapplication of the Commission’s new doctrine would seriously distort this power, providing the
To avoid these consequences, it is imperative that the Commission exercise extreme caution in applying its new rule. A right to reply, in this context, should be granted only after an exhaustive examination of the relevant facts. The Commission, however, in constructing its new rule in an apparent effort to circumvent its earlier ruling in Hays, dealt with with these facts in a notably shoddy fashion, arbitrarily ignoring many critical aspects of the factual setting in which this controversy arose. The Commission’s determination of “non-responsiveness” cannot, therefore, be sustained.
IV
Finally, in a gallant, yet misguided, effort to “save” the Commission’s ruling, counsel for the Commission at oral argument abruptly changed gears, urging, contrary to the primary contentions in his brief, that we uphold the ruling on a new and highly strained interpretation of the opinions below.
We are cited to several passages from the Commission’s opinions as supportive of this new interpretation. Typical of these is the Commission’s statement that the July 7 broadcast “was ‘party-oriented’ rather than ‘issue-oriented,’ because of CBS’ abstention in this critical area of issues to be covered.”
We therefore cannot accept counsel’s new and thoroughly distorted interpretation of the opinions below. This being so, we are powerless to affirm the Commission’s ruling on this
Moreover, even if we were to accept as valid counsel’s novel construction of the opinions below, the decision still could not be affirmed on that basis, for the “specification of issues” rule would itself fail the primary test of rationality.
Whether the issue is viewed as one of fairness on the substantive issues discussed or equality of opportunity as between political parties, there is no discernible relationship between the existence of instructions to а party spokesman as to the specific issues he should discuss and the fairness of the coverage achieved. A partisan broadcast is not made more “party-oriented” simply because the issues covered are selected by the spokesman rather than by the network. The question of fairness cannot so readily be divorced from the actual content of the broadcast.
Finally, it is highly questionable whether the mandate to broadcasters inherent in this “specification of issues” rationale to dictate, censor or restrict partisan political spokesmen in their televised presentations accords with the commands of the First Amendment. The public must be equipped to make hard choices between competing political philosophies. This end is best served when there is robust debate among the people most directly involved — the spokesmen themselves — not where the operator of a federally licensed facility must circumscribe that debate as a condition precedent to airing it at all. See Red Lion Broadcasting Co. v. F.C.C., supra. Moreover, since presidential addresses are governed solely by the fairness doctrine, and not by the “specification of issues” rationale, the Commission’s extension of Zapple is essentially a one-way street. This is particularly dangerous where, as here, application of the “specification of issues” doctrine would require reply time for the party in power even though there exists neither a fairness doctrine imbalance nor a lack of responsiveness as to the particular issues discussed in the initial broadcast. Such a result is certainly contra-fairness, and raises serious questions concerning the requirement of governmental neutrality in the area of the First Amendment. Cf. Fowler v. Rhode Island,
The sudden promulgation of the “specification of issues” justification for the ruling below is just one more step in the Commission’s seemingly endless attempt throughout these proceedings “to vindicate its own idiosyncratic conception of the public interest [and] of the requirements of free speech.” Red Lion Broadcasting Co. v. F.C.C., supra,
So ordered.
Notes
. In their first IS months in office, President Eisenhower appeared on prime time network television on 3 occasions, President Kennedy 4 times, President Johnson made 7 such appearances, and President Nixon 14. These, figures exclude appearances on regularly scheduled news broadcasts, reports on foreign trips, charity appeals, convention and campaign appear-ancos in the case of President Johnson, and, in that of President Nixon, his Apollo appearances. Remarks by Frank Stanton, President, Columbia Broadcasting System, Park City, Ftah, July 10, 1970, A. 49, 50. (“A. -” references are to the Appendix of materials from the record before the Commission.)
. For example, during both Democratic and Republican administrations CBS has made time available, following the President’s State of the Union address, to congressional leaders of the оpposition. See CBS Response to Republican National Committee Petition, A. 32, 38.
. Telegram from Frank Stanton, President of CBS, to Lawrence O’Brien, June 22, 1970, A. 20-21.
. The presidential statements were drawn from his Inaugural and State of the Union addresses, news conferences, and special addresses on such matters as the Cambodian invasion and the veto of the Health, Education and Welfare appropriations bill. Mr. O’Brien used Mr. Nixon’s nomination acceptance speech to illustrate his views on the crime problem, and a broadcast statement by Vice President Agnew to supplement a statement by President Nixon on the question of dissent and national unity. See transcript of the O’Brien broadcast, A. 23-31.
. Following tire O’Brien broadcast, there were several minutes of analysis by member's of the CBS news staff of the type that customarily follows presidential appearances. In addition, a few CBS-affiliated stations, including the 5 CBS-owned television stations (but not the CBS television network), carried a paid political fund raising announcement purchased by DNC directly from the stations.
. Letter from Rogers C. B. Morton, Chairman of RNC, to Mr. Stanton, President of CBS, July 8, 1970, A. 17-19.
. A reply was sent on July 15, 1970, 2 days after RNC filed its petition with the Commission, denying reply time to RNC. CBS letter to Mr. Morton, Chairman of RNC, July 15, 1970, A. 45.
. A. 11.
. A. 5.
. A. 4 (emphasis in original).
. A. 4-10.
. CBS pointed out, inter alia,, that (1) RNC liad conceded in the past that the national committee chairman of the principal opposition party was an appropriate spokesman to reply to the President (CBS noted that the then chairman of RNC had requested and received time in 1903 to respond to President Kennedy’s televised discussion of tax legislation), A. 40-41; (2) the substantive issues covered in the July 7 broadcast had all been fully covered in presidential appearances, A. 34; (3) no showing had been made of any lack of fairness in the overall treatment by CBS of any of these issues, A. 34; and (4) as to RNC’s contention that the O’Brien broadcast introduced a “fresh issue” as to which party should govern, CBS attempted to show that the President himself had addressed tlie “which party” issue in his prior broadcasts, A. 34-35.
. The RNC reply, in substance, reiterated and amplified the arguments raised in its initial petition. A. 61-73.
.
. The other 4 complaints were concerned, in particular, with the extent to which fairness had been achieved by the 3 major commercial television networks in their coverage of the Indochina war issue. Part E of the August 18 opinion, 1flT 52-59, dealt with the RNC petition.
. 25 F.C\C.2d at 301.
. Id. at 300.
. Id. at 300 n. 25.
. Id. at 300.
.. These questiоns are considered in depth in a subsequent portion of this opinion. See text accompanying Notes 75-86, infra.
. FCC letter to Nicholas Zapple, Communications Counsel, Senate Committee on Commerce,
. In the Zapple ruling, the Commission also said that the Cullman aspect of the fairness doctrine would not apply to broadcasts on behalf of political candidates. In Cullman Broadcasting Co., 25 Pike & Fischer It. It. 895 (1963), the Commission held that a licensee could not avoid his responsibilities under the fairness doctrine because of an inability to obtain paid sponsorship for a response to a particular view on a controversial issue of public importance even though the initial presentation was sponsored. In other words, Zapple held that an imbalance in the financial resources of candidates could, in the public interest, give rise to an imbalance in their use of broadcast facilities.
.
. Ibid. The result as to the RNC petition was concurred in by 5 of the 7 Commissioners, but 3 of the 5 issued separate statements reflecting widely disparate views. Commissioner Robert E. Lee stressed an alleged failure of CBS to limit Mr. O’Brien “to the issues originally raised,” but he failed to identify the new issues he thought had been treated in the July 7 broadcast. Commissioner Lee also appeared to rest his conclusion in part on the selection of DNC as spokesman, contrary to the main opinion. The concurring opinion of Chairman Burch stressed the alleged “person or party” orientation of the O’Brien broadcast, again without definition of that term. Chairman Burch asserted that the broadcast “covered issues in the political spokesman arena,” but did not explain what he conceived that “arena” to be. Finally, Commissioner Johnson’s concurrence, which was “extremely reluctant,” was premised on the “content of the DNC program.” However, he, like his brethren, failed to point to the particular content that troubled him.
. A. 127. Simultaneously, DNC filed a motion for stay, which was subsequently withdrawn when CBS made clear that it would not afford time to RNC until CBS had exhausted its rights to review.
. A. 132.
. A. 137-138.
. A. 144-190.
. A. 130-131. ’
. A. 192-202. RNC filed a petition for further relief on August 28, 1970, in which it asked the Commission to direct CBS to provide it with reply time on or before October 10, 1970, and that CBS give RNC notice at least 16 days in advance of the date on which the broadcast was to occur. A. 203-217. CBS filed an opposition and RNC a reply. In its September 24 order, the Commission denied the RNC petition in this respect.
. A. 280-290.
. A. 21S-270 (September 3, 1970).
. A. 221-222. CBS submitted an appendix detailing the discussion of these issues by Republican spokesmen by date, time and content. A. 243-205. CBS also pointed out that the presidential broadcasts to which Mr. O’Brien replied had constituted “a strong endorsement of Republican [Party] government'’ and contained remarks “extolling the virtues of the Republican Administration and commenting unfavorably on the positions or actions of the previous Democratic Administration and the current Deino-eratic-controlled Congress.” A. 220-227.
. A. 239-240.
. Letter from FCC Chairman Rosel II. Ilyde, to Congressman Wayne L. Hays, February 9, 196S, FCC Reference No. 8830-S, C2-105.
. A. 234-239.
. A. 271-279.
. A. 271.
. A. 274.
. CBS filed a reply to the RNC opposition to its petition for reconsideration. A. 291-301.
.
.
. Id. at 742.
. Id. at 742-743.
. Id. at 743.
. Nee California Democratic State Central Committee, 20 Pike & Fischer R.R. 867 (1960) ; Republican National Committee, 3 Pike & Fischer R.R.26 767 (1964).
. Non-campaign speeches of the President, however, were held to be exempt from the equal opportunities requirement оf the “political party” situation. 25 F.C.C. 2d at 744.
. Ibid.
. Ibid.
. Id. at 745.
. Ibid.
. Id. at 746 n. 16.
. See, e. g., F.C.C. v. WOKO, Inc.,
. Secretary of Agriculture v. United States,
. Melody Music, Inc. v. F.C.C., 120 U.S. App.D.C. 241, 244,
. 4 Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents (hereinafter “WCPD”) 70-80 (1968).
. 114 Cong.Rec. (Part 1) 8S2 (1968).
. A. 234-239.
. A. 274.
.
. See authorities cited at Note 54, supra.
. Communications Act of 1934, § 315(a), 47 U.S.C. § 315(a) (1964).
. See, e. g., Udall v. Tollman,
. Burlington Truck Lines, Inc. v. United States,
. Greater Boston Television Corp. v. F.C.C., supra Note 54,
. While the exact bounds of the concept of arbitrary and capricious administrative action are not precisely defined in the Act, it is well settled that the core of the concept is the notion of rationality. See, e. g., Burlington Truck Lines, Inc. v. United States, supra Note 64,
. Communications Act of 1934, Tit. III, 48 Stat. 1081, as amended, 47 U.S.C. § 301 H seq. (1964). Section 315 reads in pertinent part:
“(a) If any licensee shall permit any person who is a legally qualified candidate for any public office to use a broadcasting station, he shall afford equal opportunities to all other sucli candidates for that office in the use of such broadcasting station: Provided, That sucli licensee shall have no power of censorship over the material broadcast under the provisions of this section. No obligation is imposed upon any licensee to allow the use of its station by any such candidate. Appearance by a legally qualified candidate on any—
(1) bona fide newscast,
(2) bona fide news interview,
(3) bona fidе news documentary (if the appearance of the candidate is incidental to tbe presentation of the subject or subjects covered by the news documentary), or
(4) on-the-spot coverage of bona fide news events (including but not limited to political conventions and activities incidental thereto), shall not bo deemed to be use of a broadcasting station within the meaning of this subsection. * * * ”
. FCC letter to Nicholas Zapple, supra Note 21.
. Aside from these two instances, the equal opportunities approach lias been applied also in both the “personal attack,” see 32 Fed.Reg. 10303 (1967); Red Lion Broadcasting Co. v. F.C.C.,
.
. See Note 4, supra.
. In its initial opinion, tlie Commission made clear that this was not a precise equal opportunities situation because, at least as to the time devoted to discussion of the Indochina war issue, the O’Brien broadcast had indeed been “responsive.”
. It is evident throughout both opinions below that the Commission considered only those speeches broadcast during this time period in reaching its determination of “unresponsiveness.” See
In the other complaints, the Committee for Fair Broadcasting, Fourteen United States Senators, and Business Executives’ Move for Vietnam Peace all urged that network coverage of the presidential addresses on Vietnam (referring specifically to those speeches occurring between November 3, 1969 and June 3, 1970) required that they be given comparable time and format to present their opposing views. The Commission refused to order the networks to grant time to these complainants or to apply an equal opportunities requirement to presidential or other official appearances. The Commission did hold, however, that format should be considered in determining whether a licensee liad achieved overall fairness. Accordingly, in light of the imbalance created by the large number of presidential addresses on Vietnam, the Commission required the networks to make additional uninterrupted time available to spokesmen selected by the networks for discussion of the Indochina war issue. Thus consideration of the UNO complaint in this context may well have led the Commission to miseharneterize that complaint as one dealing particularly with the President’s recent speeches on Vietnam.
. The 5 speeches on Indochina were telecast on November 3, 1969, 5 AVCPI) 1546; December 15, 1969, 5 AVCPD 1752; April 20, 1970, 0 AVCPD 553; April 30, 1970, 6 AVCPD 596; and •Tune 3, 1970, 6 AVCPD 721.
The 6tli speech considered by the Commission was the President’s January 26, 1970 appearance explaining his veto of a $20 billion appropriations bill for the Departments of Labor and Health, Education and AVelfare. 6 AATCPI) 76. However, no weight was given to this address in the Commission’s determination of “unresponsiveness.” In addition, a 7th speech televised during this period, the President’s January 22, 1970 State of the Union message, was not considered by the Commission in evaluating the responsiveness of the O’Brien broadcast. This was probably bеcause Democratic congressional leaders had already been given an opportunity, on February 9, 1970, to reply to this particular address.
.
. 6 WCPD 774.
. See transcript of the July 7 broadcast, A. 23-31.
. See Note 74, supra.
. For example, CBS earlier refused Senate Majority Leader Mansfield’s request for time to respond to the President’s June 17, 1970 economic message. A. 140 n. 1.
. On August 8, 1969, for example, the President delivered an extensive televised speech concerning welfare reform. 5 WCPD 1103. In addition, Mr. Nixon participated in numerous news conferences prior to November 3, 1969, dealing with a wide range of issues. See, e. y., 5 WCPD 175 (January 27, 1969) (inflation and recession, crime) ; 5 WCPD 225 (February 6, 1969) (civil rights, defense spending, environment) ; 5 WCPD 360 (March 4, 1969) (student dissent and national unity) ; 5 AVCPD 400 (March 14, 1969) (defense spending, student dissent and national unity) ; 5 WCPD 878 (June 19, 1969) (inflation and recession, student dissent and national unity) ; 5 WCPD 1327 (September 26, 1969) (inflation and recession, civil rights, student dissent and national unity).
. Respondents’ brief at 3 n. 1.
.
. See Note 80, supra.
. See, e. y., 5 WCPD (November 5, 1969) (inflation and recession, crime) ; 5 WCPD 1720 (December 8, 1909) (civil rights, spending, student dissent and national unity) ; 6 WCPD 76 (January 20, 1970) (inflation and recession, civil rights) ; 6 WCPD 010 (May 8, 1970) (unemployment, student dissent and national unity).
.
. For example, presidential spokesmen have frequently appeared on CBS’ Face the nation. See, e. y., A. 248, 252 (Vice President Agnew) (February 1, 1970) (dissent, equal rights, crime) ; A. 249, 252 (Vice President Agnew) (May 3, 1970) (dissent, сrime) ; A. 249, 250, 255 (Herb Klein, Director of Communications) (May 24, 1970) (dissent, economy, human resources) ; A. 251-252 (Dr. Paul McCracken, Chairman of the President’s Council of Economic Advisors) (June 21, 1970) (economy) ; A. 254-256 (Daniel P. Moynihan, Counselor to the President for Domestic Affairs; Robert Finch, former Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare; Walter Hickel, former Secretary of the Interior) (January 25, 1970) (environment). It might be argued that such appearances should not be considered in this context since they are generally balanced by similar appearances by Democratic spokesmen. However, the issue under the Commission’s new doctrine is “responsiveness,” not “balance.” If an imbalance was created by the O’Brien broadcast, that should properly be treated under the fairness doctrine, not the more stringent “equal opportunities” rule.
. Commission comiso!, Mr. Olilbaum, is well and favorably known to this court. Our references to his efforts to save the Commission’s opinions are not intended as a reflection on him.
.
. Indeed, a recent Commission decision lends support to this view of the opinions below. In Democratic National Committee, - F.C.C.2d - (FCC No. 71-882, August 20, 1971), RNC sought time to reply to a Dеmocratic broadcast telecn.st on April 22, 1971 by tiro American Broadcasting Company. The Commission rejected the RNC demand, however, finding the situation there distinguishable from the instant controversy. In so finding, the Commission noted that Zapple, as extended by the Commission’s decision in this case, “applies only to appearances by party spokesmen in response to Presidential appearances when the licensee does not specify the issues to be treated as those which were discussed by the President." Slip opinion at 7, 1f 14. (Emphasis added.)
. See authorities cited at Note 66, supra.
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring):
The administrative process requires that government agencies and commissions issue reasons for their actions. Here the Commission has outdone itself by giving four reasons for its action— albeit different reasons at each step of the proceedings. In its initial order the Commission ruled that Columbia Broadcasting System was bound to grant time to the Republican National Committee because Chairman O’Brien referred only briefly to the war in his statement and because “The Loyal Opposition” was party-oriented rather than issue-oriented, thereby bringing this case within the Commission’s Zapple
However well-intentioned CBS was, the result here was simply the “political party” situation which we described at the outset. It was “party-oriented” rather than “issue-oriented,” because of CBS’ abstention in this critical area of issues to be covered.
(A. 311, emphasis supplied, footnotes omitted.)
In its brief the Commission chose to change its position yet a third time. It claimed that special circumstances had rendered the general doctrine inadequate to assure reasonable opportunity for the public to receive conflicting views. These circumstances, viz., a speech by a candidate, political editorializing, or a speech by a candidate’s supporters, limit the broadcaster’s discretion. The FCC was not concerned with CBS’ overall fairness. It claimed that O’Brien’s presentation was not responsive and that CBS had failed to assure that it would be. Even though the FCC was cognizant that the President’s numerous speeches created an imbalance on the war issue requiring presentation of the other side of the coin, CBS’ fatal error, it said, was in granting time to D.N.C. for any purpose without supervision. Therefore, the only imbalance, the Commission contended, was one created by CBS in failing to give R.N.C. time to respond to D.N.C. Not satisfied with even this position as espoused in the briefs, the Commission made an eleventh-hour change in its game plan at oral argument. As Judge Wright points out, the Commission urged that we entirely disregard the responsiveness issue raised in the briefs and affirm the FCC on one ground and one ground only — failure of CBS to instruct D.N.C. on precisely which issues to raise during the broadcast.
I can neither accept nor sympathize with the manner in which the Commission has handled this litigation. They have created a debacle in seeking a sound basis for- their decision. They have been unable to bring the ease at bar within Zapple and have been similarly unable to distinguish it from Hays. Their opinions at the hearing level as well as the position urged in the briefs and at oral argument show a capricious, arbir trary and inconsistent approach to this case. The Cоmmission cannot constantly change its position quo'cumque modo velit. I feel constrained to sound a trumpet in warning against such attempts by administrative agencies to play
. Letter to Nicholas Zapple,
. See generally 1 K. Davis, Administrative Law Treatise, § 1.03 (1958).
. Letter v jErom Chairman Rosel H. Hyde to Hon) Wayne Hays, Commission Ref. No. 8330-S; 02-105 (1968).
