Florida, like every other state in the union, 1 hаs enacted legislation regulating the conduct of those who “lobby” the state’s legislative or executive officials. This appeal requires us to determine whether Chap. 93-121, Laws of Florida, is unconstitutional so far as it requires extensive disclosure by lobbyists and their principals and bars lobbyists from receiving fees contingent on their success in affecting legislative or executive outcomes. We hold that Florida’s disclosure requirements survive the facial challenge that Appellant brings today. And, we uphold the ban on contingency-fee lobbying despite whatever doubts recent cases may have cast on its constitutionality. About the contingenсy fee, we deem ourselves to be bound by some old pronouncements of the Supreme Court; and we lack the power to overrule these pronouncements, even if more recent cases suggest that the Supreme Court might someday reach a result contrary to the one we reach today.
I.
Appellant is an organization of professional lobbyists. The lobbyist-members contend the disclosure and contingency-fee provisions of the statute violate their constitutional rights and assert that they fear imminent reprisal.
The legislation challenged here, Chapter 93-121 of the Laws of Florida, amended the provisions of Fla.Stats. §§ 11.045 аnd 112.3215. Those provisions define “Lobbying,” “Lobbyist,” and “Principal.” As amended, the sections provide that a lobbyist hired by a principal shall disclose all lobbying expenditures, whether made by the lobbyist or by the principal, and the source of funds for all such expenditures. See id. § 11.045(3)(a). In addition, the statute requires disclosure of expenditures by category, аnd provides a non-exclusive list of categories: “food and beverages, entertainment, research, communication, media advertising, publications, travel, and lodging.” Id. Furthermore, the Florida legislature has provided for an administrative procedure, so that persons in doubt about the precise operation of the statute may, in writing, seek clarification of the intended reach of the statutes. Id. § 11.045(4). As noted, the statute also precludes would-be lobbyists from exchang *459 ing their services for an award contingent on legislative outcome. See id. § 11.047.
The League does not argue that the statute has been unconstitutionally applied to penalize its members. And, from the record, nothing indicates that any member of the League has requested an advisory opinion as provided for in the statute. The only contentions are that the statute is overbroad and, therefore, facially invalid in its disclosure provisions and that the contingency-fee ban is unconstitutional in the light оf recent Supreme Court precedent. After the parties proffered extensive documentary evidence, the district court granted summary judgment in favor of the state.
II.
If the League is correct that the greater number of this statute’s applications are unconstitutional, then its members face an unattractive sеt of options if they are barred from bringing a facial challenge: refrain from engaging in protected First Amendment activity or risk civil sanction for alleged unethical conduct. Therefore, this action is ripe; and the League has standing to bring it, even though it makes no allegation that its members have actually been sanctiоned.
See generally Abbott Lab. v. Gardner,
We do not say that the absence of allegations of prosecutions under the Act is irrelevant to our disposition of this case. Because Appellant has failed to allege a specific unconstitutional application, its challenge must be characterized as a facial — as distinсt from as-applied — challenge. This characterization requires Appellant to meet a higher burden because, as the Supreme Court has indicated, “[a] facial challenge to a legislative Act is, of course, the most difficult challenge to mount successfully____”
United States v. Salerno,
Some disаgreement has appeared lately among members of the Supreme Court on exactly how high the threshold for facial invalidation should be set. As we understand it, some Justices interpret Supreme Court precedent to indicate that a statute is not facially invalid unless there is
no
set of circumstances in which it would opеrate constitutionally; others contend the cases require only that a statute would operate unconstitutionally in
most
cases.
Compare Janklow v. Planned Parenthood,
- U.S. -,-& n. 1,
III.
Within the framework of the facial challenge, we measure the Act against the appropriate First Amendment standard. In defining that standard, we turn first to
United States v. Harriss,
In
Harriss,
the Supreme Court was not explicit about the level of constitutional scrutiny applied. It appears, however, that the Court did not subject the lobbying restrictions to the demands of strict scrutiny. Instead, the Court satisfied itself that the government had asserted sufficient interests— specifically, “maintaining] the integrity of a basic governmental process,”
In
Minnesota State Ethical Practices v. Nat’l Rifle Ass’n,
Several other courts have similarly interpreted
Harriss
and have rejected broad constitutional attacks on lobbying disclosure requirements. In
Fair Political Practices Comm’n v. Superior Ct. of Los Angeles,
IV.
Against the standard of Harriss and its progeny, we are unpersuaded that a substantial number of the applications of Chapter 93-121 will offend thе First Amendment. So, we reject the facial challenge.
The League contends that the First Amendment demands strict scrutiny of the reporting requirements. Thus, in the League’s estimation, the law is overbroad and facially invalid to the extent the state cannot show both a compelling interest in its ends and that the statute is narrowly tailored tо avoid undue interference with the exercise of legitimate speech rights. The League concludes that the statute is not narrowly tailored to the extent it requires reporting of “indirect expenses when there is no direct contact with governmental officials.” In the light of the case law summarized above, we disagree.
The League concedes, as it must, that the state has articulated legitimate interests. The Supreme Court has made clear that circumstances like these implicate the correlative interests of voters (in appraising the integrity and performance of officeholders and candidates, in view of the pressures they face) and legislators (in “self-protection” in the face of coordinated pressure campaigns).
See, e.g., McIntyre v. Ohio Elections Comm’n,
- U.S.-, -,
And, these interests continue to apply when the pressures to be evaluated by voters and government officials are “indirect” rather than “direct.”
See Minnesota State Ethical Practices,
Because the interests of thе state of Florida are compelling, the facial challenge can succeed only if the League has shown that a substantial fraction of the applications of the challenged law will fail to further these articulated interests. On the record before us, we conclude that the League cannot satisfy this burdеn. We reach this conclusion in the light of both Harriss’s notation that mail campaign expenses may be required to be reported and the reasoning of Minnesota State Ethical Practices, which we find persuasive; these sources strongly indicate that the First Amendment permits required reporting of considerably more than face-to-face contact with government officials.
As for the League’s hypothesized, fact-specific worst-case scenarios, we also decline to accept the facial challenge based on these perceived problems. The League suggests, for example, that the state may begin applying the expense reрorting requirements against editorial writers who urge a legislative result, simply because the journalists are employed by corporate structures that employ lobbyists for totally unrelated reasons. The Supreme Court in
Harriss
discounted similar “hypothetical borderline situations.”
Harriss,
V.
Therefore, we decline to validate the facial challenge.
3
But, in the future courts can, to the extent necessary, evaluate the statute’s constitutionality as-apрlied. They can also sever those parts of the statute, if any, that factual development shows can never be applied constitutionally.
See, e.g., Harriss,
*462 VI.
Appellant also argues that the First Amendment bars the prohibition on the receipt of fees contingent on the passage of favorable legislation. The League relies chiefly on
Meyer v. Grant,
Florida points оut that in cases decided well before the articulation of “exacting scrutiny,” the Supreme Court specifically held that contracts to lobby for a legislative result, with the fee contingent on a favorable legislative outcome, were void
ab initio
as against public policy:
Hazelton v. Sheckels,
This prediction may be accurate, but we are not at liberty to disregard binding case law that is so closely on point and has been only weakened, rather than directly overruled, by the Supreme Court. The Court instructed, in
Rodriguez de Quijas v. Shearson/American Express, Inc.,
Therefore, the decision of the district court is AFFIRMED.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. See Steven Browne, Note, The Constitutionality of Lobby Reform: Implicating Associational Privacy and the Right to Petition the Government, 4 Wm. & Mary Bill Rts. J. 717 (1995) (observing that all fifty states have statutes regulating lobbying).
. Also, we note that this case is a First Amendment case, where because of the overbreadth doctrine, facial challenges may succeed more often.
See New York v. Ferber,
. One commentator has suggested that two interests in particular are served by sparing use of the power to void a statute on its face, both of which interests are applicable in this case. These interests are, first, in restraining the power of the judiciary to interfere with the prerogatives of the political branches of government and, second, in ensuring that the courts are cоnfronted with concrete facts, thereby reducing the rate of error in constitutional decisionmaking. See Michael C. Dorf, Facial Challenges to State and Federal Statutes, 46 Stan.L.Rev. 235, 245-46 (1994).
. For example, in Norris, a case involving a contract to lobby for contracts with the Department of War, the Court wrote:
Legislation should be prompted solely from considerations of the public good.... Agreements for compensаtion contingent upon success, suggest the use of sinister and corrupt means for the accomplishment of the end desired. The law meets the suggestion of evil, and strikes down the contract from its inception.
. Some support for this argument appears in the decision of the Montana Supreme Court in
Montana Auto. Ass'n v. Greely,
