For many years the plaintiffs, Rabbi Abraham Grossbaum and Lubavitch of Indiana, Inc., had received annual permission to display a menorah in the lobby of the City-County Building in Indianapolis during the eight days of Chanukah. In 1993, the defendant Indianapolis-Marion County Building Authority (“Building Authority”) changed its policy and denied permission for the display. In 1994, following a second refusal to permit the menorah display, the plaintiffs sought injunctive and declaratory relief against the Building Authority and Ronald L. Reinking, its general manager. The district court, acting without the benefit of the Supreme Court’s recent guidance in this area, denied the plaintiffs’ motion for preliminary injunction. The plaintiffs then timely appealed that decision to this court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1). For the reasons presented in the following opinion, we reverse the judgment of the district court.
I
A. Facts
The City-County Building in downtown Indianapolis is the seat of government for the City of Indianapolis and the County of Marion, Indiana. It is administered by the defendant Building Authority, a municipal corporation. The tenants of the building include many of the offices, agencies and departments of the City and Cоunty. The lobby of the building is open to the public during business hours. Mr. Reinking, General Manager of the Building Authority that manages the City-County Building, is responsible for granting or denying requests to use lobby space in the building.
The lobby of the City-County Building is a site where, by policy and longstanding practice, the Building Authority has allowed broad access to a wide variety of public and private speakers. Requests to use the lobby and to place displays or exhibits in the lobby are usually made in writing, addressed to the Building Authority. However, numerous oral requests have been made and granted as well. Of the 117 written requests made from 1990 through September 22, 1994, all were granted, to public and private groups alike, except several requests for sales or fundrais-ing activities, one request for third-time use by the same party, and, in 1993 and 1994, the plaintiffs’ requests to display their menorah at Chanukah.
Rabbi Grossbaum, an Orthodox Jewish Rabbi, and Lubavitch of Indiana, Inc., an Orthodox Jewish Organization (“Lubavitch”), were granted permission from the Building Authority, through Mr. Reinking, to erect their five-foot wooden menorah in the lobby of the City-County Building throughout Chanukah each year from approximately 1985
During Chanukah 1992, the Building Authority received complaints that the display of the menorah in the City-County Building violated the Establishment Clause of the Constitution. Thereafter, at its October 4, 1993 meeting, the Building Authority considered and unanimously adopted a “Policy on Seasonal Displays,” which stated:
Religious displays and symbols are not permitted in the City-County Building in that the display of seasonal religious symbols in the halls of government conveys the appearance of governmental endorsement of religion in violation of the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment of the Federal Constitution.
At first the Building Authority prohibited both the menorah and the Christmas tree in its lobby. However, once it was informed by counsel that courts treat a Christmas tree as a secular, rather than religious, symbol, the Building Authority Board decided in its December 1, 1993 meeting that a Christmas tree in the lobby was consistent with, rather than in violation of, its Policy. It erected a Christmas tree in the lobby, but cоntinued to prohibit display of the menorah on the ground that its Policy on Seasonal Displays forbade religious displays and symbols in the lobby.
Lubavitch did not pursue its efforts to present its display in 1993. In 1994, however, after it again was denied permission to display its menorah on the same ground, the plaintiffs filed a complaint, seeking declaratory and injunctive relief, against the Building Authority and Mr. Reinking in his official capacity. The complaint contained four counts: two free speech claims, alleging viewpoint-based and content-based discrimination against religious speech, an equal protection claim and a free exercise of religion claim. The complaint alleged that, because Lubavitch wanted to erect a menorah during Chanukah 1994 and in future years, the Building Authority’s denial of that request to display a menorah constituted a continuing injury. Lubavitch also moved for a temporary restraining order or preliminary injunction as to count I only, the religious discrimination allegation based on viewpoint discrimination.
B. District Court Decision
The district court denied plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction on November 22, 1994. See Grossbaum v. Indianapolis-Marion County Bldg. Auth.,
Because the parties had stipulated, for the purposes of this litigation, that the lobby was a “nonpublic forum,” the district court followed the analysis for evaluating access to nonpublic forums under the Free Speech Clause set forth in Lamb’s Chapel v. Center Moriches Union Free School District, — U.S. —,
With the very limited factual showing of uses of the lobby even arguably tied to “the holiday season,” the Court is not persuaded the Building Authority has taken any actions that amount to recognizing “the holiday season” as a meaningful category or subject matter for speech and expression of competing “viewpoints” in this nonpublic forum. And without a relevant track record of actual “holiday” uses after the Building Authority adopted its policy in 1993, “the holiday seаson” is, in the abstract, too broad and too amorphous to be treated as a “subject” for purposes of this analysis.
In the district court’s view, the viewpoint discrimination forbidden in Lamb’s Chapel had not occurred here. Instead of suppressing a point of view, the court opined, the Building Authority had decided to avoid the controversy that might be provoked by displays of religious symbols. The court concluded that “the Building Authority decisions about access to the lobby in this record do not show ‘the holiday season’ to be a subject for which the Building Authority has opened the lobby for private expressions of various secular and religious viewpoints.” Id. at 1462.
Nevertheless, the district court approved the Building Authority’s display of a Christmas tree as a secular display that did not establish viewpoint discrimination under this circuit’s decision in Lubavitch Chabad House, Inc. v. City of Chicago,
Although it was not necessary in light of its earlier analysis, the district court next addressed the Building Authority’s Establishment Clause defense. It determined that “the record does not show that the proposed display would violate the Establishment Clause.” Id. at 1464. The district court invoked the “equal access” or neutrality analysis of Supreme Court case law and concluded that the Building Authority did not appear to endorse the religious message of the menorah, and thus was probably not violating the Establishment Clause during the years it allowed the display of the menorah. The court also found that the Building Authority did not offer evidence that the menorah would dominate the lobby and thereby сreate an appearance of endorsement. It concluded that, had it been required to reach the issue of endorsement, this Establishment Clause concern would not have constituted a sufficient basis for denying a preliminary injunction.
The district court’s denial of the motion for preliminary injunction concluded:
Based on the record before the court, the Building Authority is not engaging in viewpoint discrimination when it applies its policy to refuse plaintiffs permission to display their menorah in the lobby of the City-County Building. The Free Speech Clause does not require the Building Authority to allow plaintiffs to display their menorah, nor does the Establishment Clause prohibit the Building Authority from allowing them to do so. The First Amendment leaves the Building Authority’s manager and board at least that much room to exercise their judgment over appropriate uses of the public property that has been entrusted to them.
II
DISCUSSION
A. Review of Preliminary Injunction
When we review a district court’s preliminary injunction decision, we accord substantial deference to that court’s discretionary acts of weighing evidence and balancing equitable factors. However, our consideration of that court’s legal conclusions is a de novo review. Gateway E. Ry. v. Terminal R.R. Ass’n,
A district court typically considers whether the moving party has demonstrated (1) some likelihood of prevailing on the merits, and (2) an inadequate remedy at law and irreparable harm if preliminary relief is denied. If the movant clears these two thresholds, the court must consider (3) the irreparable harm the nonmovant will suffer if preliminary relief is granted, balanced against the irreparable harm to the movant if relief is denied; and (4) the public interest, meaning the effect that granting or denying the injunction will have on nonparties.
Erickson v. Trinity Theatre, Inc.,
The central issue in this appeal is whether the district court erred in denying a preliminary injunction on the ground that Lubavitch was not likely to succeed on the merits of its case. Although the parties do not discuss them, the other three factors are clearly present. It seems indisputable that both the movants and nonmovants could suffer irrepаrable harm in this case: The plaintiffs would be injured if the denial of the menorah display was an unconstitutional violation of their freedom of expression. The defendants would be harmed if their Establishment Clause justification for denying the display was determined to be unconstitutional. Moreover, it is surely in the public interest to decide whether the Building Authority’s refusal to display the menorah is viewpoint-based discrimination, or whether the Building Authority’s defense under the Establishment Clause allows the exclusion of the menorah. For this reason we turn, as did the district court, to the question whether the plaintiffs are likely to succeed on the merits of their claims.
B. The Free Speech Claim
Rabbi Grossbaum and Lubavitch claim that the Building Authority’s adoption and application of a policy forbidding religious holiday displays and symbols excludes their
Two factors relevant to our analysis are undisputed. The first is that the menorah is a privately owned religious symbol. It is well established that the display of such symbols as a menorah, a cross, or a creche is symbolic religious speech protected by the First Amendment. Capitol Square Review & Advisory Bd. v. Pinette, — U.S. —, —,
1.
The Nonpublic Forum
Constitutionally protected religious expression is not guaranteed unlimited access to government property. The Supreme Court’s approach for deciding when the government’s limitations on the use of its property outweigh the interest of private parties wishing to use the property for other purposes is termed “forum analysis.” Cornelius v. NAACP Legal Defense & Educ. Fund, Inc.,
With respect to public property that is not a designated public forum open for indiscriminate public use for communicative purposes, we havе said that “[c]ontrol over access to a nonpublic forum can be based on subject matter and speaker identity so long as the distinctions drawn are reasonable in light of the purpose served by the forum and are viewpoint neutral.”
Lamb’s Chapel, — U.S. at-,
Concerning the “viewpoint neutrality” prong, Cornelius stated the rule for a nonpublic forum as well:
[T]he government violates the First Amendment when it denies access to a speaker solely to suppress the point of view he espouses on an otherwise includible subject.
Id. at 806,
The first amendment’s ban on discriminating against religious speech does not depend on whether the school is a “public forum” and, if so, what kind.... Even when the government may forbid a category of speech outright, it may not discriminate on account of the speaker’s viewpoint. Especially not on account of a religious subject matter, which the free exercise clause of the first amendment singles out for protection.
Id. at 1298 (citations omitted) (holding that school policy prohibiting written material of a
2.
Viewpoint Discrimination
The plaintiffs’ position is that exclusion of their menorah display from the City-County Building lobby on religious grounds, when comparable secular holiday displays by other private groups are permitted, constitutes viewpoint-based discrimination in violation of the Free Speech Clause of the First Amendment. Rabbi Grossbaum and Lubavitch submit that their menorah, a religious symbolic display, constitutes protected speech on the “holiday season,” an “includible subject” for discussion in the City-County Building lobby. In their view, the district court erred in refusing to recognize that the Building Authority had identified the “holiday season” as a “meaningful category or subject matter for speech.” The Building Authority responds that the district court correctly portrayed its Policy, and that the plaintiffs’ characterization of the Policy as a “seasonal display” or a “holiday season” policy is incorrect. By creating a policy which prohibits all religious displays and symbols, the Building Authority submits, it properly exerted its right to exercise control over the nonpublic forum lobby in a reasonable and viewpoint-neutral manner. In fact, it claims that its Board “neither proposed, adopted nor intended a ban on only seasonal religious displays.” Appellees’ Br. at 20.
a.
The district court upheld the Building Authority’s Policy on the basis that “the holiday season” was “too broad and too amorphous to be treated as a ‘subject’ ” on which the plaintiffs’ menorah expresses a religious viewpoint.
The record of lobby use before the Policy was enacted, which the district court declined, wrongly in our opinion, to consider, indicates that the Building Authority in the past had allowed both religious and secular holiday displays by private and public groups. See App. at 40, 69, 72, 134. In fact, the notations on the written requests for use of the lobby suggest that the Building Authority’s Policy was based entirely on availability of the space, and not on the content or speaker involved. After the Policy was enacted, the Board’s discussion at its December 6, 1993 meeting suggested that the only change to its practice of granting use of its lobby was that seasonal religious symbols were not permitted. We conclude that, based on the Policy as it was written, and based on the Building Authority’s practice of granting permission to use the lobby both bеfore and after the enactment of the Policy, the Policy’s prohibition can be characterized only as one based on seasonal displays in the City-County Building that express a religious perspective on the season.
b.
Realizing that Lamb’s Chapel indicates a result opposite from the one it reached, the district court attempted to distinguish that case from the one before it. On appeal, the defendants now urge that we accept some of those distinctions. Consequently, in reaching our decision, we have examined Lamb’s Chapel with great care. In that case, the Supreme Court acknowledged that a school district, “like the private owner of property, may legally preserve the property under its control for the use to which it is dedicated.” -U.S. at-,
That all religions and all uses for religious purposes are treated alike under [the policy in question], however, does not answer the critical question whether it discriminates on the basis of viewpoint to permit school property to be used for the presentation of all views about family issues and child-rearing except those dealing with the subject matter from a religious standpoint.
Id. at-,
Although a speaker may be excluded frоm a non-public forum if he wishes to address a topic not encompassed within the purpose of the forum ... the government violates the First Amendment when it denies access to a speaker solely to suppress the point of view he espouses on an otherwise includible subject.
Id. (quoting Cornelius,
The defendants submit that the case before us is different from Lamb’s Chapel. In Lamb’s Chapel, Rule 10 allowed (i.e., “opened the forum” to) use of the school for social, civic, and recreational topics, and Rule 7 expressly excluded religious viewpoints. The “subject matter” — social, civic and recreational topics — was expressly stated and the exclusion of a religious viewpoint on these otherwise includible subjects was discriminatory. By contrast, in this case, defendants submit, there was no explicit delineation of which subjects were permitted. Therefore, the Policy did not regulate viewpoints on a list of permitted subjects; it simply eliminated one subject, religion, from the subjects that could be discussed in this nonpublic forum. Therefore, the Building Authority claims that it properly exerted its right to exercise its control over the nonpublic forum lobby in a reasonable and viewpoint-neutral manner: Its Policy prohibits all religious displays and symbols. It further suggests that there is no evidence that it would allow, under private sponsorship, secular seasonal holiday displays.
We cannot accept these attempts to distinguish the clear teaching of Lamb’s Chapel. As the court’s colloquy with counsel at oral argument made quite clear, the Policy challenged here was constructed to prevent one thing: seasonal holiday displays of a religious character. The absence of an explicit list of permissible subjects upon which discourse is permissible in this nonpublie forum does not mean that there is no “otherwise includible subject” for discussion in the forum. In Hedges,
Any fingering doubts about whether the religious displays prohibited by the Policy are properly characterized as “viewpoint” rather than “subject matter” have been dispelled by the Supreme Court’s recent pronouncement in Rosenberger v. Rector & Visitors of the University of Virginia, — U.S. —,
Relying on Lamb’s Chwpel, Cornelius, and Perry as apposite precedents, the Court elaborated on the parameters within which the
Thus, in determining whether the State is acting to preserve the limits of the forum it has created so that the exclusion of a class of speech is legitimate, we have observed a distinction between, on the one hand, content discrimination, which may be permissible if it preserves the purposes of that limited forum, and, on the other hand, viewpoint discrimination, which is presumed impermissible when directed against speech otherwise within the forum’s limitations.
Id.
In Rosenberger, as in our ease, the government entity claimed that the exclusion of religious material was basеd on content, not viewpoint. The Court recognized that the distinction between content and viewpoint “is not a precise one,” and that the treatment of religious thought as a viewpoint rather than a “comprehensive body of thought” is “something of an understatement” when such issues “have been subjects of philosophic inquiry throughout human history.” Id. And yet, within this context, it is a viewpoint.
We conclude, nonetheless, that here, as in Lamb’s Chapel, viewpoint discrimination is the proper way to interpret the University’s objections to [the excluded organization]. By the very terms of [its] prohibition, the University does not exclude religion as a subject matter but selects for disfavored treatment those student journalistic efforts with religious editorial viewpoints. Religion may be a vast area of inquiry, but it also provides, as it did here, a specific premise, a perspective, a standpoint from which a variety of subjects may be discussed and considered. The prohibited perspective, not the general subject matter, resulted in the refusal to make third-party payments, for the subjects discussed were otherwise within the approved category of publications.
Id. at-,
In the case before us, the excluded group, Lubavitch, seeking to display the menorah, had already been qualified as a permissible organization to use the lobby for years. Others with non-religious messages remain free to apply for space in the City-County Build
C. The Establishment Clause Defense
The Building Authority submits that its exclusion of the plaintiffs also is justified because a display of seasonal religious symbols in the seat of government conveys the appearance of governmental endorsement of religion in violation of the Establishment Clause. The district court determined that the plaintiffs were not entitled to a preliminary injunction because they had no right to express their religious views in the lobby of the City-County Budding. Therefore, it was unnecessary for the court to decide whether a potential Establishment Clause violation excused the defendant officials from permitting the expression. Nevertheless, the court did address this argument and determined that, assuming that the issue had to be addressed, there was, on the record before it, no countervailing Establishment Clause concern sufficiently strong to require the curtailment of otherwise permissible expression.
The court noted that the same menorah had been placed in the lobby from 1985 to 1992. In its view, thеre was “little danger that reasonable onlookers would think that the menorah was being displayed with the government’s endorsement of any religious message.”
The Building Authority has not presented evidence that would support a finding that plaintiffs’ display would so dominate the lobby that a formal policy of equal access and neutrality would be likely to “degenerate into endorsement.”
1.
At the outset, we note that the Supreme Court has made clear that “compliance with the Establishment Clause is a state interest sufficiently compelling to justify content-based restrictions on speech.” See Capitol Square Review & Advisory Bd. v. Pinette, — U.S. at —, —,
Despite this potential limitation on access to a forum established by the government, we believe that the district court correctly applied — and anticipated — the Supreme Court’s approach in this most delicate of areas. The Supreme Court’s recent cases
A central lesson of our decisions is that a significant factor in upholding governmental programs in the face of Establishment Clause attack is their neutrality towards religion_ More than once have we rejected the position that the Establishment Clause even justifies, much less requires, a refusal to extend free speech rights to religious speakers who participate in broad-reaching government programs neutral in design.
Rosenberger, — U.S. at —,
In Rosenberger, the Supreme Court, through the pen of Justice Kennedy, set forth the approach that ought to govern the adjudication of lower courts in striking the appropriate balance between freedom of expression and the concerns protected by the Establishment Clause:
If there is to be an assurance that the Establishment Clause retains its force in guarding against those governmental actions it was intended to prohibit, we must in each case inquire first into the purpose and object of the governmental action in question and then into the practical details of the program’s operation.
— U.S. at-,
To obey the Establishment Clause, it was not necessary for the University to deny eligibility to student publications because of their viewpoint. The neutrality commanded of the State by the separate Clauses of the First Amendment was compromised by the University’s course of action. The viewpoint discrimination inherent in the University’s regulation required public officials to scan and interpret student publications to discern their underlying philosophic assumptions respecting re*594 ligious theory and belief. That course of action was the denial of the right of free speech and would risk fostering a pervasive bias or hostility to religion, which could undermine the very neutrality the Establishment Clause requires. There is no Establishment Clause violation in the University’s honoring its duties under the Free Speech Clause.
Id. at-,
The Supreme Court’s recent decision, Capitol Square Review, also followed the approach of Rosenberger. In addition to emphasizing the general principle that the opening of government property for religious speech does not confer any imprimatur of state approval on religious sects or practices, — U.S. at -,
2.
Following the methodology outlined by the Supreme Court in Rosenberger and applied by the Court in that ease and in Capitol Square, we turn now to this case. At the outset, it is very apparent that, in many significant ways, we have before us a case very similar to those just adjudicated by the Supreme Court. Notably, we are confronted, as were the Justices, with a case in which the governmental authorities have chosen to open governmental property to some forms of private expression. As we have noted earlier in this opinion, it is clear that the holiday season is a subject to which the City-County Building has been opened for nongovernmental, private discourse. The record also establishes, as the district court noted in its opinion, that, prior to the restrictions at issue in this case, the same menorah had been placed in the lobby by the plaintiffs for a significant number of years. At oral argument, the Building Authority made no claim that an application for space by the plaintiffs or any other religious group would receive any different treatment оr be subject to any other procedure than the one used to process the applications of other groups.
As in Capitol Square, this case involves religious expression at or near the seat of government. In the view of the Building Authority, the placement of a menorah in the actual seat of government signals government endorsement of a religious symbol, and not even the posting of disclaimer signs on the display would be enough to mitigate the appearance of government endorsement there. The recent Supreme Court cases fail to give us definitive guidance on the appropriate assessment of the “seat of government” consideration. In Capitol Square, a plurality of four of the Justices would have rejected the argument that private religious expression at the seat of government can be characterized as constituting a governmental endorsement of religion when the government has opened the forum to private speakers on equal terms. Three other Justices did not believe that such a definitive exceрtion
We were confronted with a religious display at the seat of government in American Jewish Congress v. City of Chicago,
On the basis of the record before us on this denial of a preliminary injunction, we cannot say that the district court erred when it concluded that the placement of the menorah in the lobby of the City-County building of Indianapolis, pursuant to an evenhanded policy of allowing expression on the holiday season, raises no Establishment Clause concerns of such countervailing importance as to outweigh the plaintiffs’ right to free expression.
Conclusion
Because we believe that the district court erred by not acknowledging the right of the plaintiffs to exercise their rights of free ex
Reversed.
Notes
. The factual record in this case is not disputed. The parties submitted Joint Stipulations of Fact, R.9. The facts recitеd in this opinion derive from those stipulations and from other uncontested facts offered by the parties at the district court hearing.
. There clearly was no policy to prohibit the sale of goods in the lobby, however. Requests for use of the lobby for the sale of Girl Scout cookies and the Indianapolis Bar Association dinner tickets were approved, for example. See, e.g., App. at 36, 42, 46, 54, 66, 67, 69, 158. The notations made by Mr. Reinking on the written requests for space indicated that the decision was made on the basis of availability of space.
. The menorah is a nine-pronged candelabrum that is displayed during the eight days of Chanukah, and is lit each night of the festival. It is a religious symbol associated with the holiday. Joint Stipulation 10, R.9 at 3.
. On November 29, 1994, this court granted plaintiffs' motion for an injunction pending resolution of this appeal. Lubavitch was therefore permitted to erect its menorah display during Chanukah 1994.
. In addition to its constitutional defense, the Building Authority presents a defense of laches to bar injunctive relief. It claims Lubavitch unreasonably delayed commеncing this action. According to the defendants, Lubavitch knew of the Authority’s refusal to display the menorah more than a year earlier, but filed the lawsuit only twenty days prior to Chanukah, without giving reasons for the delay.
This defense is without merit. Rabbi Grossb-aum wrote to Mr. Reinking on June 27, 1994, again requesting permission for the menorah display. He asked whether the Building Authority had reconsidered its Policy and asked for an explanation if the menorah would not be allowed. Because he received no response, the Rabbi wrote again on August 4, 1994. Mr. Reinking replied by letter on August 9, 1994; he explained that the Policy "does not permit the display of seasonal religious symbols in the building," and denied Rabbi Grossbaum’s request. Less than three months later, on November 7, 1994, the plaintiffs filed their verified complaint in the United States District Court in the Southern District of Indiana. See App. at 176-78. In addition, defendants did not claim that they were harmed. Mere delay is not enough; prejudice must also be shown. Gardner v. Panama R.R.,
. The First Amendment of the United States Constitution provides in pertinent part:
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.
U.S. Const, amend. I.
. See Doe v. Small,
. Krishna Consciousness discusses the same three categories:
Under this approach, regulation of speech on government property that has traditionally been available for public expression is subject to the highest scrutiny. Such regulations survive only if they are narrowly drawn to achieve a compelling state interest. Perry, supra,460 U.S. at 45 ,103 S.Ct. at 955 .... The second category of public property is the designated public forum, whether of a limited or unlimited character — property that the state has opened for expressive activity by part or all of the public. Ibid. Regulation of such property is subject to the same limitations as that governing a traditional public forum. Id. at 46,103 S.Ct. at 955_ Finally, there is all remaining public property. Limitations on expressive activity conducted on this last categoty of property must survive only a much more limited review. The challenged regulation*587 need only be reasonable, as long as the regulation is not an effort to suppress the speaker's activity due to disagreement with the speaker’s view. Ibid.
Id. at-,
. Mr. Reinking's statement concerning the need for a display policy is as follows:
The attention and publicity focused on the lobby of the City-County Building during the holiday season of 1992 pointed out the need for the authority to have a written policy regarding displays in our building. Last year’s holiday season brought newspaper articles, correspondence from the Indiana Civil Liberties Union and research into constitutional law. I am hopeful that an appropriate policy can facilitate a less controversial season in this and future years.
Included in this mailing is a draft of a policy on seasonal displays which Howard Kahlen-beck has prepared. Howard will discuss this draft, and the pertinent issues associated with the establishment of such a policy, with the directors at the meeting on Monday, October 4, 1993.
App. at 159 (emphasis added).
. There was no discussion at any of these meetings that the secular display could be placed in the lobby because it was sponsored or erected by the government rather than a private organization. The discriminating characteristic that allowed the Christmas tree disрlay and prohibited the menorah was solely that the former was a secular symbol and the latter a religious one. The distinction was made on the basis of what was said, not who was speaking.
. The Court explained:
It is axiomatic that the government may not regulate speech based on its substantive content or the message it conveys. Other principles follow from this precept. In the realm of private speech or expression, government regulation may not favor one speaker over another. Discrimination against speech because of its message is presumed to be unconstitutional.... When the government targets not subject matter but particular views taken by speakers on a subject, the violation of the First Amendment is all the more blatant. Viewpoint discrimination is thus an egregious form of content discrimination. The government must abstain from regulating speech when the specific motivating ideology or the opinion or perspective of the speaker is the rationale for the restriction.
Id. at-,
. The district court and the Building Authority rely on Lubavitch Chabad House, Inc. v. City of Chicago,
. The Rosenberger Court stated:
It does not violate the Establishment Clause for a public university to grant access to its facilities on a religion-neutral basis to a wide spectrum of student groups, including groups which use meeting rooms for sectarian activities, accompanied by some devotional exercises.
Id. at-,
. Capitol Square involved a "full-fledged public forum” rather than a limited forum case. However, as the Court pointed out in Capitol Square by its reference to Lamb’s Chapel, the same principle applies in nonpublic forum cases.
. See, e.g., Chabad-Lubavitch v. Miller,
. Cf. County of Allegheny v. ACLU Greater Pittsburgh Chapter,
