Lead Opinion
I. Introduction
The two appeals before this Court on consolidated rehearing raise the important and novel question of whether individual viewers of public television stations, licensed by the Fedéral Communications Commission to state instrumentalities, have a First Amendment right to compel the licensees to broadcast a previously scheduled program which the licensees have decided to cancel. For the reasons stated below we find that the viewers do not have such a right.
Both cases before us concern the decisions of the licensees not to broadcast the program “Death of a Princess.” In Muir v. Alabama Educational Television Commission,
In Barnstone v. University of Houston,
We directed that both cases be consolidated and reheard en banc. We now affirm the judgment of the District Court for the Northern District of Alabama in Muir and reverse the judgment of the District Court for the Southern District of Texas in Barn-stone.
II. Factual Background
The Muir case arose when AETC decided not to broadcast “Death of a Princess,” which had been scheduled for broadcast on May 12, 1980 at 8:00 P.M. The program, one of thirteen in the series “World,” is a dramatization of the investigation by the program’s director, producer and co-author into the motivations and circumstances which were said to have led to the July 1977 execution for adultery of a Saudi Arabian princess and her commoner lover.
AETC, organized under Ala. Code § 16-7 — 1, is responsible for “making the benefits of educational television available to and promoting its use by inhabitants of Alabama” and has “the duty of controlling and supervising the use of channels reserved by the Federal Communications Commission to Alabama for noncommercial, educational use.” Ala. Code § 16-7-5. AETC operates a statewide network of nine noncommercial, educational television stations licensed by the Federal Communications Commission under the Communications Act of 1984 (47 U.S.C. §§ 151, et seq.). AETC is funded through state legislative appropriations from the Special Education Trust Fund, matching federal grants through the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB), and private contributions.
AETC is a member of the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS), a non-profit corporation distributing public, non-commercial television programs to its members by satellite. AETC is also a member of the Station Program Cooperative (SPC), a program funding and acquisition mechanism operated by PBS. Membership in SPC entitles licensees to participate in the selection and funding of national public television programs distributed by PBS. Only those licensees who contribute to a program’s cost have a right to broadcast it. Those who contribute are free to broadcast or not to broadcast the program.
PBS’s acquisition of the program series “World” was funded by 144 public television licensees, including AETC, through the SPC. During the week prior to the scheduled broadcast of “Death of a Princess” AETC received numerous communications from Alabama residents protesting the showing of the program. The protests expressed fear for the personal safety and well-being of Alabama citizens working in the Middle East if the program was shown. On May 10 AETC announced its decision not to broadcast the film as scheduled.
The Barnstone case arose in a factual context similar to that of Muir. The University of Houston is a co-educational institution of higher learning funded and operated by the State of Texas. See Tex. Educ. Code Ann. §§ 111.01 et seq. The university funds and operates KUHT-TV, a public television station licensed to the university by the F.C.C. As a member of the SPC, KUHT-TV contributed to the funding of the “World” program series. KUHT-TV scheduled “Death of a Princess” for broadcast on May 12, 1980 at 8:00 P.M.
On May 1, 1980 KUHT-TV announced that it had decided not to broadcast the program. This decision was made by Dr. Patrick J. Nicholson, University of Houston Vice-President for Public Information and University Relations. Dr. Nicholson had never previously made a programming decision such as this, though as the university official charged with the responsibility of operating KUHT-TV he had the power to do so. In a press release announcing the cancellation Dr. Nicholson gave the basis of his decision as “strong and understandable objections by the government of Saudi Arabia at a time when the mounting crisis in the Middle East, our long friendship with the Saudi government and U.S. national interests all point to the need to avoid exacerbating the situation.” Dr. Nicholson also expressed a belief that the program was not balanced in a “responsible manner.”
Upon learning of Dr. Nicholson’s decision, on May 8,1980, plaintiff Barnstone brought suit to require KUHT-TV to air “Death of a Princess.”
III. The First Amendment Does Not Prohibit Governmental Expression
The central argument advanced by the plaintiffs on appeal is that their First Amendment rights were violated when the defendants, as state actors, denied the plaintiffs an opportunity to view “Death of a Princess” on the public television stations operated by the defendants. We are thus called upon to determine whether the First Amendment rights of viewers impose limits on the programming discretion of public television stations licensed to state instrumentalities.
The First Amendment operates to protect private expression from infringement by government. Such protection applies both to the right to speak and the right to hear and is operative in a variety of contexts.
The plaintiffs emphasize that the protection of the First Amendment extends only to private expression and not to governmental expression. They assert that the amendment serves only to confer duties on government — not rights.
Our essential task thus does not center on determining whether AETC- and the University of Houston are vested with a First Amendment right to make the programming decisions which they made regarding “Death of a Princess.” In the absence of a violation of a constitutional right inhering in the plaintiffs, AETC and the University of Houston are free to make whatever programming decisions they choose, consistent with statutory and regulatory requirements. The fundamental question before us is whether in making the programming decisions at issue here, the defendants violated the First Amendment rights of the plaintiffs.
IV. The Regulatory Framework Enacted by Congress
Our inquiry into the constitutional issue at hand is aided by a brief review of the broadcast legislation enacted by Congress.
Prior to 1927 the allocation of broadcast frequencies was left entirely to the private sector and the result was “chaos.” Red Lion Broadcasting Co. v. FCC,
Congress thus enacted the Radio Act of 1927 which established the Federal Radio Commission to allocate frequencies among competing applicants in a manner responsive to the public “convenience, interest, or necessity.”
The Communications Act of 1934, 47 U.S.C. §§ 151 et seq., the successor to the Radio Act of 1927, was similarly designed by Congress to promote a balance between the First Amendment interests of the public and of the broadcast licensees. In furtherance of the First Amendment rights of the public the Communications Act specifically mandates that the Federal Communications Commission consider the public interest in the course of granting licenses, 47 U.S.C.
In affirming the First Amendment interests of broadcast licensees § 3(h) of the Communications Act specifically provides that broadcast licensees are not to be deemed common carriers.
A basic premise of Commission policy is that a licensee is a ‘trustee’ for the public and that he must therefore assume the ‘primary duty and privilege to select the material to be broadcast to his audience .. . ’ [cites omitted] ‘The Commission has always regarded the maintenance of control over programming as a most fundamental obligation of the licensee.’ [cites omitted]
Public television licensees are generally subjected to the same regulatory requirements as their commercial counterparts. See Accuracy in Media, Inc. v. FCC,
The Public Broadcasting Act of 1967
The picture which emerges from the regulatory scheme adopted by Congress is one which clearly shows broadcast licensees endowed with the privilege and responsibility of exercising free programming control of their broadcasts, yet also charged with the obligation of making programming decisions which protect the legitimate interests of the public. The right to the free exercise of programming discretion is, for private licensees, not only statutorily conferred but also constitutionally protected. CBS. Under the existing statutes public licensees such as AETC and the University of Houston possess the same rights and obligations to make free programming decisions as their private counterparts; however, as state instrumentalities, these public licensees are without the protection of the First Amendment. This lack of constitutional protection implies only that government could possibly impose restrictions on these licensees which it could not impose on private licensees. The lack of First Amendment protection does not result in the lessening of any of the statutory rights and duties held by the public licensees. It also does not result in individual viewers gaining any greater right to influence the programming discretion of the public licensees.
V. KUHT-TV and AETC are not Public Forums
It is clear that Congress did not deem it necessary for viewers to be accorded a right of access to television broadcast stations in order for the public’s First Amendment interests in this medium to be fully realized. Indeed it is clear that Congress concluded that the First Amendment rights of public television viewers are adequately protected under a system where the broadcast licensee has sole programming discretion but is under an obligation to serve the public interest. In spite of this Congressional scheme the District Court in Barnstone found that KUHT-TV was a public forum because it was operated by the government for public communication of views on issues of political and social significance. The court held that as a public forum the station could not deny access to speakers who wished to be heard in the forum, unless the requirements for prior restraint were satisfied.
The plaintiffs now urge that we affirm the District Court’s ruling that public television stations are public forums. The plaintiffs, unlike the District Court, however, do not argue for a public right of access to the stations. Instead the plaintiffs contend that as public forums the stations are prohibited by the First Amendment from making programming decisions motivated by hostility to the communicative impact of a program’s message and stemming from a specific viewpoint of the broadcaster.
We find both the holding of the District Court and the argument of the plaintiffs to be incorrect. The Supreme Court has recently rejected the theory adopted by the District Court that because a government facility is “specifically used for the communication of information and ideas” it is ipso facto a public forum. United States Postal Service v. Council of Greenburgh Civic Ass’ns,
does the character of the place, the pattern of usual activity, the nature of its essential purpose and the population who take advantage of the general invitation extended make it an appropriate place for communication of views on issues of political and social significance.
In the cases in which a public facility has been deemed a public forum the speakers have been found to have a right of access because they were attempting to use the facility in a manner fully consistent with the “pattern of usual activity” and “the general invitation extended.”
Our holding today is consistent with the Supreme Court’s ruling in CBS that television stations operated by private broadcast licensees provide no public right of access. The Court in CBS pointed out that the creation of a public right of access to television stations would result in the derogation of the licensees’ duty to insure that their stations serve the public interest:
The result would be a further erosion of the journalistic discretion of broadcasters in the coverage of public issues, and a transfer of control over the treatment of public issues from the licensees who are accountable for broadcast performance to private individuals who are not. The public interest would no longer be “paramount” but, rather, subordinate to private whim.
Nor can we accept the Court of Appeals’ view that every potential speaker is “the best judge” of what the listening public ought to hear or indeed the best judge of the merits of his or her views. All journalistic tradition and experience is to the contrary.
Id.
The plaintiffs stress that they do not argue for the creation of a public right of access to public television stations. They contend that, even without a public right of access, the stations are public forums and as such cannot make programming decisions based on the communicative impact of a program. We find this contention to be untenable. It is the right of public access which is the essential characteristic of a public forum and the basis which allows a speaker to challenge the state’s regulation of the forum. The gravamen of a speaker’s public forum complaint is the invalid and discriminatory denial of his right of access to the forum. If a speaker does not have a right of access to a facility, that facility by definition is not a “public forum” and the speaker is without grounds for challenge under the public forum doctrine.
VI. The Decision to Cancel Death of a Princess was not Governmental Censorship
The plaintiffs argue that even if we decline to characterize KUHT-TV and AETC as public forums we should nonetheless find that the defendants violated the plaintiffs’ First Amendment rights by “censoring” “Death of a Princess.” The plaintiffs contend that censorship, in violation of the First Amendment, occurs when state officials in charge of state operated public television stations decide to cancel a scheduled program because of the officials’ opposition to the program’s political content.
There is no question that “the First Amendment means that government has no power to restrict expression because of its message, its ideas, its subject matter, or its content .... The essence of this forbidden censorship is content control.” Police Dept. of Chicago v. Mosley,
We are not convinced that editorial decisions of public television stations owned and operated by the state must, or should, be viewed in the same manner and subjected to the same restrictions as state regulatory activity affecting speech in other areas. Standard First Amendment doctrine condemns content control by governmental bodies where the government sponsors and financially supports certain facilities through the use of which others are allowed to communicate and to exercise their own right of expression.
The plaintiffs concede that state officials operating public television stations can- exercise some editorial discretion. They contend, however, that in exercising this discretion the officials must be “carefully neutral as to which speakers or viewpoints are to prevail in the marketplace of ideas.” CBS, Inc. v. FCC,
The plaintiffs’ analysis fails to recognize a number of essential differences between typical state regulation of private expressive activity and the exercise of editorial discretion by state officials responsible for the operation of public television stations. When state officials operate a public television station they must necessarily make discriminating choices. As the Supreme Court pointed out in CBS,
The plaintiffs seek to draw a distinction between a decision not to show a program and a decision to cancel a previously scheduled program. They suggest that while it is a proper exercise of editorial discretion for a licensee initially to decide not to schedule a program, it is constitutionally improper for the licensee to decide to cancel a scheduled program because of its political content. In support of their view the plaintiffs cited decisions holding that school officials may be free initially to decide which
The decision to cancel a scheduled program is no less editorial in nature than an initial decision to schedule the program. See Advocates for Arts v. Thomson,
School libraries are distinguishable from broadcast stations in a number of important ways. There are limited hours in a day for broadcasting, and broadcast licensees are constantly required to make sensitive choices between available programs. Cf. Board of Education v. Pico,-U.S.-, -, n. 1,
The right to cancel a program is, furthermore, far more integral a part of the operation of a television station than the decision to remove a book from a school library. Libraries typically have at least the opportunity to review a book before acquiring it, therefore, there may be “few legitimate reasons why a book, once acquired, should be removed from a library not filled to capacity.” Pico v. Board of Education,
We conclude that the defendants’ editorial decisions to cancel “Death of a Princess” cannot be properly characterized as “censor
VII. The Plaintiffs Can Seek Remedial Relief from the FCC
Our holding that the defendants did not violate the plaintiffs’ First Amendment rights does not preclude the plaintiffs from challenging the propriety of the defendants’ programming decisions with the FCC. Our decision is limited to the constitutional issue presented. We offer no opinion as to whether or not the actions of AETC and the University of Houston comport with their statutory and regulatory obligation.
Under the Communications Act the FCC may at any time, upon public complaint or sua sponte, review the programming selections of its licensees to ascertain whether they are complying with the requirements of the Act, in particular the requirement that the licensee act in the public interest. 47 U.S.C. § 308(b). The FCC routinely reviews complaints similar to those raised by the plaintiffs.
VIII. Conclusion
The decisions of AETC and the University of Houston to cancel “Death of a Princess” did not violate the First Amendment rights of the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs have no constitutional right to compel the broadcast of the program. Accordingly, we find that the District Court for the Northern District of Alabama properly awarded summary judgment to AETC. We also find that the District Court for the Southern District of Texas erred in issuing its order requiring KUHT-TV to broadcast the program.
The judgment of the District Court for the Northern District of Alabama is AFFIRMED.
The judgment of the District Court for the Southern District of Texas is REVERSED and REMANDED. On remand the District Court shall dissolve the injunctive relief and render judgment for appellants.
Notes
. Muir v. Alabama Educational Television Commission,
. Barnstone v. University of Houston,
. “Death of a Princess” was produced jointly by WGBH Educational Foundation, licensee of public television station WGBH-TV in Boston, Massachusetts, and ATV Network of London, England.
. PBS’s “Station Users Agreement” reposing in licensees the absolute right to select programs they will broadcast and to determine when they will broadcast them accords with the FCC regulation contained in 47 C.F.R. § 73.658(e) which requires that every broadcaster reserve the right to reject any program offered to it. The FCC requires that every broadcaster consistently maintain independent control over selection of programs as a condition to retention of a license. Cosmopolitan Broadcasting,
. In addition to the reasons cited in the press release, the District Court, upon consideration of Dr. Nicholson’s testimony, found four other reasons why the cancellation decision may have been made. First, Dr. Nicholson testified that he considered the program to be “in bad taste.” Second, Dr. Nicholson expressed concern that some members of the public might believe that the “docu-drama” was a true documentary. Third, Dr. Nicholson testified that the University of Houston had previously entered into a contract with the Saudi Arabian royal family to instruct a particular princess. Finally, Dr. Nicholson testified that he had been in charge of fund raising activities for the university from 1957-1978 and that a significant percentage of the university’s private contributions came from major oil companies and from individuals in oil related companies.
. Harvey Malyn was subsequently granted leave to join this action as a party-plaintiff.
. See L. Tribe, American Constitutional Law, 580-584 (1978).
. See, Police Dept. of the City of Chicago v. Mosley,
. See Schneider v. State,
. Plaintiffs invoke Justice Stewart’s holding in Columbia Broadcasting Systems, Inc. v. Democratic National Committee,
. See L. Tribe American Constitutional Law, 588 590 (1978); P.A.M. News Corp. v. Butz,
. Government expression, being unprotected by the First Amendment, may be subject to legislative limitation which would be impermissible if sought to be applied to private expression. Yet there is nothing to suggest that, absent such limitation, government is restrained from speaking any more than are the citizens. Freedom of expression is the norm in our society, for government (if not restrained) and for the people. Freedom of speech is not good government because it is in the First Amendment; it is in the First Amendment because it is good government.
. The Supreme Court in CBS observed that First Amendment issues regarding broadcast licensees should be analyzed in light of the Congressionally established statutory and regulatory scheme:
Balancing the various First Amendment interests involved in the broadcast media and determining what best serves the public’s right to be informed is a task of great delicacy and difficulty. The process must necessarily be undertaken within the framework of the regulatory scheme that has evolved over the course of the past half century. For during that time Congress and its chosen regulatory agency have established a delicately balanced system of regulation intended to serve the interests of all concerned.”
That is not to say we ‘defer’ to the judgment of the Congress and the Commission on a constitutional question, or that we would hesitate to invoke the Constitution should we determine that the Commission has not fulfilled its task with appropriate sensitivity to the interests in free expression. The point is, rather, that when we face a complex problem with many hard questions and few easy an*1039 swers we do well to pay careful attention to how the other branches of Government have addressed the same problem.
Id. at 103,
. Extensive discussion of the history of broadcast regulation is found in CBS at 103-104,
. Radio Act of 1927 § 4, 44 Stat. 1163.
. The “public interest” includes the First Amendment interest of the public to receive “suitable access to social, political, esthetic, moral, and other ideas and experiences ...” Red Lion,
. Section 3(h) provides as follows:
‘Common carrier,’ or ‘carrier’ means any person engaged as a common carrier for hire in interstate or foreign communication by wire or radio or in interstate or foreign communication by wire or radio or in interstate or foreign radio transmission of energy, except where reference is made to common carriers not subject to this chapter; but a person engaged in radio broadcasting shall not, insofar as such person is so engaged, be deemed a common carrier.
47 U.S.C. § 153(h).
. See also FCC v. Midwest Video Corp.,
“As we see it § 3(h), consistently with the policy of the Act to preserve editorial control of programming in the licensee, forecloses any discretion in the Commission to impose access requirements amounting to common-carrier obligations on broadcast systems. The provision’s background manifests a congressional belief that the intrusion worked by such regulation on the journalistic integrity of broadcasters would overshadow any benefits associated with the resulting public access. It is difficult to deny, then, that forcing broadcasters to develop a “nondiscriminatory system for controlling access ... is precisely what Congress intended to avoid through § 3(h) of the Act.”
. The most salient example is section 73.-658(e) of the Commission’s rules which provides:
No license shall be granted to a television broadcast station having any contract, agreement, or understanding, express or implied, with a network organization which, with respect to programs offered or already contracted for pursuant to an affiliation contract, prevents or hinders the station from (1) rejecting or refusing network programs which the station reasonably believes to be unsatisfactory or unsuitable or contrary to the public interest or (2) substituting a program which, in the station’s opinion is of greater local or national importance.
47 C.F.R. § 73.658(e).
. Public Broadcasting Act of Nov. 7, 1967, Pub. L. No. 90-129, 81 Stat. 365.
. This insistence on unhindered local licensee programming discretion was codified in Section 396(g)(1)(B) of the Act.
. The Court in United States Postal Service ruled that mailboxes are not public forums.
. Cf. Greer v. Spock,
. The nature of facilities held to constitute public forums may be gleaned from the cases: municipal auditoriums, Southeastern Promotions Ltd. v. Conrad,
. Similarly producers of television programs are extended no invitation to air their programs on the public television stations. Producers are, of course, free to submit their programs to the stations with a request that they be broadcast, but they have no right to compel such broadcast. The decision whether to broadcast a program remains entirely with the licensee. The District Court for the Southern District of Texas thus erred in finding that the producers of “Death of a Princess” had a right of access to station KUHT-TV to broadcast the film.
. See Jones v. North Carolina Prisoners’ Labor Union, Inc.,
. See Bazaar v. Fortune,
. See L. Tribe 580-584.
. See p. 1050 infra; see also Houchins v. KQED, Inc.,
. At the time this case was submitted to us, the plaintiff cited, inter alia, Pico v. Board of Educ.,
A majority of the justices did not join any single opinion in Pico. There is a plurality opinion, i.e., one attracted more concurrences than did any other opinion leading to the result. The opinion by Justice Brennan is joined by Justice Marshall and Justice Stevens. Justice Blackmun concurred in all save one section, but dissents from the plurality’s opinion that the “right to receive information” detected by Justice Blackmun imposes a duty upon the State to provide information or ideas,-U.S. at —,
The Chief Justice and three others, Justice Powell, Justice Rehnquist and Justice O’Con-nor, in dissent, agree with Justice Blackmun that there is no First Amendment obligation upon the State to provide continuing access to particular books,-U.S. at-,
The Fifth Member of the Court voting for the judgment expresses no opinion on the First Amendment issues, being of the opinion that the Court should not, until after remand, “issue a dissertation on the extent to which the First Amendment limits the discretion of the school board to remove books from the school library.” Id.-U.S. at-,
Being instructed by Marks v. United States,
While the majority of the Court entered judgment in Pico resulting in a remand for the development of the record, this was necessarily based upon the status of the record and the issues presented in the case. Here, we are satisfied that the record before us adequately presents the issues.
. All branches of government are, and ought to be, guardians of the Constitution. It is no encroachment upon the private preserve of the Judicial Branch for the Congress to undertake implementation of the First Amendment; it is the duty of the Congress to do so. The Judiciary must be the final arbiter, but it is not the sole provider of freedom under the Bill of Rights.
The courts properly pay close attention to the implementation of constitutional guarantees by the Congress. CBS,
. “Formulated under the Commission’s power to issue regulations consistent with the ‘public interest,’ the [Fairness Doctrine] imposes two affirmative responsibilities on the broadcaster: coverage of issues of public importance must be adequate and must fairly reflect differing viewpoints. In fulfilling the Fairness Doctrine obligations, the broadcaster must provide free time for the presentation of opposing views if a paid sponsor is unavailable and must initiate programming on public issues if no one else seeks to do so.”
CBS,
. Thus, contrary to the finding of the District Court in Barnstone, the defendant did not suppress the speech of the producer of “Death of a Princess.” The defendants did not in any manner seek to prevent the producers from freely distributing or exhibiting the film. The defendants chose only not to exhibit the film through the stations which they were licensed to operate.
. The state may not suppress the expression of ideas. Thus, the state may not prevent Nazi’s from expressing their views in a parade. National Socialist Party of America v. Village of Skokie,
. See e.g., KMAP, Inc.
. Indeed in Alabama Educational Television Commission,
Concurrence Opinion
with whom
While I join in the result reached by the majority, I reach my conclusion on a different basis. Therefore, I join in the views expressed by Judge Garwood and add:
The sensitive and important issues in these cases cannot be resolved simply by attempting to decide whether a television station operated by a state agency is, or is not, a public forum. That term is but a label, developed to describe a location the use of which is open to the public. It does not express a definition but a conclusion.
The issue directly presented can be stated simply: whether an individual viewer has a right to compel a television station operated by a state agency to broadcast a single program previously scheduled by an employee of the agency that a higher-ranking state official has decided, because of its content, to cancel. This pretermits the factual questions whether the program was canceled for what the dissent calls “legitimate reasons” and whether the official’s
Determination of the constitutional limitations that result because a television licensee is a state agency rather than a private agency must take into account not only the rights of viewers but a number of other considerations. The license is federally bestowed. The state agency licensee has both a statutory duty to comply with the rules and regulations governing the use of its license
These interests are all entitled to consideration and some or all of them may be accorded constitutional protection. Whether a viewer has a right, therefore, to see a single program that has been canceled by station management cannot be determined by focusing only on the interests of the viewer.
Even the fact that the state is engaged in television broadcasting does not fully define the constitutional limitations on its actions, for such broadcasting might be designed to serve differing purposes. Licensing is not destiny. That the state is the licensee does not predetermine the station’s function. The state may elect the station’s mission, so long as this mission is consistent, with the station’s license and the Constitution. The prerogatives of managers, editors, and programmers, the rights of access of those who seek exposure, and the rights of viewers, as well as the prerogatives of the licensee itself as a state agency, are at least in large part determined by this mission.
The function of a state agency operating an informational medium is significant in determining first amendment restrictions on its actions. State agencies publish alumni bulletins, newsletters devoted to better farming practices, and law reviews; they operate or subsidize art museums and theater companies and student newspapers. The federal government operates the Voice of America
If the state is conducting an activity that functions as a marketplace of ideas, the Constitution requires content neutrality. Thus, a state university may not override editorial freedom for student newspapers.
All of the opinions in Board of Educ. v. Pico, - U.S. -,
In his concurring opinion, Justice Black-mun is willing to say only that “certain forms of state discrimination between ideas are improper.”
The dissenters do not agree that students have a constitutional right to receive information or that “a school board [has a duty to] affirmatively aid [a] speaker in its communication with the recipient.”
All of the opinions in Pico, therefore, seem to support the distinction between the application of the first amendment to limitations on the use of a public forum and the restrictions it may impose on governmental action in conducting a particular activity. Whether the views of the plurality or those of the dissenters express the constitutional interpretation that will ultimately be adopted, Pico seems to endorse the view that the nature of the activity determines the strictures the first amendment places on governmental action.
While the Mobile and Houston television stations are operated by state agencies, neither station is designed to function as a marketplace of ideas, a medium open to all who have a message, whatever its nature. The staff of each station had made an initial programming decision based in part on their assessment of the content of “Death of a Princess.” Had the initial decision been not to use the program, the argument might have been made that this too was censorship and violated the potential viewers’ right to see. If a decision is initially made at one level to use a program and is then reversed at a higher level, the content assessment involved is more apparent, but it is not necessarily converted thereby from legitimate programming into forbidden censorship.
Judicial reassessment of the propriety of a programming decision made in operating a television station involves not only interference with station management but also reevaluation of all of the content-quality-audience reaction factors that enter into a decision to use or not to use a program by a medium that cannot possibly, by its very nature, accommodate everything that every viewer might desire. With deference to the dicta observations made in the Pico plurality opinion, our reexamination of such a decision cannot logically be confined to occasions when higher officials overrule subordinates. If it is forbidden censorship for the higher official to cancel a program, it is equally censorship for the lower officials to decide initially to reject a program.
The Constitution is categoric but it does not command the theoretical. The state’s discretion is confined by the functions it may perform as a broadcast licensee, and the purpose to which it has dedicated its license. Moreover, these cases involve only one program, not a licensee policy or practice of, for example, favoring only one political party, or of broadcasting racially or religiously discriminatory views.
For these reasons, although I cannot agree with all of the majority opinion, particularly its discussion of the application of the public forum doctrine, I concur in the result.
. See Karst, Public Enterprise and the Public Forum: A Comment on Southeastern Promotions, Ltd. v. Conrad, 37 Ohio St.L.J. 247, 254 (1976) .
. 47 U.S.C. § 303; see Red Lion Broadcasting Co. v. FCC,
. See Accuracy in Media, Inc. v. FCC,
. See Columbia Broadcasting Sys., Inc. v. Democratic Nat’l Comm.,
. See Bazaar v. Fortune,
. See generally Lehman v. City of Shaker Heights,
Although American constitutional jurisprudence, in the light of the First Amendment, has been jealous to preserve access to public places for purposes of free speech, the nature of the forum and the conflicting interests involved have remained important in determining the degree of protection afforded by the Amendment to the speech in question.
. Cf. City of Madison Joint School Dist. v. Wisconsin Emp. Comm’n.,
. 22 U.S.C. § 1463 (1976 & Supp. IV 1980).
. Id. §§ 2871-2879.
. 44 U.S.C. § 1108.
. A recent article on one of these activities, Voice of America, vividly illustrates this point. Bethell, Propaganda Warts, Harper’s, May 1982, at 19. Indeed, this article describes an incident similar to the ones at issue in these cases. Id. at 21.
. See Bazaar v. Fortune,
. See Adderley v. Florida,
. Greer v. Spock,
. See Jones v. North Carolina Prisoners’ Labor Union, Inc.,
. Lehman v. City of Shaker Heights,
. Dallas Ass’n of Community Orgs. for Reform Now v. Dallas County Hosp. Dist.,
. Seven Justices filed opinions in Pico. The Court divided four-four on the constitutional issue of the extent to which the first amendment limits the discretion of a school board to remove books from a school library. Justice White concurred in the judgment of the Court but did not reach this issue. See generally Maj. Op. supra,
. - U.S. at -,
In sum, the issue before us in this case is a narrow one, both substantively and procedurally. It may best be restated as two distinct questions. First, Does the First Amendment impose any limitations upon the discretion of petitioners to remove library books from the Island Trees High School and Junior High School? Second, If so, do the affidavits and other evidentiary materials before the District Court, construed most favorably to respondents, raise a genuine issue of fact whether petitioners might have exceeded those limitations?
(Emphasis in original).
. Id at----,
. Id at-----,
. Id. at--,
A school library ... is “a place dedicated to quiet, to knowledge, and to beauty.” Brown v. Louisiana,383 U.S. 131 , 142, [86 S.Ct. 719 , 724,15 L.Ed.2d 637 ] (1966) (Opinion of Fortas, J.). Keyishian v. Board of Regents,385 U.S. 589 [, 603,87 S.Ct. 675 , 684,17 L.Ed.2d 629 ] (1967), observed that “students must always remain free to inquire, to study and to evaluate, to gain new maturity and understanding.” The school library is the principal locus of such freedom.
Id. at-,
. - U.S. at--,
. Id at-,
. Id. at-,
. Id. at - n.1,
. Id. at-,
. See id. at • • ,
[T]he unique environment of the school places substantial limits on the extent to which official decisions may be restrained by the First Amendment values. But that environment also makes it particularly important that some limits be imposed.
(Emphasis in original).
. id. at----,
. Id. at -----,
. Id. at-,
. See Board of Educ. v. Pico,-U.S. at---,
Dissenting Opinion
with whom
I dissent because I am convinced that the majority has committed a serious error in applying the law to these cases. The clearly defined issue in these appeals is whether the executive officers of a state operated public television station may cancel a previously scheduled program because it presents a point of view disagreeable to the religious and political regime of a foreign country. The majority opinion permitting cancellation on these grounds flies completely in the face of the First Amendment and our tradition of vigilance against governmental censorship of political and religious expression.
Death of a Princess is a dramatization of one man’s investigation of the circumstances and motives which led to the July 1977 execution of a Saudi Arabian princess and her lover for adultery. The film presents narrative and recreated interviews which examine the religious, cultural, and political hierarchy of Saudi Arabian society. Death of a Princess is directly critical of many aspects of the Saudi regime, including the government’s enforcement of religious and cultural proscriptions.
The Saudi government reacted strongly to the production and distribution of Death of a Princess. After the film was shown in Great Britain, Saudi Arabia temporarily recalled its ambassador in protest. The Saudis again evidenced strong displeasure when PBS scheduled the film for broadcast in May 1980 as part of its World series.
The record in Muir reveals that during the period immediately preceding the May 12 air date the Alabama Educational Television Commission received numerous telephone calls expressing concern over the scheduled telecast of Death of a Princess.
Walker scheduled a telephone conference with the other commissioners for later in the day. At some point, Walker spoke directly with Harbert, who supplied him with most or all of the facts relied on by the commission in reaching its conclusion that “broadcast of the program could expose Alabama citizens in the Middle East to physical and emotional abuse through rioting, physical assault and property damage.” The plaintiffs unsuccessfully maintained that the decision “was one made out of political considerations.” (R. at 96.)
The district court in Barnstone found that Dr. Patrick Nicholson, Vice President for Public Information and University Relations of the University of Houston, unilaterally decided to prevent broadcast of Death of a Princess on the University operated television station, KUHT-TV. Barnstone v. University of Houston,
The majority of this Court — now in the twilight of its long and honorable existence
The freedom of expression protected by the First Amendment encompasses the rights of both speakers and listeners. CBS, Inc. v. FCC,
It is the right of the viewers and listeners, not the right of the broadcasters which is paramount. It is the purpose of the First Amendment to preserve an uninhibited marketplace of ideas in which truth will ultimately prevail, rather than to countenance monopolization of that market, whether it be by the Government itself or a private licensee. It is the right of the public to receive suitable access to social, political, esthetic, moral, and other ideas and experiences which is crucial here. That right may not constitutionally be abridged ....
Our system of constitutional protection clearly reflects that government may not restrict the free discussion of public issues on the basis of the political, religious, or ideological content of the message. Freedom of expression concerning public issues “is at the heart of the First Amendment’s protection.” First Nat’l Bank of Boston v. Bellotti, supra,
This Court held in Bazaar v. Fortune,
The majority opinion completely ignores the critical issue in these cases by concluding that “[t]he state officials in charge of AETC and KUHT-TV have simply exercised their statutorily mandated discretion and decided not to show a particular program at a particular time.” The very simple answer to that position is that FCC regulation is designed neither to preempt judicial scrutiny nor to redress state censorship as alleged in these cases.
Federal regulation of the broadcast media, for the most part, reflects the government’s attempt to balance the allocation of a scarce resource with the First Amendment interests of private broadcasters and the public. See Red Lion Broadcasting Co. v. FCC, supra,
In addition, while it is true that the FCC hears complaints similar to those raised in these cases, it is also true that the FCC routinely denies relief. A brief review of the cases cited by the majority reveals that the FCC steadfastly refuses to depart from its “longstanding policy of deferring to licensee discretion.” Right to Life, Inc. v. WAVE-TV,
[BJecause of the sensitive First Amendment considerations involved, the Commission must strike a delicate balance between ensuring that licensees operate in the public interest and avoiding unnecessary interference in their programming decisions. Thus, the Commission has made clear that both the responsibility for and discretion in the selection of broadcast material rests with licensees.
In order for the FCC to take adverse action against a broadcaster for suppressing a particular viewpoint, the petitioner “must present substantial extrinsic evidence of intentional and specific incidents” of suppression. KMAP, Inc., supra,
Thus it is clear that the majority’s deference to the FCC in these cases that present important constitutional questions amounts io nothing more than “. . . a promise to the ear ...” which will most certainly be broken “to the hope.” See Cuthbert v. United States,
The concurring opinions of Judges Rubin and Garwood erroneously suggest that official censorship may only be found when the state operates a medium which is “content neutral,” see, e.g., City of Madison Joint School Dist. v. Wisconsin Emp. Rel. Com’n,
These suppositions erroneously ignore the proper considerations a Court may give the editorial process, as demonstrated by this Court’s previous experience. For example, the issue presented to this Court in Bazaar v. Fortune, supra, a case relied on to some extent by Judge Rubin, was not whether the University of Mississippi’s literary magazine was “content neutral” or whether any student had the “right” to force the English Department and its student editors to publish any given article or short story. The issue in Fortune was whether the University chancellor could prevent the distribution of the magazine because one of its short stories contained “inappropriate” material criticizing contemporary race relations.
In the recent case of Board of Educ. v. Pico, - U.S. -,
Finally, the concurring opinions would appear to recognize official censorship by state television broadcasters when that cen
It is the judiciary which is the ultimate arbiter of the fundamental rights involved in these cases.
Because of the importance of the values at stake, and the ability of the defendant usually to offer a colorably permissible reason for its actions, the trier of fact must critically examine the asserted rationale for the defendant’s conduct. In Bazaar v. Fortune this Court rejected defendants’ assertion that they were attempting to prevent the publication of a literary magazine because it contained obscenities when no action had been taken against similar writings found in the university library or on students’ required reading lists.
No one would doubt that “broadcast media pose unique and special problems not present in the traditional free speech case.” CBS, Inc. v. Democratic Nat’l Comm.,
The plaintiffs in Muir and Barnstone have made serious allegations of state censorship which the defendants have attempt
. The district court in Muir entered its orders denying the preliminary injunction and granting defendants’ motion for summary judgment in this case without benefit of oral evidence and on the basis of very limited discovery. Assuming that the court did not abuse its discretion in denying the preliminary injunction, the issue of summary judgment remains. In
. By Public Law 96-452, 94 Stat. 1994, effective October 1, 1981, the United States Congress divided the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals into two new autonomous circuits — the new Fifth Circuit and the Eleventh Circuit. The cases now under consideration, as required by the Act, are being considered by the judges of the former Fifth Circuit as if the legislation dividing the circuit “had not been enacted.” Pub. Law 96 — 452 § 9(3). Thus, having been established by Congress in 1891 as one of the original Circuit Courts of Appeals, the Fifth Circuit is indeed in its twilight.
. Although a controversy arose over the broadcast of Death of a Princess, it does not appear that the program itself dealt with a controversy within the meaning of the fairness doctrine. See RKO General, Inc.,
. The substantial quantum of proof a petitioner must produce in order to persuade the FCC to deny a state broadcaster’s license is clearly illustrated in Alabama Educational Television Commission,
. The very purpose of a Bill of Rights was to withdraw certain subjects from the vicissitudes of political controversy, to place them beyond the reach of majorities and officials and to establish them as legal principles to be applied by the courts. One’s right to life, liberty, and property, to free speech, a free press, freedom of worship and assembly and other fundamental rights may not be submitted to vote; they depend on the outcome of no elections.
West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette,
. As this Court concluded in Fortune:
“. . . [W]e can only reiterate that speech cannot be stifled by the state merely because it would perhaps draw an adverse reaction from the majority of people, be they politicians or ordinary citizens, and newspapers. To come forth with such a rule would be to virtually read the First Amendment out of the Constitution and, thus, cost this nation one of its strongest tenets.
. Judge McDonald found that KUHT-TV was a public forum and concluded that “decisions not to show programs on it may be challenged as prior restraint.”
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
I concur in the majority opinion, and append these remarks only to point up two additional interrelated matters I believe significant.
First, plaintiffs are not attacking governmental “public” broadcasting as such. Nor do they seek to require its operation to be on a pure “open forum” basis — like an empty stage available to all comers' — where each citizen can cause the broadcast of his or her program of choice, with the inevitable selectivity determined by completely content neutral factors such as lot, or first
As the majority opinion convincingly demonstrates, in television broadcasting not only is selection inevitable, but it is likewise inevitable that in numerous instances it will be largely based on factors that are not content neutral and on considerations that involve sympathy for or hostility to the program’s “message” on the part of the party having the power of selection.
In contrast to a pure “open forum” system where diverse individual members of the public (and perhaps third-party producers) in effect select the programs and may be considered the speakers, in conventional broadcasting the power of selection rests with the station (or party controlling it) and in substance it is the speaker. Where a governmental unit controls a conventionally operated station, it is the speaker and speaks either in its corporate capacity or as a kind of proxy for the full body of its citizens. In an isolated instance, to grant an individual the right to require such a station to broadcast a particular program merely because the station rejected it for “political” type considerations, is, in effect, to force the governmental unit — in either its corporate or more general representative capacity — to speak in a certain way and to forego other speech it would have engaged in. To grant such a right on a consistent and thorough basis is to necessarily transform the station into one operated essentially on an “open forum” basis.
In the second place, plaintiffs do not assert that the stations in question have, on the basis of their agreement or disagreement with the different points of view involved or for similar “political” type reasons, structured their programming so that it constitutes a one-sided or slanted presentation of any matter of public concern, importance or controversy, whether relevant to the “message” of plaintiffs’ desired program or otherwise.
A private citizen has no constitutional right to force a conventionally operated governmental “public” television station to enter with its broadcasting a particular propaganda war by showing a specific program selected by the citizen. Whether it is proper for such a governmental station to enter that kind of a war at all, or whether if it does so it may nevertheless present only one side while refusing, for reasons of a “political” nature, to broadcast any competing view, are questions of a different nature that are not now before us.
. Nor do plaintiffs claim that they were denied any right or privilege which the stations granted any other citizen similarly situated.
. In my view, the level at which a particular television programming decision is made, just as the question of whether it is made by failure to initially select or by cancellation, is relevant here only in the sense of possibly being evidentiary of whether the decision is made on the basis of sympathy for or hostility to the program message or for some similar “political” type reason. In the context of these governmental stations broadcasting to the general public, I do not think it is of constitutional significance that the “sympathy” or “politics” influencing the decision is that of the program director or the university public affairs director or the station board of directors, when all are acting as governmental personnel.
. And plaintiffs do not contend their particular (or some similar) program must be shown to fairly balance the presentation on this subject matter which the stations have improperly slanted by showing some other program or programs.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
I agree with the analysis in Judge Johnson’s thorough and well-reasoned dissent, with one exception: his statement that the government’s decision to withdraw a program becomes presumptively unconstitutional once a plaintiff has shown that the decision was made because of the program’s “substantive content.” In my view, in addition to “substantive content,” there must be shown an improper motivation, an intent to “restrict[] access to the political ideas or social perspectives discussed .. .. ” Board of Education v. Pico,-U.S.-,-,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
I cannot join the majority or concurring opinions for the reason that each of these television stations does far more than transmit expressions of the state. Our desire to free non-profit public broadcasting from judicial interference is no justification for pretending that the state is not 'relaying messages into the idea marketplace. I must conclude that the state encounters the First Amendment requirement of neutrality for reasons generally discussed in my original panel concurrence. Barnstone v. University of Houston, KUHT-TV,
On the other hand, I would not go so far as Judge Johnson does to make the state’s decision presumptively unconstitutional whenever a program is not shown “because of its substantive content.” State operated television stations should be given more latitude, even to choose on the basis of substantive content, in their program selection. They should be entitled to pursue excellence, to build viewing audiences, to respond to what viewers want, and to consider the effect of their programs upon that audience. Bona fide programming decisions would not, for me, violate First Amendment neutrality. Only if the decision to show or not to show were based upon viewpoint alone, in juxtaposition to the personal viewpoint of the programming authority or state superiors, entirely aside from any opinion as to program value or effect, would I regard neutrality abused and court action justifiable.
The recent opinion of a plurality of the Supreme Court in Board of Educ. v. Pico,--U.S.-,
[Government officials] rightly possess significant discretion to determine the content of their school libraries. But that discretion may not be exercised in a narrowly partisan or political manner.. .. Our Constitution does not permit the official suppression of ideas. Thus whether petitioners’ removal of books from their school library denied respondents their First Amendment rights depends upon the motivation behind petitioners’ actions. If petitioners intended by their removal decision to deny respondent access to ideas with which petitioners disagreed, and if this intent was the decisive factor in petitioners’ decision, then petitioners have exercised their discretion in violation of the Constitution.
-U.S. at-,
Moreover, for the reasons I have already explained, see
