Choose Life of Missouri, Inc. is a nonprofit Missouri corporation. Kevin Roach is the founder, president, and chairman of the board of directors of Choose Life of Missouri, Inc. Choose Life and Roach (collectively, “Choose Life”) filed suit against Karen King Mitchell, Director of the Missouri Department of Revenue (“DOR”), in her official capacity, and against the members of the Joint Committee on Transportation Oversight (“Joint Committee”) in their official capacities (collectively, “appellants”) after the Joint Committee denied Choose Life’s application to obtain a specialty license plate. The district court 2 granted summary judgment to Choose Life, declared section 21.795(6) of the Missouri Revised Statutes to be unconstitutional, and entered an injunction requiring Mitchell to issue Choose Life’s specialty license plate. The appellants appeal, and for the reasons discussed below, we affirm.
*862 I. BACKGROUND
The State of Missouri permits drivers to obtain “specialty” license plates for a fee in addition to the ordinary registration fee. Like regular license plates, specialty plates contain a combination of identifying letters and numbers. However, specialty plates contain a specific message or symbol from a sponsoring organization that replaces the state moniker “Show Me State.”
Missouri law provides for two methods to create a specialty plate. First, the Missouri Legislature can pass a bill that creates a specialty plate. Approximately seventy specialty plates have been created by the Missouri Legislature for organizations such as the March of Dimes, the Missouri Civil War Reenactors Association, and the Missouri Society of Professional Engineers. See, e.g., Mo.Rev.Stat. § 301.3032-.3148. Second, private organizations can apply to the DOR for a specialty plate. Mo.Rev.Stat. § 301.3150. Section 301.3150 sets out the requirements and administrative procedures for an application to the DOR.
1. An organization ... that seeks authorization to establish a new specialty license plate shall initially petition the department of revenue by submitting the following:
(1) An application in a form prescribed by the director for the particular specialty license plate being sought, describing the proposed specialty plate in general terms and have a sponsor of at least one current member of the general assembly. The application may contain written testimony for support of this specialty plate;
(2) Each application submitted pursuant to this section shall be accompanied by a list of at least two hundred potential applicants who plan to purchase the specialty plate if the specialty plate is approved pursuant to this section; [and]
(3)An application fee, not to exceed five thousand dollars, to defray the department’s cost for issuing, developing and programming the implementation of the specialty plate, if authorized;
7. The department of revenue shall submit for approval all applications for the development of specialty plates to the joint committee on transportation oversight during a regular session of the general assembly for approval.
8. If the specialty license plate requested by an organization is approved by the joint committee on transportation oversight, the organization shall submit the proposed art design for the specialty license plate to the department as soon as practicable, but no later than sixty days after the approval of the specialty license plate.
Id. Meanwhile, section 21.795(6) governs the Joint Committee’s process for approving or denying the specialty plate applications.
The [Joint Committee] shall also review for approval or denial all applications for the development of specialty license plates submitted to it by the department of revenue. The committee shall approve such application by a unanimous vote. The committee shall not approve any application if the committee receives a signed petition from five house members or two senators that they are opposed to the approval of the proposed license plate. The committee shall notify the director of the department of revenue upon approval or denial of an application for the development of a specialty plate.
Mo.Rev.Stat. § 21.795(6). If an application is denied, the organization can make a request to the Joint Committee for a “review” of the Joint Committee’s determina *863 tion within fifteen days of receiving the notice of denial. Mo.Rev.Stat. § 301.3152. Specialty plates for groups such as the Missouri Hospice Organization, Ethan and Friends for Autism, and Missouri’s Cattlemen Foundation have been approved and produced using this process. A vehicle owner who wishes to obtain a specialty plate must pay the State of Missouri a fifteen dollar fee in addition to the normal license plate registration fee and comply with the requirements of the sponsoring organization, which often include a required donation to the organization.
Using the second method, Choose Life submitted an application to the DOR for a “Choose Life” specialty license plate and fully complied with the requirements listed in section 301.3150. Missouri State Senators Joan Bray and Rita Heard Days, both of whom describe themselves as “pro-choice” and both of whom are members of the Joint Committee, submitted a letter to the Chair of the Joint Committee opposing the “Choose Life” specialty plates. Accordingly, the Joint Committee denied the application. Choose Life requested a review of the Joint Committee’s decision under section 301.3152. The Joint Committee again rejected the application.
Choose Life filed suit, arguing that the Joint Committee’s denial of the “Choose Life” specialty plate violated its rights to free speech, due process and equal protection under the United States Constitution and its right to free speech under the Missouri Constitution. Choose Life sought a permanent injunction requiring Mitchell to issue the “Choose Life” specialty plate. Choose Life also sought a declaratory judgment that the specialty license plate statutory scheme was unconstitutional because it gave Missouri officials unbridled discretion to restrict private speech and that the Joint Committee acted unconstitutionally by denying the “Choose Life” specialty plates. Both parties moved for summary judgment. The district court denied the appellants’ motion and granted Choose Life’s motion. The district court held that the specialty plates constituted private speech and that the statutory scheme lacked adequate guidelines to prevent viewpoint discrimination by the state because “there is unbridled discretion given to the government official(s) in deciding to approve or deny a specialty license plate.” The court thus struck down section 21.795(6) as unconstitutionally overbroad and entered an injunction requiring Mitchell to issue the “Choose Life” specialty plates.
The appellants appeal, arguing that the district court erred by denying the appellants’ motion for summary judgment, by granting Choose Life’s motion for summary judgment, and by entering the permanent injunction.
II. DISCUSSION
We review a grant of summary judgment de novo.
Pucket v. Hot Springs Sch. Dist. No. 23-2,
To determine whether Missouri’s specialty license plate scheme survives a First Amendment challenge, we must first decide whether the messages contained on specialty plates communicate government or private speech. The appellants argue that the messages on specialty plates are government speech that need not be viewpoint neutral. As the Supreme Court recently noted, “[t]he Free Speech Clause restricts government regulation of private speech; it does not regulate government speech. A government entity has the
*864
right to ‘speak for itself.’ ‘[I]t is entitled to say what it wishes,’ and to select the views that it wants to express.”
Pleasant Grove City v. Summum,
555 U.S. —,
The question whether the messages on specialty plates communicate government or private speech appears to be an issue of first impression in this circuit. We have, however, faced this issue with respect to personalized vanity plates, which are license plates that allow vehicle owners to arrange their license plates’ identifying numbers and letters to create a personalized message. In
Lewis v. Wilson,
Since
Lewis,
the Supreme Court has addressed the distinction between government and private speech in the context of a federal program that financed generic advertising to promote beef.
Johanns v. Livestock Mktg. Ass’n,
Meanwhile, both before and after
Jo-hanns
our sister circuits have addressed the issue of whether specialty license plates, particularly “Choose Life” specialty plates, communicate government or private speech. In
Planned Parenthood of South Carolina, Inc. v. Rose,
(1) the central “purpose” of the program in which the speech in question occurs; (2) the degree of “editorial control” exercised by the government or private entities over the content of the speech; (3) the identity of the “literal speaker”; and (4) whether the government or the private entity bears the “ultimate responsibility” for the content of the speech.
Id. at 618.
Applying the
SCV
factors to South Carolina’s “Choose Life” specialty plate statute, the Fourth Circuit in
Rose
determined that the specialty plates were “a mixture of private and government speech.”
Rose,
Two years after
Rose,
the Sixth Circuit considered the constitutionality of Tennessee’s “Choose Life” specialty plate statute.
Am. Civil Liberties Union of Tenn. v. Bredesen,
Applying the Supreme Court’s reasoning in
Johanns
to determine whether the message of the “Choose Life” specialty plates communicated government speech, the court stated,
“Johanns
stands for the proposition that when the government determines an overarching message and retains power to approve every word disseminated at its behest, the message must be attributed to the government for First Amendment purposes.”
Id.
at 375. The court noted that the Tennessee legislature chose the message and approved every word and that while “Tennessee ... [left] some of the remaining details to an entity
*866
whose members [were] answerable to the State government,” Tennessee “retain[ed] a veto over its design.”
Id.
at 376 (internal quotation omitted). The court concluded that because Tennessee had “the right to wield ‘final approval authority over every word used’ ” and set “the overall message to be communicated,” the Choose Life message was “Tennessee’s own message” and did not implicate private-speech rights.
Id.
(quoting
Johanns,
Two years after
Bredesen,
the Ninth Circuit faced a similar challenge to Arizona’s “Choose Life” specialty plate.
Az. Life Coalition, Inc. v. Stanton,
In deciding whether Arizona’s specialty plates communicated government or private speech, the Ninth Circuit identified the
SCV
factors and determined that
Jo-hanns
was factually distinguishable because specialty plates do not involve compelled speech or compelled subsidies.
Stanton,
In its analysis, the Ninth Circuit stated that the Arizona License Plate Commission’s “de minimis editorial control over the plate design and color does not support a finding that the messages conveyed by the organization constitute government speech.” Id. at 966. “[T]he statutory requirements address[ed] who may speak, not what they may say.” Id. Finally, the court noted that the Arizona Life Coalition controlled the message of its special organization plate and that “the individual members who choose to purchase the plate voluntarily choose to disperse that message.” Id. at 967. Thus, using the four-factor SCV test informed by Johanns, the Ninth Circuit held that the message on the “Choose Life” specialty plates was private speech. Id. The court concluded that the Arizona License Plate Commission violated the First Amendment by engaging in viewpoint discrimination when it denied the Arizona Life Coalition’s application. The court then remanded the case with directions to require the Arizona License Plate Commission to approve the Arizona Life Coalition’s application. Id. at 973.
Most recently, the Seventh Circuit addressed the specialty license plate issue in
Choose Life of Illinois, Inc. v. White,
Informed by the Supreme Court, our analysis of vanity plates in Lewis, and the analyses of specialty plates by our sister circuits, we now turn to the Missouri specialty license plate scheme to determine whether the messages on the plates are government or private speech. Our analysis boils down to one key question: whether, under all the circumstances, a reasonable and fully informed observer would consider the speaker to be the government or a private party. Notwithstanding the Sixth Circuit’s conclusion to the contrary, we now join the Fourth, Seventh and Ninth Circuits in concluding that a reasonable and fully informed observer would consider the speaker to be the organization that sponsors and the vehicle owner who displays the specialty license plate.
The primary purpose of Missouri’s specialty plate program is to allow private organizations to promote their messages and raise money and to allow private individuals to support those organizations and their messages. As the Seventh Circuit noted, “[t]he plates serve as ‘mobile billboards’ for the organizations and like-minded vehicle owners to promote their causes and also are a lucrative source of funds.”
Id.
at 863. Such a conclusion is consistent with our analogy between vanity plates and bumper stickers in
Lewis. See Lewis,
With more than 200 specialty plates available to Missouri vehicle owners, a reasonable observer could not think that the State of Missouri communicates all of those messages. For example, Missouri offers specialty plates for the Knights of Columbus, which requires members to be practicing Catholics, for the Grand Lodge, which requires members to have a “belief in God,” and for the Order of the Eastern Star, which requires members to have a “belief in the existence of a Supreme Being.” Yet a reasonable observer would not think that the State of Missouri has established the Catholic faith or that it has taken a position on the existence of God or a Supreme Being. Similarly, in Lewis we ordered the DOR to issue an “ARYAN-1” vanity plate. No reasonable observer would believe that the State of Missouri is endorsing white supremacy. Thus, the wide variety of available specialty plates further suggests that the messages on specialty plates communicate private speech.
Moreover, we note that the messages communicated through specialty plates are voluntary, not compulsory. While Missouri requires a vehicle to display a license plate, the State does not compel anyone to purchase a specialty plate. “Private individuals choose to spend additional money to obtain the plate and to display its pro-life messages on their vehicle.”
Stanton,
Because the specialty plates bear sufficient indicia of private speech, we believe that under all the circumstances a reasonable and fully informed observer would recognize the message on the “Choose Life” specialty plate as the message of a private party, not the state. Therefore, we conclude that the messages communicated on specialty plates are private speech, not government speech.
3
See also Robb v. Hungerbeeler,
*869
Since we find that messages on specialty plates communicate private speech, we now turn to the issue of whether Missouri’s specialty plate program is unconstitutional because it allows the State to engage in viewpoint discrimination. “[A] law or policy permitting communication in a certain manner for some but not for others raises the specter of content and viewpoint censorship.”
Lakewood v. Plain Dealer Publ’g Co.,
If Choose Life can prevail on a facial challenge, it need not prove, or even allege, that the Joint Committee denied the specialty plates based' on Choose Life’s viewpoint.
5
“[T]he success of a facial challenge on the grounds that an ordinance delegates overly broad discretion to the decisionmaker rests not on whether the administrator has exercised his discretion in a content-based manner, but whether there is anything in the ordinance to prevent him from doing so.”
Forsyth County v. Nationalist Movement,
The appellants concede that section 21.795(6) provides no guidelines for the members of the Joint Committee in reviewing specialty plate applications. They claim, however, that because the only voting members of the Joint Committee are legislators, not administrators or hired state employees, they are immune from suit. As the appellants note, “[t]here is no question that legislative bodies ... are given immunity for statements and actions taken while performing legislative acts.”
Fortner v. City of Archie,
Finally, the appellants argue that even if section 21.795(6) is unconstitutional, the district court abused its discretion in entering a permanent injunction requiring the DOR to issue the “Choose Life” specialty plates. In particular, the appellants contend that section 21.795(6) is so intertwined with the rest of the specialty plate statutory scheme that it is not severable, so that if section 21.795(6) is struck down, the rest of the specialty plate statutory scheme must fail as well. If the entire statutory scheme fails, then the DOR cannot issue any new specialty plates, including the “Choose Life” specialty plate.
We look to state law to determine the severability of a state statute.
U.S. Dep’t of Treasury v. Fabe,
The appellants point to the administrative procedures for obtaining a specialty plate set out in section 301.3150 to support their argument that section 21.795(6) is not severable from the rest of *871 the specialty plate scheme. Section 21.795(6) specifically provides that the Joint Committee has the authority to review specialty license plate applications and must approve them by a unanimous vote. Without section 21.795(6), the appellants argue, there is no mechanism for approving new specialty plate applications because there is no longer any statutory approval process. Choose Life argues, however, that section 21.795(6) is severable from the rest of the specialty plate scheme and that a sufficient statutory process remains in place to allow the issuance of the “Choose Life” plate.
Section 21.795 provides for the creation of the Joint Committee on Transportation Oversight and lists its duties, which include holding an annual meeting based on a report from the department of transportation; making recommendations to the state highways and transportation commission; holding semiannual meetings to discuss transportation department efficiencies, the presentation of a prioritized plan for all modes of transportation and other issues; and approving or denying specialty license plate applications. Even without section 21.795(6), the Joint Committee still meets on a regular basis, conducts business, oversees the transportation department and votes on “matter[s] within [its] duties.” Section 21.795(1) allows the Joint Committee to approve matters “within the committee’s duties” by a “concurrence of a majority vote of the [voting] members.” Thus, the Joint Committee can still vote on specialty plate applications, which qualify as “matter[s] within [its] duties” under sections 21.795(1) and 301.3150(10). However, the remaining provisions limit what the Joint Committee can consider when it votes on specialty plate applications. The Joint Committee may still conduct the ministerial duties of determining whether the specialty plate applicant has provided the required list of two hundred individuals who plan to purchase the plate; whether the applicant has paid the fee, not to exceed five thousand dollars, to defray the cost of issuing, developing, and programming the implementation of the plate; and whether the applicant has the sponsorship of at least one member of the Missouri Legislature. Mo.Rev.Stat. § 301.3150(1). The Joint Committee can still review and approve or deny specialty plate applications based on the criteria provided in section 301.3150(1); it simply cannot deny an application based on the viewpoint of the speaker as it can under the current statutory scheme. Therefore, we find that sufficient statutory authority remains for the DOR to issue specialty license plates after receiving the approval of the Joint Committee. See Mo.Rev.Stat. § 301.3150(7) (“The department of revenue shall submit for approval all applications for the development of specialty plates to the [J]oint [C]ommittee ... during a regular session of the general assembly for approval.”); § 301.3150(10) (“The department shall begin production and distribution of each new specialty license plate within one year after approval of the specialty license plate by the [J]oint [C]om-mittee.”).
Because section 21.795(6) is severable, the rest of section 21.795 and section 301.3150 remain intact, and we find that the district court did not commit legal error by entering a permanent injunction ordering Mitchell to issue the “Choose Life” specialty plates. Therefore, we hold that the district court did not abuse its discretion.
III. CONCLUSION
Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment and entry of a permanent injunction.
Notes
. The Honorable Scott O. Wright, United States District Judge for the Western District of Missouri.
. We do not think that the Supreme Court’s recent
Summum
decision requires a different outcome. In that case, the Court held that privately-donated monuments in a city park communicate government speech.
Summum,
. We would normally conduct a forum analysis at this point to determine whether license plates are traditional public forums, designated public forums, or nonpublic forums.
See, e.g., White,
. We note that the Supreme Court has expressed disfavor with facial challenges as they “often rest on speculation” and "raise the risk of premature interpretation of statutes on the basis of factually bareboñes records.”
Wash. State Grange v. Wash. State Republican Party,
554 U.S. —,
