I.
In this constitutional challenge to the lobbying activities of the Florida Bar, plaintiff Robert E. Gibson contends that the Bar violated his first amendment rights of free speech and association by spending compulsory bar dues to espouse political and ideological positions. The district court found that the Bar’s stated purpose of improving the administration of justice served as a sufficiently important governmental interest to justify the intrusion upon Gibson’s rights caused by the Bar’s Legislative Program. We reverse, holding that certain positions taken by the Bar are not sufficiently germane to its administration-of-justice function to justify the expenditure of compulsory dues.
II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
The Florida Supreme Court, pursuant to Article V, Section 15 of the Florida Constitution, has exclusive jurisdiction to regulate the admission to practice and discipline of attorneys. The court has mandated that, in order to practice law in Florida, one must be a member in good standing of the Florida Bar, which in turn requires the payment of annual dues. See Integration Rule of the Florida Bar, Articles II, VIII. In the Integration Rule, the supreme court delineates the purposes of the Bar as threefold: “to inculcate in its members the principles of duty and service to the public, to improve the administration of justice, and to advance the science of jurisprudence.” Id.
The Bar engages in a Legislative Program in which it lobbys before the Florida Legislature and takes official positions on various public issues. 1 The Bar has adopted Standing Board Policy 900, which sets forth regulations and procedures by which the Bar takes positions on ballot questions and legislative matters. Under Policy 900, either the Bar’s Legislation *1566 Committee or Executive Committee considers an issue and determines whether its subject matter is within the scope of the Bar’s authority as set forth in its Rules and By-Laws. If so, the committee then determines by majority vote what position the Bar should adopt with respect to that issue. The Bar Board of Governors then considers the recommendation of the committee and determines the official Bar position.
Appellant Robert E. Gibson is a member in good standing of the Florida Bar. Gibson actively and financially supported a campaign on behalf of “Proposition One,” a ballot question seeking limitation of government revenue that eventually was stricken from the ballot. When the Bar publicly announced its opposition to Proposition One, Gibson filed this action for declaratory and injunctive relief, claiming that the Bar’s use of compulsory dues constituted a violation of his first amendment rights of free speech and association. Gibson contended that the first amendment prohibited the use of compulsory dues' to advocate any position on any matter other than direct advocacy to a judicial body. The case was tried before the district court, which entered a judgment in favor of the Bar. The district court held that the Bar’s administration-of-justice function was “a ‘sufficiently important’ state interest to justify the degree of intrusion into plaintiff’s rights occasioned by the Bar’s legislative program.” This appeal followed.
III. DISCUSSION
At the heart of this appeal is the appellant’s contention that his rights of free speech and association have been infringed by the Bar’s use of compulsory dues to espouse political and ideological positions with which the appellant does not agree. 2 The legal underpinnings necessary to resolve this question are derived from a series of United States Supreme Court cases, one of which upholds the constitutionality of the integrated state bar, and others which involve the closely analogous situation where union members are forced to financially support union lobbying measures through compelled membership dues or agency shop fees.
A. Constitutionality of Compulsory Membership Dues
In
Lathrop v. Donahue,
*1567
Admittedly,
Lathrop v. Donahue
offers little, if any, specific guidance on the first amendment rights at issue in this appeal.
See Abood v. Detroit Board of Education,
In
International Machinists v. Street,
B. Use of Compulsory Fees for Political Purposes
In
Abood v. Detroit Board of Education,
Abood
first observed that former' Supreme Court decisions “established with unmistakable clarity that the freedom of an individual to associate for the purpose of advancing beliefs and ideas is protected by the First and Fourteenth Amendments, [citations omitted] ... [Contributing to an organization for the purpose of spreading a political message is protected by the First Amendment.”
C. Applying Abood to the Florida Bar
At the risk of oversimplification,
Abood
may be read to say that compulsory union or agency shop fees may not be spent on lobbying or ideological activities that are not germane to the purpose that brought the union together in the first place.
See Ellis v. Railway Clerks,
A distinction does arise, however, in the character of the entity to which the compelled funds must be paid. On one hand, Congress has recognized the importance of collective bargaining and the need for unions to avail themselves of the political process in the representation of their members.
See Hanson, supra
at 238,
Justice Harlan, in his concurring opinion in
Lathrop v. Donahue, supra,
seized upon this distinction to support his contention that an integrated bar was conceptually no different than an appointed advisory board whose dissenting individual members would have no first amendment right to squelch such a board’s majority recommendation.
See Lathrop,
Compelled support of a private association is fundamentally different from compelled support of government____
[T]he reason for permitting the government to compel the payment of taxes and to spend money on controversial projects is that the government is representative of the people. The same cannot be said of a union, which is representative only of one segment of the population, with certain common interests. The withholding of financial support is fully protected as speech in this context.
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We conclude, therefore, that the difference between the union and the integrated bar is so small that the rationale of the
Abood
case is very appropriate.
See Keller v. State Bar of California,
Obviously, the recitation of this simplistic rule will be of little assistance when one of the purposes of the Bar is the amorphous “administration of justice.” Transposition of the
Abood
rationale to the integrated bar works well conceptually, but the practical reality of applying that rationale is not so easy. All first amendment challenges are analyzed under a two-part test that requires a “compelling interest” and the “least restrictive means” of achieving that interest.
E.g., Chicago Teachers Union v. Hudson,
475 U.S. -, -,
Accordingly, it is apparent that too much weight was given at the trial level to the Bar’s compelling interest argument and not enough attention was focused upon whether the Legislative Program was conducted in the least restrictive manner available to the Bar. The evidentiary record in this appeal does not enable us to make a definitive decision on whether certain positions taken by the Bar were sufficiently related to its basic function to justify the expenditure of compulsory dues. Nor does the opinion of the trial court adequately identify specific actions taken by the Bar’s Legislative Program. Indeed, the decision below was based on a review of the Bar’s Policy 900, rather than analysis of past Bar positions. In an action such as this, where specific actions are challenged as contrary to the first amendment, it is not sufficient to assess the rules and procedures by which those actions were taken. The proper focus' in this action should be upon the actual results of the Bar’s Legislative Program,
i.e.,
whether past positions of the Bar were sufficiently related to its purpose of improving the administration of justice. On this issue, the Bar bears the burden of proving that its expenditures were constitutionally justified.
See Chicago Teachers Union, supra,
at-,
Although further findings of fact are necessary to resolve this dispute, some discussion of appropriate Bar lobbying issues is warranted. Uncertainty and disagreement over what is a proper issue for Bar lobbying are the reasons for this dispute and for our reversal of the trial court. In such a situation, some guidance is necessary to help draw the inevitably fine lines that will arise in these cases. The Bar should construe “improving the administration of justice” as pertaining to the role of the lawyer in the judicial system and in society. The collective expertise of lawyers is grounded in their long-standing relationship with the courts. Lobbying activities that infringe upon individual rights should relate directly to that expertise. 4
It should be stressed that this opinion addresses only the use of compelled fees by
*1570
the Bar.
Abood
specifically noted that the union was free to politicize on
any
issue of interest to that group.
See
IV.
This action is therefore REVERSED and REMANDED to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. In addition to traditional legislative lobbying measures, the Bar promulgates its political and ideological positions through official Bar publications and speeches by Bar officials. The record demonstrates that the Bar has espoused the following positions: (1) opposed tort reform; (2) opposed limitation of damages in medical malpractice actions; (3) opposed changes in the state sales tax; (4) opposed changes in the state’s taxation and venue powers; and (5) advocated regulation of child care centers.
. "Among the rights protected by the First Amendment is the right of individuals to associate to further their personal beliefs."
Healy v. James,
A state may restrict the speech of a private person only when the restriction is a precisely drawn means of serving a compelling state interest.
Consolidated Edison Co. v. Public Service Comm.,
. In his concurring opinion, Justice Harlan strenuously contended that because it was not unconstitutional to require the payment of dues, it could not be unconstitutional for a state bar to use such funds to fulfill a basic purpose for which the bar was established. Assuming that there existed some valid distinction between free association and free speech rights in the context of an integrated bar, Justice Harlan stated that the integrated bar did not divest Wisconsin lawyers of the freedom of individual thoughts, speech, and association. (P. 881) The concurrence went on to state that the state *1567 interest in an integrated bar is "sufficiently important to justify whatever incursions on these individual freedoms may be thought to arise” from the compulsory dues requirement. (P. 861)
. Acceptable areas for Bar lobbying would include the following topics: (1) questions concerning the regulation of attorneys; (2) budget appropriations for the judiciary and legal aid; (3) proposed changes in litigation procedures; (4) regulation of attorneys’ client trust accounts; and (5) law school and Bar admission standards.
. Although the question of proper remedy is not before this court, this aspect of the
Abood
opinion suggests that the difficult task of discerning proper Bar position issues could be avoided by one of two methods: (1) a voluntary program in which lawyers would not be compelled to finance the Legislative Program, but could contribute towards that program as they wished; or (2) a refund procedure allowing dissenting lawyers to notify the Bar that they disagree with a Bar position, then receive that portion of their dues allotted to lobbying. [According to testimony at trial, each lawyer’s share of the lobbying budget amounts to approximately $1.50]. Lawyers would only have to notify the Bar of a general disagreement, since the first amendment also protects an individual’s right
not
to disclose his beliefs.
See Abood, supra,
at 241, n. 42,
