Affirmеd by published opinion. Judge WILLIAMS wrote the opinion, in which Judge TRAXLER and Judge HOWARD joined.
This appeal arises out of a dispute regarding the constitutionality of a provision in the Virginia statute authorizing the issuance of special license plates to members of the Sons of Confederate Veterans
I.
The General Assembly of Virginia has created a program through which “special” Virginia license plates may be issued to members and supporters of various organizations or groups. Such plates must be specifically authorized by statute. Va. Code Ann. § 46.2-725 (Michie 1998). Generally, the plates bear the organization’s logo and motto in addition to letters and numbers as found on other Virginia license plates. Ordinarily, a group or organization that would like to have a special license plate made available to its members contacts a member of the General Assembly to request that a bill be introduced which, if enacted, would authorize the issuance of a special plate. The General Assembly has authorized well over one hundred special plates in this fashion, a significant number of them for private organizations or associations.
The Virginia statute that created the special license plate рrogram gives the Commissioner authority to “prescribe” the design of any special plate, stating that “[a]ll special license plates issued pursuant to this article shall be of designs prescribed by the Commissioner....” Va. Code Ann. § 46.2-725(B)(3) (Michie 1998). Section 46.2-725(B)(3) does not merely create discretion in the Commissioner to approve or reject plate designs; it also lays out substantive standards for those plate designs, requiring that they “bear unique letters and numerals, clearly distinguishable from any other license plate designs, and be readily identifiable by law enforcement personnel.” Id.
The record indicates that special plate designs ordinarily are settled upon by a cooperative process between the Commissioner, represented by the Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV), and the group authorized to receive a special plate. The group is invited in a letter from the DMV to submit a design through a designated “sponsor,” a person authorized to communicate on the group’s behalf with the DMV regarding the plate. The letter instructs the sponsor to include “electronic media art of the logo and legend for the plate” with its submission. (J.A. at 104) (DMV form letter to plate sponsors). In addition to these instructions, “Special License Plate Design Criteria” are provided, which specifically state that “[y]ou can use your organization’s logo or create a logo to be placed on the plate.” (J.A. at 106.)
II.
The SCV brought this action in the United States District Court for the Western District of Virginia by and through their Commander in Chief, Patrick J. Griffin, seeking a declaration that the logo restriction is invalid under the First, Fifth, and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution, an injunction requiring the Commissioner to issue special license plates bearing the logo of the SCV, including the Confederate flag, to those members of the SCV who request them, and attorney’s fees and costs pursuant to 42 U.S.C.A. § 1988. The SCV and the Commissioner filed cross-motions for summary judgment. The district court granted the SCV’s motion and denied the Commissioner’s motion on January 18, 2001.
In support of its rulings, the district court made several findings. First, it found that plates authorized for private organizations under Virginia’s special license plate program constitute private, rather than government, speech. Id. at 945 (“the design of [special plates] honoring private entities is the speech of those entities”). The district court then analyzed the effect of the logo restriction on the SCV’s speech rights, concluding that the prohibition of any logo or emblem on the SCV’s special plate discriminates on the basis of viewpoint and is thus invalid. Id. at 947. The district court also conducted an analysis of the special license plate program as a forum for speech, concluding that it would constitute a “designated public forum” under such analysis.
As to the appropriate remedy for the violation, the district court found that the two sentences of section 46.2-746.22 are severable under Virginia law, and that the second, comprising the logo restriction, could thus be invalidated while leaving the first intact. Id. at 949. The district court found alternatively that even if the second sentence could not be severed from the first (and consequently the whole statute authorizing a special plate for the SCV would have to be invalidated), it would act pursuant to its inherent equitable powers to compel the Commissioner to comply with the requirements of the first sentence of § 46.2-746.22 — that is, to issue special plates to the SCV containing their logo. To invalidate the authorizing statute entirely, the district court found, would give effect to viewpoint discrimination in violation of the First Amendment. Id. The Commissioner timely noted this appeal.
The Commissioner’s argument on appeal has three parts. First, the Commissioner contends that the special plate authorized for the SCV, and indeed all the special plates authorized in Virginia, are instances of “government speech.” Second, the Commissioner argues that even if the special plates contain private speech, that speech has not been abridged impermissi-bly in violation of the First Amendment because the logo restriction is a reasonable subject matter limitation, rather than a bar to expression of a particular viewpoint. Third and finally, the Commissioner contends that if section 46.2-746.22 is unconstitutional, the district court erred when it severed what it found to be the offending portion of the authorizing statute, thereby creating a statute that the General Assembly did not pass and would not have passed.
III.
With these background principles in mind, we turn first to the question of whether the speech on the special plates authorized by the Virginia legislature is private speech or “government speech.” The Commissioner contends that any expressive content on a Virginia special plate is a “statement” by the Commonwealth about the group represented on the plate. In this vein, the Commissioner emphasizes that the General Assembly authorized the SCV’s special plate to “hon- or” that organization. Because these special plates constitute government speech, the Commissioner argues, traditional First Amendment inquiries do not apply, in light of the settled principle that when the government speaks, it may craft its message and cannot be forced to formulate or subsidize a message it does not choose. Accordingly, he argues that because the SCV’s special plates constitute government speech, they are not subject to First Amendment challenge on the grounds raised by the SCV.
A.
It is well established that “the government can speak for itself.” Bd. of Regents of Univ. of Wis. Sys. v. Southworth,
In Rust, the Supreme Court held that the federal government constitutionally could prohibit doctors from providing counseling or other information regarding abortion to patients while treating those patients in a program set up and funded by the federal government. The doctors’ right to speak was not offended by the limitation imposed by the federal government because the government had merely chosen to fund one activity — counseling not including discussion of abortion — to the exclusion of another — counseling including discussion of abortion. See id. at 198-99,
Thus, even ordinarily impermissible viewpoint-based distinctions drawn by the government may bе sustained where the government itself speaks or where it uses private speakers to transmit its message.
When the government speaks, for instance to promote its own policies or to advance a particular idea, it is, in the end, accountable to the electorate and the political process for its advocacy. If the citizenry objects, newly elected officials later could espouse some different or contrary position.
Southworth,
B.
No clear standard has yet been enunciated in our circuit or by the Supreme Court for determining when the government is “speaking” and thus able to draw viewpoint-based distinctions, and when it is regulating private speech and thus unable to do so. Indeed, as we have noted, there exists some controversy over the scope of the government speech doctrine. Several other circuits, however, have addressed the question in contexts that are instructive here. Our sister circuits have examined (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, in analyzing circumstances where both government and a private entity are claimеd to be speaking. See Wells v. City and County of Denver,
C.
1.
Turning to application of the factors enumerated by our sister circuits to the case before us, we first consider the “purpose” of the special plate program. While the purpose of а government program or subsidy that implicates speech interests will in some cases be apparent, see Wells,
Examining the special plate program as a whole, we believe neither party is entirely correct in its argument about the purposes of the program. Several considerations lead us to conclude that the purpose of the special plate program primarily is to produce revenue while allowing, on special plates authorized for private organizations, for the private expression of various views. First, the fees collected through the special plate program are, as the Commissioner concedes, “a source of additional revenue” for Virginia. (Br. of Appellant at 50.) Indeed, in fiscal year 2000, the net revenue from special plates totaled nearly $4.5 million. The Commissioner himself cites this revenue as a purpose of the program. While the mere fact that the program produces revenue for Virginia is not conclusive as to its purpose, the net financial impact of the program on the Commonwealth’s fisc does indicate that the General Assembly here is not making the kind of selective funding decisions involved in cases like Rust and Finley.
Second, the legislation creating the special plate program imposes a fee structure that suggests the program’s revenue-producing aim. Section 46.2-725 of the Virgi
[n]o license plates provided for in this article shall be issued until the Commissioner receives at least 350 prepaid applications therefor. In the event that 350 or more prepaid applications have not been received on or before the last day of the third year from the date the license plates were last authorized, no such license plates shall be issued unless the license plates are reauthorized by the General Assembly.
Va.Code Ann. § 46.2-725(B)(l). The supposed “honor” bestowed on a group for whom a special license plate is authorized, in other words, is conditioned on the willingness of 350 private persons to pay extra to obtain the plate expressing the “honor.” If the General Assembly intends to speak, it is curious that it requires the guaranteed collection of a designated amount of money from private persons before its “speech” is triggered.
Third, the special plate authorized for the SCV is available only to members of the SCV who can provide “written evidence” that they are members of the group. Va.Code Ann. § 46.2-746.22. This type of restriction is common among the statutes authorizing special plates in Virginia. E.g., Va.Code Ann. § 46.2-738.1 (Mi-chie 1998) (requiring written evidence that the applicant is a member of the American Radio Relay League for issuance of the special plate recognizing that group); § 46.2-741 (Michie 1998) (requiring the same for survivors of the attack on Pearl Harbor); § 46.2-747.1 (Michie 1998) (requiring the same for members of the Gold Wing Road Riders Association). These restrictions suggest that the special plates to which they apply are intended by the General Assembly to allow the authorized recipients to express their pride in membership in an organization while facilitating the group’s speech. If non-members cannot obtain the plates, those motorists who have them send a personal message by carrying the plates on their vehicles, because the plates identify them аs members of the organization. Cf. Lewis v. Wilson,
2.
Turning to the “editorial control” exercised by the Commonwealth over the
3.
We next inquire into who is the “literal speaker” and who bears the “ultimate responsibility” for the speech in this case. The “literal” speaker here might be said to be the license plate itself, which would seem not to suggest either government or private speech strongly, and who bears “ultimate responsibility” for the speech is unclear. We note that the court in Wells reasoned that ownership of the means of communication was a valid consideration in determining whether it contained government speech, and the parties do not dispute here that Virginia continues to own the special plates at all times. Importantly, though, the special plates are mounted on vehiclеs owned by private persons, and the Supreme Court has indicated that license plates, even when owned by the government, implicate private speech interests because of the connection of any message on the plate to the driver or owner of the vehicle. See Wooley v. Maynard,
Because the speech on the authorized special plate is the SCV’s rather than Virginia’s, the SCV’s First Amendment rights are implicated by the logo restriction in the authorizing legislation, and we must consider the impact of that restriction on their rights. The SCV contend, and the district court found, that the logo restriction discriminates on the basis of the viewpoint they would like to express, through the logo incorporating the Confederate flag, on their special plate. Where the government is not expressing its own policy, either directly or, as in Rust, through an intermediary, it presumptively violates the First Amendment when it discriminates on the basis of views expressed by private speakers. See Ark. Educ. Television Comm’n v. Forbes,
A.
The Supreme Court has adopted forum analysis as the means of analyzing restrictions placed on private speech that occurs on government property or with government participation (financial or otherwise) where the government is not expressing its own message.
B.
In examining the Commissioner’s argument that the logo restriction is viewpoint-neutral, we begin with the language of the restriction. The logo restriction directs that “[n]o logo or emblem of any description shall be displayed or incorporated into the design of the [SCV] license plates issued under this section.” Va.Code Ann. § 46.2-746.22. Although the logo restriction itself makes no reference to the Confederate flag, the Commissioner concedes that it was the inclusion of the Confederate flag in the SCY’s logo that led to the prohibition against the use of the logo on the SCV’s special license plate. (Br. of Appellant at 10 (conceding that the purpose of the logo restriction is to “ensure that the battle flag does not appear on the special license plate”).) Having conceded that the logo restriction is an attempt to ban the display of the Confederate flag, the Commissioner argues that the restriction is content-based, but viewpoint-neutral, because it bans all viewpoints about the Confederate flag (which the Commissioner identifies as a category of “content” or subject matter) from the special plate forum.
As the Supreme Court has noted, the distinction between content and viewpoint discrimination “is not a precise one.” Rosenberger,
In analyzing the logo restriction’s effect, we note first that the SCV’s organizational logo, incorporating the Confederate flag, certainly represents a viewpoint. As the Commissioner concedes, the logo would “advance [the] view that the flag [is] a symbolic acknowledgment of pride in Southern heritage and ideals of independence.”
To examine the context in which the logo restriction is imposed, we first define the scope of the forum in which the SCV wish to speak, as definition of the forum’s scope provides a backdrop for analysis of the “viewpoint or content” question. Cf. Rosenberger,
The relevant forum is defined by focusing on “the access sought by the speaker.” Cornelius,
That the Confederate flag as content is prohibited in this forum, as the Commissioner contends, is not borne out by the
The nature of the restricted speech, the lack of a generally applicablе content-based restriction,
Based upon our review of the government speech and forum principles enunciated by the Supreme Court, and application of those principles to the case at hand, we conclude that the logo restriction in Va.Code Ann. § 46.2-746.22 is an instance of viewpoint discrimination that does not survive strict scrutiny review and accordingly is impermissible.
V.
Because we agree with the district court that the logo restriction is unconstitutional, we must determine whether the district court properly severed the statute. The Commissioner argues that severing the statute was an improper incursion into the realm of legislative discretion. Moreover, if the statute was not severable, the Commissioner claims, there was no legal basis for the district court’s asserted exercise of its “equitable power” and hence that portion of the district court’s ruling that compels the Commissioner’s compliance with the non-restrictive portion of section 46.2-746.22 must likewise be invalidated. The question of the severability of a state statute’s provisions is governed by state law. See Department of Treasury v. Fabe,
The Virginia Supreme Court has enunciated the test for severability under Virginia law only in the absence of a blanket severability clause, applying a presumption of nonseverability. Robinson v. Virginia,
Since the decisions noted above, Virginia’s General Assembly has enacted a statutory provision dealing with severability of sections of the Virginia Code. Section 1-17.1 of the Code provides that “the provisions of all statutes are severable unless ... it is apparent that two or more statutes or provisions must operate in accord with one another.” Va.Code Ann. § 1-17.1 (Michie 2001) (emphases added). In other words, the Virginia legislature hаs stated clearly that courts are now to apply a presumption of severability unless two provisions of a statutory section must operate together.
We have had occasion to apply section 1-17.1 only once. In Jones v. Murray,
The parties’ arguments evidence considerable confusion about the proper standard for determining severability of statutory provisions under Virginia law. The Commissioner contends, citing to the district court’s opinion below, that “the test of severability in the Commonwealth is whether the legislature would be satisfied with what remains after the invalid part has been eliminated.” (Br. of Appellant at 51) (internal citation omitted). The district court determined that the quoted language was the proper test for severability, but that it is “buttressed by the modern-day Virginia Code, which requires that the severed and remaining portions ‘must operate in accord with one another’.” Sons of Confederate Veterans v. Holcomb,
Examining the statutory framework and relevant caselaw, we conclude that section 1-17.1 is the governing statement of the law of severability in Virginia. Accordingly, we apply the statute’s presumption of severability to section 46.2-746.22’s provisions. The provisions are thus “severable unless ... it is apparent that ... [the] provisions must operate in accord with one another.” Va.Code Ann. § 1-17.1. We see no reason why the second sentence of § 46.2-746.22 must operate in accord with the first, and the Commissioner has not suggested any such reason in his brief. The first sentence is not rendered meaningless or nonsensical by the elimination of the second. Indeed, the operation of the first sentence is in a sense not affected at all by the elimination of the second — it сontinues to authorize special plates for the SCV, as it did before the second sentence was determined to be unconstitutional. The only change in the statute’s operation is the excision of the unconstitutional logo restriction, a restriction that was imposed entirely by the second sentence. Cf. Jones,
Even assuming, as the parties apparently do, that the “intent of the legislature” inquiry remains a valid consideration in determining severability under Virginia law, we find that it is overcome here by the presumption of severability which applies to statutes enacted by the General Assembly. The logo restriction may well have been the result of a political compromise within the legislature that aided the passage of section 46.2-746.22. Some legislators may have agreed to support the authorizing statute only on condition of the addition of the logo restriction. Under the current legal framework in Virginia, howеver, the General Assembly enacts laws against the backdrop of section 1-17.1’s severability presumption. Without a clear indication that the legislature’s intent was to enact section 46.2-746.22 only with the logo restriction in place, and without any expression of the statute’s purpose, we cannot presume that the legislature would
VI.
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the district court properly held that the logo restriction in Va.Code Ann. § 46.2-746.22’s second sentence violates the First Amendment. We also conclude that the second sentence of section 46.2-746.22 may be severed from the remainder of the statute. The judgment of the district court is accordingly affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The Sons of Confederate Veterans is a Tennessee non-profit corporation. Sons of Confederate Veterans, Inc. v. Holcomb,
. The statute states in full:
On receipt of an application therefor and written evidence that the applicant is a member of the Sons of Confederate Veterans, the Commissioner shall issue special license plates to members of the Sons of Confederate Veterans. No logo or emblem of any description shall be displayed or incorporated into the design of license plates issued under this section.
Va.Code Ann. § 46.2-746.22 (Michie 2000).
. The district court stated that the forum analysis it conducted was not necessary to its holding because “impermissible viewpoint discrimination is sufficient and independent grounds for striking down the ban at issue, regardless of the forum in which the expression occurs.” Sons of Confederate Veterans,
. The Supreme Court has indicated that a viewpoint-based restriction of private speech rarely, if ever, will withstand strict scrutiny review. See, e.g., R.A.V. v. St. Paul,
. Indeed, the proposition that Rust itself involved government speech is not universally acсepted, see Legal Servs. Corp. v. Velazquez,
. While viewpoint-based distinctions drawn by the government are permissible where it sends its own message through its own program, as in Rust, such distinctions are ordinarily not permissible where the government exercises editorial discretion to choose from among private messages those it will favor or subsidize. See Forbes, 523 U.S. at 676-77,
. In considering the approaches taken by our sister circuits, we focus primarily on the factors enunciated in Wells and Knights of the KKK because Downs, while relevant in that the question of whether the speech was government speech or private speech was squarely before the court, decided the constitutionality of a restriction in the school context, a context where First Amendment inquiries may be colored by recognition of the special necessities of the educational environment. See Wells,
. It might be argued that the special plate program works by authorizing a variety of state-approved, if not state-created, messages and allowing a private person to decide whether to select a plate expressing a particular one, and that it is therefore the equivalent of a program subsidizing the promulgation of governmеnt-chosen messages. Cf. Rust,
. We note that our conclusion is consistent with the analysis employed by the Second and
. The Supreme Court’s forum doctrine generally recognizes three categories of fora that exist or arise on government property or where government expends resources and creates them. Traditional public fora include streets, parks, and sidewalks — places which, "by long tradition or by government fiat” have been "devoted to assembly and debate.” Perry Educ. Ass’n v. Perry Local Educators’ Ass’n,
. As the Ninth Circuit has noted, the "coherence of the distinction between ‘content discrimination’ and 'viewpoint discrimination’ ” may be seen as "tenuous.” Giebel v. Sylvester,
. A competing viewpoint of the Confederate flag is that it is "a symbol of racial separation and oppression.” United States v. Blanding,
. We note that we are not faced with a restriction generally applicable to the design of special plates in Virginia. Thus, this case differs from the vanity plate cases decided by the Second and Eighth Circuits. See Perry v. McDonald,
. Accordingly, we need not address the adequacy of the Commissioner’s proffered justifications under the standard applicable to content-based but viewpoint-neutral restrictions in fora for private speech. Further, the Commissioner has not advanced the argument that display of the Confederate flag on a private vehicle is equivalent to "fighting words,”
. After finding that the logo restriction could be severed, the district court stated that if it could not be severed, the court "would exercise equitable power in enjoining the [Commissioner] from enforcing [the logo restriction] and requiring the issuance of plates displaying the [SCV’s] logo.” The Commissioner contends that such an exercise of equitable power would be outside the realm of the court's discretion. Because the district court properly severed the statute, we do not address the injunctive relief that it stated it would, in the alternative, provide.
