OPINION
In this case of compelled, commercial speech challenged under the First Amendment, the Department of Agriculture requires the plaintiff, a mushroom producer, to contribute funds for advertising mushrooms, on a regional basis, as authorized by thе Mushroom Promotion, Research, and Consumer Information Act of 1990, 7 U.S.C. § 6101
et seq.
1
The District Court upheld the Act and the government’s action compelling payments for mushroom advertising. The plaintiff claims that other mushroom producers shape the contеnt of the advertising to its disadvantage and that the administrative process allows a majority of producers to create advertising to its detriment. The issue before us is whether the answer to the First Amendment question presented here should be the sаme as in the recent case of
Glideman v. Wileman Bros. & Elliott, Inc.,
The government argues that the degree of regulation or “collectivization” of an industry should makе no First Amendment difference on the compelled advertising issue so long as the compelled advertising is nonpolitical and so long as the plaintiff is not restricted in its own advertising. The plaintiff contends to the contrary that the constitutionality оf the compelled speech under the 1990 Mushroom Act — in light of Wileman — must turn on the degree of regulation of the industry. The question for us is whether the degree of government *223 regulation of an industry controls the outcome or whether the government is right that this is irrelevant under Wileman.
In prior restraint and compelled speech cases involving nonbroadcast political speech, the First Amendment prohibition is nearly absolute,
Near v. Minnesota,
In the
Wileman
case, thе Supreme Court emphasized and reemphasized that the compelled advertising program for California tree fruits under the Agricultural Marketing Agreement. Act of 1937 contemplates “a uniform price to all producers in a particular market,” a “policy of collective, rather than competitive, marketing” and an exemption from the antitrust laws in order “to avoid unreasonable fluctuation in supplies and prices.”
Wileman,
On the other side of the ledgеr, the government correctly argues that Justice Stevens also emphasized repeatedly in his opinion that the compelled agricultural advertising in
Wileman
is not a
restriction
on commercial advertising as in cases that have invalidated such regulation, see,
e.g., Central Hudson Gas & Elec. Corp. v. Public Serv. Comm’n of N.Y.,
The question for us then is whether these two elements—(1) germaneness to a valid, comprehensive, regulatory scheme and (2) nonideological content—are independent of each other and each provide a sufficient basis for upholding compelled commercial speech. In other words, even though the mushroom advertising program before us. is not “germane” to any сollective program setting prices or supply, does the fact that the advertising is “nonideo-logical” or “nonpolitical” in nature mean that it should be permitted under the First Amendment?
We do not read the majority opinion in
Wileman
as saying that any compelled commercial speech that is nonpolitical or nonsymbolic or nonideological does not warrant First Amendment protection. We conclude that the explanation for the
Wileman
decision is to be' found in the fact that the California tree fruit industry is fully collectivized and is no longer a part of a free market, as well as in the nonpolitical nature of the compelled speech. The majority uses this concept of collectivization and the nonideological nature of the advertising together. The conjunction “and” germaneness “and” nonpolitical—is used in the Court’s holding. Our interpretation of
Wileman
is that if either of the two elements is missing—either the collectivization of the industry or the purely commercial nature of the advertising—the First Amendment invalidates the compelled commercial speech, absent some other compelling justification not present in the case before us. The Court’s holding in
Wileman,
we believe, is that nonideological, compelled, сommercial speech is justified in the context of the extensive regulation of an industry but not otherwise. The purpose of this principle joining regulation and content is to deter free riders who take advantage of their monopoly рower resulting from regulation of price and supply without paying for whatever commercial benefits such free riders receive at the hands of the government. Whether wise or unwise, or true or untrue, the legislative theory behind such extensive rеgulation is that the interests of producers and consumers are furthered by the monopoly powers inherent in government control of price and supply. In exchange for such power in the market place, members of the industry may have to provide certain benefits to their industry in the form of payments for nonideological advertising of industry products. If an economic actor chooses to remain aloof from the regulated industry, he owes no reciprocal duty to promote the industry; but if he chooses to join, he has a reciprocal duty to promote its interest. This principle of reciprocity designed to control free-ridership is essentially the same basis upon which the Supreme Court upheld some, and struck down other, compelled speech in the union, closed-shop context in
Lehnert v. Ferris Faculty Ass’n,
Applying this interpretation to the case at hand, we find that the context of the mushroom business is entirely different from the collectivized Californiа tree fruit business. Mushrooms are unregulated. Hence the compelled commercial speech is not a price the members must pay under the reciprocity principle in or *225 der to further their self-interest which is regarded as arising from heavy regulation through marketing orders controlling price, supply and quality. Thus in the absence of extensive regulation, the effort by the Department of Agriculture to force payments from plaintiff for advertising is invalid under the First Amendment. The portions оf the Mushroom Act of 1990 which authorize such coerced payments for advertising are likewise unconstitutional.
Accordingly, the judgment of the District Court is reversed.
Notes
. Enacted by Congress in 1990, the Mushroom Act states:
It is declared to be the policy of congress that it is in the public interest to authorize the establishment of an orderly procedure for financing through adequate assessments on mushrooms produced domestically or imported into the United States, program of promotion, research, and consumer and industry information dеsigned to —
(l)strengthen the mushroom industry's position in the marketplace;
©maintain and expand existing markets and uses for mushrooms; and
©develop new markets and uses for mushrooms.
7 U.S.C. § 6101(b). These policy objectives are supported by findings set forth in the Act that mushrooms are not only an important food valuable to the human diet, but that they play a significant role in this country's economy and that their production benefits the environment. The Act does not permit the regulation of prices or mandatory quantity or quality controls of mushrooms produсed and sold by farmers, nor does it subsidize or restrict the growth of mushrooms or otherwise collectivize the industry. It is basically a commercial advertising statute designed to assess mushroom growers for the cost of advertising. 7 C.F.R. Part 1209.40(a).
Pursuant to the Mushroom Act, thе Secretary of Agriculture promulgated an Order establishing a Mushroom Council made up of mushroom producers nominated by producers and importers for appointment by the Secretary. 7 U.S.C. § 6104(b); 7 C.F.R. Part 1209. The Order generally directs the Council to "carry out programs, plans, and projects designed to provide maximum benefits to the mushroom industry.” 7 C.F.R. § 1209.39(Z). The Council's activities are funded through mandatory assessments on larger producers and importers of fresh mushroom products for domestic use, bаsed upon poundage of mushrooms marketed in the United States and not to exceed a penny per pound. 7 U.S.C. § 6104(g), 7 C.F.R. § 1209.51. The Council has used these funds solely to finance generic advertising efforts on behalf of the mushroom industry.
. See, e.g., Nicole B. Casarez, Don’t Tell Me What to Say: Cоmpelled Commercial Speech and the First Amendment, 63 Mo. L. Rev. 929 (1998); Leading Case, Commercial Speech— Compelled Advertising, 111 Harv. L. Rev. 319 (1997).
. Justice Souter’s twenty-five page dissenting opinion in
Wileman
provides an extensive history of compelled advertising in the market for agricultural commodities. His reading of the history of the agricultural regulations is that it shows that the advertising is simply the result of interest group lobbying, not a response to economic conditions. .See
Wile-man,
