2. Reasonableness
Plaintiffs argue that even if the customized postage program is a nonpublic forum, the Regulations are still unconstitutional becausе they are unreasonable.
A reminder: under the Supreme Court's forum doctrine, the government may restrict access to a nonpublic forum "as long as the restrictions are 'reasonable and [are] not an effort to suppress expression merely because public offiсials oppose the speaker's view.' " Archdiocese,
Plaintiffs advance two reasons why the Regulations fail even this forgiving test. First, the wholesale exclusion of "political" content is too indeterminate to be reasonable under the Supreme Court's recent dеcision in Minnesota Voters Alliance v. Mansky, --- U.S. ----,
a. Mansky
First, Mansky. The question there was whether Minnesota's "political apparel ban" barring voters from wearing political badges and оther insignia inside a polling place on election day violated the Free Speech Clause.
And second, "a restriction may also be unreasonable if it is unclear what speech would be swept in or otherwise seriously hamper consistent administration."
There is another key difference between the political-speech ban in Mansky and the restrictions before this Court. In Mansky, although the state law broadly banned all "political" apparel, it was "the unmoored use of the term 'political' ... combined with [the state's] haphazard interpretations" of the term in guidance and briefing that led to the law's demise.
Plaintiffs argue that here, it is the absence of "operational guidance" that will lead to "impossible line-drawing problems" because vendors like Stamps.com will be forced to decide on their own "whether an imаge is too 'political.' " Opp'n at 23. They round off a litany of examples of borderline, potentially political customized postage designs that would otherwise fall into the permitted "commercial" or "social" categories. For instance, "an image of a wedding cake as an advertisement for a bakery is certainly a commercial design, but what if the cake displayed rainbow colors with plastic figurines of two brides?"
The First Amendment allows the government to exclude entire categories of content from a nоnpublic forum. And there will necessarily be some line drawing whenever the government excludes some category of speech. The question is whether the government "has articulated a 'sensible basis for distinguishing what may come in from what must stay out,' " Archdiocese,
b. USPS's interests
Moving to Plaintiffs' second argument on reasonableness. They contend that the Regulations do not reasonably serve either of USPS's two stated interests in adopting them: avoiding harmful misattribution to its brand and аvoiding political entanglement.
USPS first says its "exclusion of political speech from the program reasonably serves USPS's legitimate interest in avoiding potential misattribution of the content in Customized Postage to USPS, especially where misattribution could harm USPS's brand and business equities." MTD at 34. Plаintiffs counter that this "misattribution worry is not even a permissible government interest." Opp'n at 28. According to Plaintiffs, "the First Amendment does not permit censorship of protected speech based on anticipated audience reactions." Id. at 27.
Plaintiffs' argument fails as a matter of law. In Cornelius, the Supreme Court explained that "thе Government need not wait until havoc is wreaked to restrict access to a nonpublic forum."
Plaintiffs argue that even if USPS has a legitimate interest in avoiding potential misattribution, "restricting political (but not commercial) speech does not remotely fit the ends" of that interest. Opp'n at 27. In their view, instead of selectively silencing some speech, USPS should inform consumers that it permits but does not endorse the speech contained on customized postagе.
USPS next says that its "restriction on political content [also] reasonably serves USPS's 'particularly weighty' governmental interest in avoiding political entanglement, 'given the history of the Postal Service and its problematic historical associations with partisan politics.' " MTD at 34 (quoting Del Gallo v. Parent,
Finally, restrictions in nonpublic fora are more likely to be considered reasonable where alternative channels of communication remain open. See Perry,
* * *
In all, the Court concludes that the 2018 Regulations satisfy the requirements for restrictions on private speech in nonpublic fora. Unlike the political-apparel ban in Mansky, the Regulations are not fatally indeterminate; rather, as a categorical ban on political speech, they provide sufficiently clear guidance on what can come in and what must stay out. The Regulations are also consistent with USPS's legitimate interests in avoiding political entanglement and potential misattribution of postage designs that could harm USPS's business interests.
IV. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the Court will dismiss the claims originally set forth in Plaintiffs' First Amended Complaint as moot and the supplemental claims set forth in Plaintiffs' Supplemental Complaint for failure to state а claim. The Court will also deny as moot Plaintiffs' Motion for Summary Judgment. An Order accompanies this Memorandum Opinion.
Notes
The D.C. Circuit recently emphasized that categorical subject-matter restrictions are not viewpoint-based restrictions. Id. at 319. Therefore, that the Regulations exclude entire categories, like political or religious speech, does not constitute viewpoint discrimination.
Contrary to USPS's framing, the Court does not take Plaintiffs' argument to be that under Mansky, all " 'bans on "political speech" in nonpublic forums' are per se 'unreasonable[.]' " Reply at 16 (selectively quoting Opp'n at 25). To the extent Plaintiffs do so argue, the D.C. Circuit rejected a similar interpretation in Archdiocese,
