Featured Article
First Amendment Exceptions to Otherwise Valid Laws: A Doctrinal and Meta-Doctrinal Perspective
When do the First Amendment’s Free Speech and Free Exercise Clauses require exceptions to generally valid laws? Recently, the Supreme Court has upheld a number of such exceptions, which excuse some speakers and religiously motivated actors from legal duties that apply to others, including in prominent cases under antidiscrimination statutes and emergency pandemic regulations. By contrast, other landmark cases–such as United States v. O’Brien and Employment Division v. Smith—insist that First Amendment exceptions should be rare.
In analyzing the fraught and confusing issues that surround First Amendment exceptions, this Article makes four main contributions. First, it conceptualizes claims to First Amendment exceptions as as-applied challenges, which the Supreme Court purports to welcome in other contexts, and elucidates the role of “severability” principles in making as-applied challenges possible. Insofar as as-applied challenges are unavailable, the Article argues, applicable doctrine necessarily relies on facial challenges to protect First Amendment rights. Second, the Article conducts a doctrinal survey of judicially mandated exceptions under both the Free Speech and Free Exercise Clauses and highlights the diverse variety of tests that determine when claims to exceptions can succeed. The survey confirms that First Amendment exceptions are indeed exceptional, though not anomalous. It additionally establishes, however, that facial challenges are the more common mechanism for protecting First Amendment rights–a conclusion contrary to the Supreme Court’s frequent admonition that facial challenges should be rare and disfavored. Third, the Article probes beneath the surface of current doctrines authorizing First Amendment exceptions and generates insights about the nature of First Amendment rights and the diverse interests that those rights protect. Based on variance in the Supreme Court’s receptivity to claims to First Amendment exceptions, the Article draws provocative conclusions about which underlying interests the Justices view as more and less deserving of judicial protection. Fourth, the Article exposes flaws in the Supreme Court’s reasoning in designing and applying frameworks authorizing First Amendment exceptions in two recent leading cases, 303 Creative LLC v. Elenis under the Free Speech Clause and Tandon v. Newsom under the Free Exercise Clause. Overall, the Article enriches previous understandings of how exceptions do and should fit into a complex ecosystem of First Amendment rights and interests.