NASW of RI v. Harwood ( 1995 )


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    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

    _________________________

    No. 95-1090

    NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF SOCIAL WORKERS, ET AL.,

    Plaintiffs, Appellees,

    v.

    JOHN B. HARWOOD, ET AL.,

    Defendants, Appellants.

    _________________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND

    [Hon. Raymond J. Pettine, Senior U.S. District Judge] __________________________

    _________________________

    Before

    Selya, Cyr and Lynch,

    Circuit Judges. ______________

    _________________________

    John A. MacFadyen for appellants. _________________
    Jeffrey B. Pine, Attorney General, and Alan M. Shoer, _________________ _______________
    Special Assistant Attorney General, on brief for State of Rhode
    Island, amicus curiae.
    Amy R. Tabor, with whom Hardy Wood Tabor & Chudacoff was on _____________ ____________________________
    brief, for appellees.

    _________________________

    November 13, 1995

    _________________________



















    SELYA, Circuit Judge. Over a century ago, Charles SELYA, Circuit Judge. _____________

    Dudley Warner, a nineteenth-century Connecticut journalist,

    earned a sliver of immortality by coining the phrase "politics

    makes strange bedfellows." This appeal, which forges an

    improbable alliance among such disparate groups as the National

    Association of Social Workers, the Rhode Island State Rifle and

    Revolver Association, the Rhode Island Affiliate of the American

    Civil Liberties Union, the Rhode Island State Right to Life

    Committee, Inc., the Coalition to Preserve Choice, the National

    Education Association, and Ocean State Action, proves that the

    aphorism still has force.

    Here, the improbable allies (all private, non-profit

    organizations) banded together with others to bring an action in

    Rhode Island's federal district court against John B. Harwood,

    Speaker of the Rhode Island House of Representatives (the House)

    and Guido Petteruti, the House's head doorkeeper.1 The

    plaintiffs challenged the constitutionality of House Rule 45 a

    rule that purports to ban both lobbyists and lobbying from the

    floor of the House while the House is in session on its face

    and as applied. The district court found for most of the

    plaintiffs and ordered the House to desist from continuing its

    prevailing practices with regard to the interpretation and
    ____________________

    1Other plaintiffs in the underlying action included several
    individuals registered as lobbyists for non-profit organizations
    (Kate Coyne-McCoy, Harvey Press, Scott Nova, Barbara Baldwin,
    Susan Closter-Godoy, Steven Brown, Barbara Colt, Donn Dibiasio,
    Anna Sullivan, and Marti Rosenberg), and three elected members of
    the House (Edith Ajello, Barbara Burlingame, and Francis
    Gaschen).

    2












    enforcement of Rule 45. See National Ass'n of Social Workers v. ___ ________________________________

    Harwood, 874 F. Supp. 530 (D.R.I. 1995) (Social Workers).2 _______ _______________

    Given the benefit of briefing and argument on the doctrine of

    legislative immunity a benefit denied to the distinguished

    district judge, since the defendants inexplicably neglected to

    raise the issue in the lower court we reverse.

    I. BACKGROUND I. BACKGROUND

    We recount the facts "in the light most hospitable to

    the verdict-winner, consistent with record support." Cumpiano v. ________

    Banco Santander P.R., 902 F.2d 148, 151 (1st Cir. 1990). ____________________

    In January 1993, the House, under fresh leadership that

    had pledged procedural reform, adopted several new rules. Among

    them was Rule 45 (the full text of which is reproduced in the

    appendix). On its face, Rule 45 banishes all lobbyists from the

    floor of the House (and the House lounge) while the House is in

    session. Nonetheless, the rule permits members of the public to

    be on the House floor while the House is in session, provided

    that "they remain seated along the sides of the chamber, refrain

    from conversation, and maintain the decorum of the House," and

    provided further that they do not "directly or indirectly engage

    in the practice of lobbying." Rule 45(b).
    ____________________

    2The district court nonetheless rebuffed the legislator-
    plaintiffs, who claimed that Rule 45 violated their First
    Amendment right to receive political information. The court
    ruled that, even if the legislators had been denied some level of
    access to lobbyists, the denial did not "rise[] to the level of a
    constitutional deprivation." Social Workers, 874 F. Supp. at ______________
    542. The legislator-plaintiffs have not appealed and,
    accordingly, we confine our discussion to the claims brought by
    the other plaintiffs.

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    Although Rule 45 does not define the term "lobbyist,"

    it incorporates the statutory definition of "lobbying" contained

    in the Rhode Island Lobbying Act, R.I. Gen. Laws 22-10-1 to

    22-10-12 (the Act). The Act defines "lobbying" as "acting

    directly or soliciting others to act for the purpose of

    promoting, opposing, amending, or influencing in any manner the

    passage by the general assembly of any legislation or the action

    on that legislation by the governor." Id. 22-10-2. The Act ___

    requires lobbyists for private organizations and interests to

    register with the Secretary of State, see id. 22-10-5 & 22-10- ___ ___

    6, and to wear identifying badges, see id. 22-10-8. Government ___ ___

    officials who lobby are given considerably more leeway. The Act

    grants safe passage to many elected officials, see id. 22-10- ___ ___

    3(1), and other public employees, while required to register, are

    otherwise exempt from the Act's provisions. See id. 22-10-4.1. ___ ___

    Neither elected officials nor other public employees are required

    to wear identification badges.

    The district court found that, prior to the adoption of

    Rule 45, the House provided two galleries overlooking the chamber

    which were accessible to all members of the public, lobbyists

    included. In addition, "representatives of both private and

    governmental organizations were allowed to be present on the

    floor of the House." Social Workers, 874 F. Supp. at 535. These ______________

    lobbyists typically occupied seats on the periphery, in an area

    ranged alongside the two outermost aisles of the House floor.

    They communicated with legislators in a variety of ways, such as


    4












    by whispered conversations on the perimeter of the House floor,

    written notes, physical gestures, and other assorted signals.

    See id. This buzznacking took place even while the members were ___ ___

    debating floor amendments.

    After the adoption of Rule 45, access to the overhead

    galleries remained unchanged. But from that point forward, the

    House excluded private lobbyists (easily recognized by their

    obligatory identification badges) from the House floor while the

    House was in session. The district court found that, in

    contrast, "agents or employees of governmental bodies [were]

    allowed to be present on the floor of the House while it [was] in

    session, as [were] members of the general public." Id. ___

    Moreover, the "defendants permitted agents of governmental

    organizations to be present, to speak, to respond to questions,

    to provide information, and to confer with legislators on the

    House floor during House sessions on frequent occasions,"

    notwithstanding the apparently unconditional text of Rule 45.

    Id. at 537. ___

    The plaintiffs struck back on April 27, 1993. On that

    date, they filed a civil action under 42 U.S.C. 1983 (1988)

    against Messrs. Harwood and Petteruti (as the individuals

    purportedly responsible for enforcing the House's rules) charging

    that Rule 45, on its face and as applied, violated the

    plaintiffs' rights under the First and Fourteenth Amendments.

    The defendants denied the allegations. Following a four-day

    bench trial, the judge found for the plaintiffs. See National ___ ________


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    Ass'n of Social Workers v. Harwood, 860 F. Supp. 943 (D.R.I. _________________________ _______

    1994). The defendants then moved to alter the judgment. While

    that motion was under advisement, we decided AIDS Action Comm. v. _________________

    Massachusetts Bay Transp. Auth., 42 F.3d 1 (1st Cir. 1994). The ________________________________

    judge then issued the opinion that is now before us, 874 F. Supp.

    530, modifying the original rescript in certain particulars.

    In substance, the court found that the presence of the

    general public on the perimeter of the House floor a presence

    expressly permitted by Rule 45 constituted "communicative and

    expressive activity," id. at 540; that, due to the communicative ___

    possibilities inherent in physical presence, the public's access

    to the perimeter of the House floor rendered the floor itself a

    limited-purpose public forum, see id.; and that, therefore, both ___ ___

    Rule 45's exclusion of lobbyists and its proscription against

    lobbying on the House floor constituted impermissible time,

    place, and manner restrictions on expressive activity, see id. at ___ ___

    540-41.3 On this basis, the court held that Rule 45, on its
    ____________________

    3In the court's view, the rule did not "leave open ample
    alternative means of communication for the lobbyists," Social ______
    Workers, 874 F. Supp. at 541, because "representatives elected to _______
    the Rhode Island House of Representatives are part time
    legislators . . . [who] lack legislative office quarters in the
    State House or elsewhere, [and who] lack legislative staffs, and
    [who] generally have full time jobs in addition to their
    legislative duties." Id. This meant, the court reasoned, that ___
    exclusion of the lobbyists denied them the opportunity to
    communicate with hard-to-find legislators by way of silent
    presence. See id. ___ ___
    In condemning the ban on lobbying on the House floor during
    House sessions, the court took a similar tack. It found that,
    "with regard to floor amendments, which are often proposed and
    voted on in the same House proceeding, the only timely and useful
    communication that can take place is that which occurs on the
    floor of the House, during the debate on the amendment." Id. ___

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    face, violated the plaintiffs' First Amendment rights. See id. ___ ___

    at 541.

    The court also found that the House haphazardly

    enforced Rule 45, allowing lobbying by government officials while

    prohibiting others from lobbying. See id. at 535-37. Predicated ___ ___

    on this finding, the court concluded that "the application of

    Rule 45 amounts to a content based restriction on speech." Id. ___

    at 541. Because the court could discern no "compelling

    government interest" that justified the exclusion of private

    lobbying while sparing governmental lobbying, it held the

    interpretation and enforcement of Rule 45 invalid under the First

    Amendment. Id. at 541-42. ___

    In constructing a remedy, the judge, presaging an issue

    not yet raised by the parties, voiced concerns about judicial

    interference in legislative affairs. See id. at 542. He ___ ___

    therefore declined the plaintiffs' invitation to "require

    defendants to return to the pre-1993 practice of admitting all

    lobbyists, public and private, onto the floor of the House on a

    first-come, first-served basis." Id. Instead, he opted to ___

    declare "the current interpretation and enforcement of Rule 45

    unconstitutional," and to order the House to refrain from

    "continuing its current practices with regard to this issue."

    Id. at 543.4 The House leadership responded on two levels: the ___
    ____________________

    4For reasons that are not readily apparent to us, the
    plaintiffs never sued the House as a body and, therefore, the
    district court plainly lacked jurisdiction to enjoin the House.
    The plaintiffs now concede that, insofar as the lower court
    purported to do so, its order cannot stand. Withal, the

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    House itself passed a new rule barring all persons except

    legislators and legislative aides from the House floor, and the

    named defendants launched this appeal.

    II. PROCEDURAL DEFAULT II. PROCEDURAL DEFAULT

    On appeal, the defendants, having engaged new counsel,

    advance a point that, for some unfathomable reason, they

    neglected to raise below: the claim that, with regard to the

    defendants' actions anent Rule 45, they are safeguarded from

    judicial interference under the federal common law doctrine of

    absolute legislative immunity. The State of Rhode Island,

    through its Attorney General, as amicus curiae, lends its

    support.

    It is very late in the day to bring a new argument to

    the fore. Ordinarily, an appellant who has not proffered a

    particular claim or defense in the district court "may not unveil

    it in the court of appeals." United States v. Slade, 980 F.2d _____________ _____

    27, 30 (1st Cir. 1992). This rule is deeply embedded in our

    jurisprudence, see, e.g., Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Warehousemen and ___ ____ _______________________________________

    Helpers Union, Local No. 59 v. Superline Transp. Co., 953 F.2d ____________________________ ______________________

    17, 21 (1st Cir. 1992) ("If any principle is settled in this

    circuit, it is that, absent the most extraordinary circumstances,

    legal theories not raised squarely in the lower court cannot be

    broached for the first time on appeal."), and we have invoked it
    ____________________

    plaintiffs argue that the court's underlying ruling that Rule
    45 is unconstitutional may endure, as the court had
    jurisdiction over the individuals charged with the rule's
    enforcement. For reasons which more clearly appear infra, we _____
    need not unsnarl this tangle.

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    with a near-religious fervor, see, e.g., McCoy v. Massachusetts ___ ____ _____ _____________

    Inst. of Technology, 950 F.2d 13, 22 (1st Cir. 1991) (collecting ____________________

    cases), cert. denied, 504 U.S. 910 (1992). Nor can this variant _____ ______

    of the raise-or-waive principle be dismissed as a pettifogging

    technicality or a trap for the indolent; the rule is founded upon

    important considerations of fairness, judicial economy, and

    practical wisdom. See, e.g., Sandstrom v. Chemlawn Corp., 904 ___ ____ _________ ______________

    F.2d 83, 87 (1st Cir. 1990); United States v. Miller, 636 F.2d _____________ ______

    850, 853 (1st Cir. 1980). Thus, parties must speak clearly in

    the trial court, on pain that, if they forget their lines, they

    will likely be bound forever to hold their peace. This is as it

    should be: the rule fosters worthwhile systemic ends and courts

    will be the losers if they permit it to be too easily evaded.

    But foolish consistency is reputedly the hobgoblin of

    little minds, see Ralph Waldo Emerson, "Self Reliance," in ___ __

    Essays: First Series (1841), and in the last analysis, this _______________________

    articulation of the raise-or-waive principle, though important,

    is a matter of discretion. See United States v. La Guardia, 902 ___ _____________ __________

    F.2d 1010, 1013 (1st Cir. 1990) (holding that "an appellate court

    has discretion, in an exceptional case, to reach virgin issues");

    accord Singleton v. Wulff, 428 U.S. 106, 121 (1976); United ______ _________ _____ ______

    States v. Mercedes-Amparo, 980 F.2d 17, 18-19 (1st Cir. 1992); ______ _______________

    United States v. Krynicki, 689 F.2d 289, 291-92 (1st Cir. 1982). ______________ ________

    Thus, this rule (like most rules) admits of an occasional

    exception. "Occasional" is the key word. Since exceptions must

    be few and far between, an appellate court's discretion should


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    not be affirmatively exercised unless the equities heavily

    preponderate in favor of such a step.

    In the La Guardia and Krynicki opinions, we set forth __________ ________

    guidelines that suggest when it may be appropriate to invoke the

    exception, and we need not rehearse the litany. Instead, we

    explain why those criteria are satisfied here, and, in the

    process, explicate the criteria themselves.

    First, this is not a case in which, by neglecting to

    raise an issue in a timely manner, a litigant has deprived the

    court of appeals of useful factfinding. The court below made a

    number of findings as to the appellants' conduct in interpreting

    and enforcing Rule 45, and addressing the omitted issue requires

    only that we determine whether the described conduct, giving full

    deference to these factual findings, falls within the established

    boundaries of legislative immunity. Thus, it can fairly be said

    that the omitted issue is purely legal in nature, and lends

    itself to satisfactory resolution on the existing record without

    further development of the facts. These attributes ease the way

    for invoking the exception. See La Guardia, 902 F.2d at 1013; ___ __________

    Krynicki, 689 F.2d at 291-92. ________

    Second, appellants' belated proffer "raises an issue of

    constitutional magnitude," a factor that favors review

    notwithstanding the procedural default. La Guardia, 902 F.2d at __________

    1013. Third, the omitted argument is "highly persuasive,"

    Krynicki, 689 F.2d at 292, a circumstance that "often inclines a ________

    court to entertain a pivotal argument for the first time on


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    appeal," La Guardia, 902 F.2d at 1013, particularly when ___________

    declining to reach the omitted argument threatens "a miscarriage

    of justice," Krynicki, 689 F.2d at 292.5 Fourth, we see no ________

    special prejudice or inequity to the plaintiffs. The omitted

    defense is law-based, not fact-based. In addition, the parties

    have joined issue; the claim of legislative immunity was made in

    full in the appellants' opening brief in this court, the

    plaintiffs responded to it in extenso, and both sides addressed __ _______

    the point during oral argument. The absence of unfairness has a

    definite bearing on a decision to overlook this type of

    procedural default. See United States v. Doe, 878 F.2d 1546, ___ ______________ ___

    1554 (1st Cir. 1989); cf. Singleton, 428 U.S. at 120 (discussing ___ _________

    importance, in determining whether to reach the merits of an

    omitted issue, of ensuring that the opposing party "ha[s] the

    opportunity to present whatever legal arguments he may have" to

    the court of appeals). Fifth, the omission seems entirely

    inadvertent rather than deliberate; although withholding the

    argument had the regrettable effect of blindsiding the district

    ____________________

    5In this context, "miscarriage of justice" means more than
    the individualized harm that occurs whenever the failure
    seasonably to raise a claim or defense alters the outcome of a
    case. Rather, courts ordinarily will relax the raise-or-waive
    principle on this basis only if a failure to do so threatens the
    frustration of some broadly important right. See Schlesinger v. ___ ___________
    Councilman, 420 U.S. 738, 743 (1975) (holding that, when __________
    "jurisdictional and equity issues . . . [are] sufficiently
    important," courts may consider issues on appeal that were not
    raised below); Krynicki, 689 F.2d at 292 (explaining that the ________
    interest at stake must be "legitimate and significant"). For
    this reason, courts often are more prone to make the infrequent
    exception in cases that involve a discernible public interest,
    and less prone to do so in disputes between private parties.

    11












    judge and needlessly prolonging the litigation, it yielded no

    tactical advantage to the defendants.

    Sixth and perhaps most salient the omitted issue

    implicates matters of great public moment, and touches upon

    policies as basic as federalism, comity, and respect for the

    independence of democratic institutions. Courts must be

    sensitive to such concerns. See Stone v. City and County of San ___ _____ _______________________

    Francisco, 968 F.2d 850, 855 (9th Cir. 1992) (explaining the _________

    court's election to address a matter first raised on appeal

    because "[i]ssues touching on federalism and comity may be

    considered sua sponte"), cert. denied, 113 S. Ct. 1050 (1993). _____ ______

    We believe that this sensitivity is appropriately expressed by a

    frank recognition that, when institutional interests are at

    stake, the case for the favorable exercise of a court's

    discretion is strengthened, and waiver rules ought not to be

    applied inflexibly.6 See, e.g., Hoover v. Wagner, 47 F.3d 845 ___ ____ ______ ______

    (7th Cir. 1995) (suggesting that "when matters of comity are

    involved, the ordinary doctrines of waiver give way"); Jusino v. ______
    ____________________

    6Our belief that the defendants should not be strictly held
    to a waiver of their absolute legislative immunity in this case
    is fortified by our recognition that a primary purpose of the
    immunity is to prevent courts from intruding into precincts that
    are constitutionally reserved to the legislative branch.
    Overlooking a waiver in order to further this policy of non-
    interference is analogous to our settled rule that, because
    federal courts are courts of limited jurisdiction, the absence of
    federal subject matter jurisdiction can be raised on appeal even
    if the issue was not raised below. See, e.g., American ___ ____ ________
    Policyholders Ins. Co. v. Nyacol Prods., Inc., 989 F.2d 1256, _______________________ ____________________
    1258 (1st Cir. 1993), cert. denied, 114 S. Ct. 682 (1994). In _____ ______
    both situations, looking past the waiver has the salutary effect
    of ensuring that federal courts do not poach on preserves that
    the Constitution reserves to other forms of oversight.

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    Zayas, 875 F.2d 986, 993 (1st Cir. 1989) (discussing court's _____

    reluctance to apply waiver rules concerning "a line of defense

    that calls into play the Commonwealth's Eleventh Amendment

    immunity"); cf. Granberry v. Greer, 481 U.S. 129, 134 (1987) ___ _________ _____

    (explaining that, when a state fails to raise a nonexhaustion

    claim in a federal habeas proceeding, the federal tribunal

    nonetheless should consider "whether the interests of comity and

    federalism will be better served . . . by requiring

    [exhaustion]").

    Here, an important issue of public concern confronts

    us. It is presented belatedly, but in a posture that permits its

    proper resolution on the existing record and works no unfair

    prejudice to the opposing parties. Failure to address the issue

    may well result in an unwarranted intrusion by a federal court

    into the internal operations of a state legislature. Under these

    exceptional circumstances, we follow the course of perceived duty

    and proceed, in the exercise of our discretion, to weigh the

    legislative immunity argument.7 See La Guardia, 902 F.2d at ___ __________
    ____________________

    7The dissent's principal response to this reason seems to be
    that overlooking the waiver "eliminates any incentive" for
    legislators to raise the immunity defense in a timely manner.
    Post at 39-40. This reasoning strikes us as triply flawed. In ____
    the first place, that argument can be used with equal force as to
    virtually all omitted defenses; its logical extension is that all
    waivers should rigorously be enforced. That view has much to
    commend it as a matter of case management, but, as La Guardia, ___________
    Krynicki, Mercedes-Amparo, Hoover, and Stone illustrate, it is ________ _______________ ______ _____
    simply not the law.
    In the second place, the argument underestimates the
    capabilities of appellate courts. There is no hint of a
    deliberate bypass in this case the belated tender of the
    defense is the product of a change in counsel (coupled with the
    appearance of Rhode Island's Attorney General as an amicus)

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    1013 ("Rules of practice and procedure are devised to promote the

    ends of justice, not to defeat them.") (quoting Hormel v. ______

    Helvering, 312 U.S. 552, 557 (1941)). _________

    III. THE MERITS OF THE OMITTED DEFENSE III. THE MERITS OF THE OMITTED DEFENSE

    We bifurcate our analysis of the legislative immunity

    defense, first discussing the general nature and scope of the

    doctrine and then addressing the specific contours of the

    appellants' claim.

    A. Legislative Immunity: In General. A. Legislative Immunity: In General. _________________________________

    The Speech or Debate Clause commands that "for any

    Speech or Debate in either House, [Senators and Representatives]

    shall not be questioned in any other place." U.S. Const. art. I,

    6, cl. 1. The Clause is, by its terms, limited to members of

    Congress. See Lake County Estates v. Tahoe Regional Planning ___ ____________________ ________________________

    Agency, 440 U.S. 391, 404 (1979). Nevertheless, state ______

    legislators and their surrogates enjoy a parallel immunity from

    liability for their legislative acts.

    While this immunity is derived from federal common law,

    it is similar in scope and object to the immunity enjoyed by

    federal legislators under the Speech or Debate Clause. When the

    Justices initially recognized state legislative immunity as a
    ____________________

    rather than a change in tactics or a reassessment of political
    costs and, if sandbagging were to occur, we have confidence
    that this court would see it for what is was, and decline to
    exercise discretion in favor of the sandbagger.
    Finally, if we assume that the dissent is correct and that
    our ruling today may encourage legislator-litigants to withhold
    immunity defenses for political reasons, that is still the lesser
    evil, far preferable in our view to the unwarranted insertion of
    the federal court's nose into the state legislature's tent.

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    component of federal common law, they turned to the Speech or

    Debate Clause for guidance anent the contours of the doctrine.

    See Tenney v. Brandhove, 341 U.S. 367, 376-79 (1951). Later, the ___ ______ _________

    Court acknowledged that the immunities enjoyed by federal and

    state legislators are essentially coterminous. See Supreme Court ___ _____________

    of Va. v. Consumers Union of the U.S., Inc., 446 U.S. 719, 732-33 ______ _________________________________

    (1980). Hence, our exploration of the appellants' legislative

    immunity claim begins with a distillation of principles extracted

    from federal constitutional jurisprudence.

    The Speech or Debate Clause has its roots in a similar

    provision found in the English Bill of Rights of 1689.8 See ___

    United States v. Johnson, 383 U.S. 169, 177-78 (1966); Tenney, _____________ _______ ______

    341 U.S. at 372. The Clause is modeled to ensure that the

    Legislative Branch will be able to perform without undue

    interference the whole of the legislative function ceded to it by

    the Framers. See Eastland v. United States Serviceman's Fund, ___ ________ ________________________________

    421 U.S. 491, 502 (1975). To that end, the Clause operates to

    shelter individual legislators from the distractions and

    hindrance of civil litigation, see id. at 503, and "immunizes ___ ___

    [them] from suits for either prospective relief or damages,"

    Consumers Union, 446 U.S. at 731. _______________

    While the core protection conferred by the Clause

    concerns speech or debate by a member of Congress on the floor of

    ____________________

    8The British version provides: "That the Freedom of Speech,
    and Debates or Proceedings in Parliament, ought not to be
    impeached or questioned in any Court or Place out of Parliament."
    1 Wm. & Mary, Sess. 2, ch. II (1689).

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    either the Senate or the House, see Gravel v. United States, 408 ___ ______ _____________

    U.S. 606, 625 (1972), the penumbra of the Clause sprawls more

    broadly. This breadth of application, which draws its essence

    from the Supreme Court's espousal of a "practical rather than a

    strictly literal reading" of the Clause, Hutchinson v. Proxmire, __________ ________

    443 U.S. 111, 124 (1979), is made manifest in two ways. For one

    thing, the Clause's prophylaxis extends to any act "generally

    done in a session of the House by one of its members in relation

    to the business before it." Kilbourn v. Thompson, 103 U.S. 168, ________ ________

    204 (1880). So read, the Clause protects not only speech and

    debate per se, but also voting, see id., circulation of ___ ___

    information to other legislators, see Doe v. McMillan, 412 U.S. ___ ___ ________

    306, 312 (1973), participation in the work of legislative

    committees, see Gravel, 408 U.S. at 624; Tenney, 341 U.S. at 378- ___ ______ ______

    79, and a host of kindred activities.

    For another thing, because the applicability of the

    Speech or Debate Clause necessarily focuses on particular acts or

    functions, not on particular actors or functionaries, the

    prophylaxis of the Clause also extends to legislative acts

    performed by non-legislators. See Eastland, 421 U.S. at 507 ___ ________

    (refusing to draw a distinction between the members of a

    congressional subcommittee and the subcommittee's counsel when

    the latter's actions were within the sphere of legitimate

    legislative activity); Gravel, 408 U.S. at 618 (holding that "the ______

    Speech or Debate Clause applies not only to a Member but also to

    his aides insofar as the conduct of the latter would be a


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    protected legislative act if performed by the Member himself").

    This extension evinces a recognition that, as a practical matter,

    legislators cannot be expected to perform their constitutionally

    allocated tasks without staff support.

    This is not to say that the protections afforded by the

    Speech or Debate Clause are limitless. They are not. See ___

    Gravel, 408 U.S. at 625. Although the Court has read the Clause ______

    generously, its protections must match its purposes. See ___

    Eastland, 421 U.S. at 501-02. When all is said and done, the ________

    absolute immunity conferred by the Clause is not afforded "simply

    for the personal or private benefit of Members of Congress, but

    to protect the integrity of the legislative process by insuring

    the independence of individual legislators." United States v. ______________

    Brewster, 408 U.S. 501, 507 (1972). ________

    The key limitation which applies both to members of

    Congress and to congressional staffers is that the Clause

    protects "only purely legislative activities." Id. at 512. If a ___

    legislator (or his surrogate) undertakes actions that are only

    "casually or incidentally related to legislative affairs," id. at ___

    528, or which fall outside the "legitimate legislative sphere,"

    Eastland, 421 U.S. at 503 (citation omitted), no immunity ________

    inheres. By the same token, the mere fact that a legislator or a

    legislative aide performs an act in his official capacity does

    not automatically confer protection under the Speech or Debate

    Clause. See Gravel, 408 U.S. at 625. For example, when a member ___ ______

    of Congress disseminates press releases to the public, the Clause


    17












    does not attach because such documents are "primarily means of

    informing those outside the legislative forum." Hutchinson, 443 __________

    U.S. at 133. So, too, activities that are more political than

    legislative in nature do not come within the legislative sphere,

    and, hence, do not implicate the Speech or Debate Clause. See ___

    Brewster, 408 U.S. at 512. These activities include such ________

    familiar fare as "legitimate ``errands' performed for

    constituents, the making of appointments with Government

    agencies, [and] assistance in securing Government contracts."

    Id. ___

    B. Legislative Immunity: In Particular. B. Legislative Immunity: In Particular. ____________________________________

    We now turn to the merits of appellants' assertion

    that, under federal common law, the instant action founders on

    the shoals of absolute legislative immunity. The plaintiffs

    brought suit, as we have said, under 42 U.S.C. 1983. In

    actions invoking federal civil rights statutes, federal courts

    customarily "equate[] the legislative immunity to which state

    legislators are entitled . . . to that accorded Congressmen under

    the Constitution." Consumers Union, 446 U.S. at 733. Viewed _______________

    against this backdrop, it is unsurprising that the courts of

    appeals historically have relied on Speech or Debate Clause

    precedents to define the doctrinal boundaries of state

    legislative immunity under the federal common law. See, e.g., ___ ____

    Schlitz v. Commonwealth of Va., 854 F.2d 43, 45-46 (4th Cir. _______ ____________________

    1988); Agromayor v. Colberg, 738 F.2d 55, 58-59 (1st Cir.), cert. _________ _______ _____

    denied, 469 U.S. 1037 (1984); Colon Berrios v. Hernandez Agosto, ______ _____________ ________________


    18












    716 F.2d 85, 89-90 (1st Cir. 1983) (per curiam); Green v. DeCamp, _____ ______

    612 F.2d 368, 371-72 (8th Cir. 1980). Thus, our mode of analysis

    dovetails with the Speech or Debate Clause cases.

    At the heart of our inquiry lies the question of

    whether appellants' acts in respect to Rule 45 are "part and

    parcel of the legislative process." Gravel, 408 U.S. at 626. If ______

    so, appellants are protected. See id. To answer this question, ___ ___

    we must understand the nature of the acts.9 We can look at them

    in one of two ways.

    In a general sense, the defendants the Speaker and

    the head doorkeeper did nothing more or less than to interpret

    and enforce Rule 45. Where, as here, a legislative body adopts a

    rule, not invidiously discriminatory on its face, see infra pp. ___ _____

    26-28, that bears upon its conduct of frankly legislative

    business, we think that the doctrine of legislative immunity must

    protect legislators and legislative aides who do no more than

    carry out the will of the body by enforcing the rule as a part of



    ____________________

    9In certain types of cases, the legislative immunity
    analysis centers on function, attempting to ascertain whether an
    action by one or more legislators is administrative or
    legislative in nature. See, e.g., Negron-Gaztambide v. ___ ____ _________________
    Hernandez-Torres, 35 F.3d 25, 27-28 (1st Cir. 1994) (holding that ________________
    legislators' decision to discharge librarian was administrative
    in nature, and did not give rise to legislative immunity). Here,
    however, we are dealing with a procedural rule adopted by a house
    of the legislature as a whole for the management of its own
    business. Hence, we are not concerned with whether the adoption
    of the rule comprises a legislative act that is transparently
    clear but, rather, with whether that act is more than "casually
    or incidentally related" to core legislative functions.
    Brewster, 408 U.S. at 528. ________

    19












    their official duties.10 See Consumers Union of the U.S. v. ___ _____________________________

    Periodical Correspondents' Ass'n, 515 F.2d 1341, 1348-50 (D.C. _________________________________

    Cir. 1975) (holding congressional employees' actions in enforcing

    Congress's internal seating regulations immune under Speech or

    Debate Clause), cert. denied, 423 U.S. 1051 (1976); see also _____ ______ ___ ____

    Davids v. Akers, 549 F.2d 120, 123 (9th Cir. 1977) (dismissing ______ _____

    action challenging internal rules for committee assignments

    brought by members of the Arizona House of Representatives

    against the Speaker); cf. R.I. Const. art. VI, 7 (expressly ___

    authorizing the House to "determine its rules of proceeding").

    The short of it is that the doctrine of legislative immunity,

    like the Speech or Debate Clause, attaches when solons' actions

    are "an integral part of the deliberative and communicative

    processes by which Members participate in committee and House

    proceedings with respect to the consideration and passage or

    rejection of proposed legislation or with respect to other

    matters [committed to their jurisdiction]." Gravel, 408 U.S. at ______

    625.

    In a more specific sense, it might be said that the
    ____________________

    10We reject the plaintiffs' attempt to differentiate the
    Speaker from the doorkeeper, based on the fact that the latter is
    not a legislator. The case law teaches that, as long as an
    aide's conduct would be covered by legislative immunity were the
    same conduct performed by the legislator himself, the aide shares
    the immunity. See Eastland, 421 U.S. at 507; Gravel, 408 U.S. at ___ ________ ______
    616; Consumers Union of the U.S. v. Periodical Correspondents' _____________________________ __________________________
    Ass'n, 515 F.2d 1341, 1348-50 (D.C. Cir. 1975), cert. denied, 123 _____ _____ ______
    U.S. 1051 (1976). Petteruti's actions in keeping the House floor
    unsullied were performed by virtue of an express delegation of
    authority to him as part of the House's staff support apparatus,
    under the auspices of the Speaker and the legislative body as a
    whole. No more is exigible.

    20












    district court granted relief because it found Rule 45 to be

    fatally deficient in three particulars: (1) on its face, Rule 45

    transgressed the First Amendment by banning lobbying on the floor

    of the House while the House is in session; (2) on its face, Rule

    45 transgressed the First Amendment by banishing all lobbyists

    from the perimeter of the House; and (3) the appellants

    interpreted, applied, and enforced Rule 45 to allow governmental

    lobbyists onto the House floor while denying comparable access to

    private lobbyists. Assuming for argument's sake that this

    narrower perspective is relevant, the question of whether the

    appellants are entitled to legislative immunity would be reduced

    to a question of whether the acts which the district court found

    problematic fell within or without "the legitimate legislative

    sphere." Eastland, 421 U.S. at 503. ________

    The first area of inquiry can celeritously be

    dispatched. We think it is beyond serious dispute that enforcing

    a duly enacted legislative rule which prohibits lobbying on the

    House floor during House sessions is well within the legislative

    sphere. Such a restriction necessarily affects the manner in

    which the House conducts its most characteristic legislative

    functions, e.g., debating and voting. A rule that colors the ____

    very conditions under which legislators engage in formal debate

    is indubitably part and parcel of the legislative process, and

    the acts of House officials (whether or not elected members) in

    enforcing it are therefore fully protected against judicial

    interference by the doctrine of legislative immunity. See id.; ___ ___


    21












    see also Doe, 412 U.S. at 312-13; Tenney, 341 U.S. at 378-79. ___ ____ ___ ______

    At first blush, the next area of inquiry whether the

    exclusion of all lobbyists from the perimeter of the House is

    within the legislative sphere appears more murky. Seating

    arrangements for non-legislators arguably are less integral to

    the legislative process than the regulation of lobbying during

    House sessions. As the trial testimony in this case amply

    demonstrates, however, when lobbyists are present on the House

    floor (even on the perimeter), they often become embroiled in the

    legislative process either through self-initiated or legislator-

    initiated contacts. And, even if lobbyists are able to maintain

    stoic silence on the perimeter, their mere presence affects the

    legislative environment.11 We conclude, therefore, that

    regulation of admission to the House floor comprises "an integral

    part of the deliberative and communicative processes by which

    Members participate in . . . House proceedings with respect to

    the consideration and passage or rejection of proposed

    legislation." Gravel, 408 U.S. at 625. Consequently, the ______

    doctrine of legislative immunity pertains.

    We are not alone in our view of a legislature's House

    ____________________

    11The plaintiffs themselves have argued, in the context of
    their First Amendment claim, that they should at least be given
    the opportunity to sit silently on the perimeter of the House
    floor so that they may communicate through their physical
    presence. The district court accepted this argument, and made it
    a cornerstone of the ensuing First Amendment analysis. See ___
    Social Workers, 874 F. Supp. at 539-41. The importance that the ______________
    plaintiffs attach to admittance to the perimeter indicates their
    own recognition that, by mere physical presence, they can
    influence ongoing legislative business.

    22












    as its castle. In Periodical Correspondents', the court reached __________________________

    a similar conclusion. There, the Periodical Correspondents'

    Association, which issues credentials to the press galleries of

    Congress, denied accreditation to a particular periodical,

    Consumer Reports, on the ground that it had ties to an advocacy

    organization. Consumers Union sued the sergeants-at-arms of the

    House and Senate, among other defendants, alleging that the

    exclusion violated the First Amendment. The court held that the

    sergeants-at-arms were immune under the Speech or Debate Clause

    because arrangements for seating the press in the House and

    Senate galleries were "integral" to "the legislative machinery."

    515 F.2d at 1350. In a later case, the court elaborated its

    rationale, explaining that the seating "immediately concerned

    House consideration of proposed legislation" because the

    arrangements "were intended to shield members of Congress from

    press members' use of their House access to lobby legislators."

    Walker v. Jones, 733 F.2d 923, 930 (D.C. Cir.) (discussing ______ _____

    Periodical Correspondents'), cert. denied, 469 U.S. 1036 (1984). __________________________ _____ ______

    Like the seating arrangements at issue in Periodical __________

    Correspondents', the seating arrangements dictated by Rule 45 _______________

    involve the "regulation of the very atmosphere in which lawmaking

    deliberations occur." Walker, 733 F.2d at 930. Moreover, if ______

    there is a distinction between Periodical Correspondents' and the __________________________

    instant case, it does not advantage the present plaintiffs; the

    Rhode Island House is seeking to regulate access to its own

    floor, rather than to galleries located above the floor.


    23












    We come now to the third area of inquiry, involving the

    significance, if any, of the plaintiffs' claim that the

    appellants interpreted and enforced Rule 45 in a manner that

    allowed lobbying on the House floor by governmental, but not

    private, lobbyists. This as-applied exclusion of private

    lobbyists, at its most primitive level, involves regulating the

    legislative environment by controlling access to the seating on

    the perimeter of the House floor. Because such regulation is

    "done in a session of the House by one of its members in relation

    to the business before it," Kilbourn, 103 U.S. at 204, it is ________

    within the legislative sphere.

    To be sure, both our dissenting colleague and the

    plaintiffs protest that the House treats private lobbyists

    differently (and less hospitably) than public lobbyists, and that

    this differential treatment offends the First Amendment. These

    charges lack sufficient force to strip away the shield of

    absolute legislative immunity.

    We believe that the body of our opinion adequately

    rebuts the dissent's views, and we decline to repastinate well-

    ploughed ground. We do add, however, our belief that the dissent

    seriously misconstrues the Court's Speech or Debate Clause

    jurisprudence beyond all recognition. To the extent that Powell ______

    can be read to hold that legislative immunity does not extend to

    legislative employees, the Court in later cases has routinely

    confined it to its unique facts. See, e.g., Gravel, 408 U.S. at ___ ____ ______

    621 (specifically identifying Kilbourn, Powell, and Dombrowski v. ________ ______ __________


    24












    Eastland, 387 U.S. 82 (1967), and stating that none "of these ________

    cases adopted the simple proposition that immunity was

    unavailable to congressional or committee employees because they

    were not Representatives or Senators"). Rather, the case law

    "reflect[s] a decidedly jaundiced view towards extending the

    Clause so as to privilege illegal or unconstitutional conduct

    beyond that essential to foreclose executive control of

    legislative speech or debate and associated matters such as

    voting and committee reports and proceedings." Id. We see no ___

    reason why judicial control of legislative speech or debate is

    any less pernicious than executive control. Moreover, the

    decision not to extend legislative immunity to congressional

    employees in cases such as Powell turned on whether "relief could ______

    be afforded without proof of a legislative act or the motives or

    purposes underlying such an act," thereby avoiding impermissible

    encroachment on "legislative independence." Id. at 620. Under ___

    that standard, judicial review of House Rule 45 as the tortured

    course of the proceedings below graphically illustrates

    unquestionably required a substantial judicial intrusion into the

    legislative domain. Finally, we recognize, as the dissent points

    out, that the Court has remarked an exception to legislative

    immunity for the exercise by legislators of punitive enforcement ________

    authority outside the ambit of purely legislative proceedings.

    See Consumers Union, 446 U.S. at 736. But the Court has never ___ ________________

    suggested, much less held, that the enforcement of a rule adopted

    by an entire legislative body designed to govern the conduct of


    25












    legislative proceedings falls within that exception. If that

    were the rule, legislative immunity would be little more than a

    rumor, and the Speech or Debate Clause would be easily skirted.

    Similarly, the plaintiffs' "as-applied" arguments are

    unavailing. In Eastland v. United States Servicemen's Fund, ________ _________________________________

    supra, the plaintiffs asseverated that "once it is alleged that _____

    First Amendment rights may be infringed by congressional action

    the Judiciary may intervene to protect [First Amendment] rights."

    421 U.S. at 509. The Court flatly rejected this asseveration,

    warning that the effort to carve out such an exception "ignores

    the absolute nature of the speech or debate protection and [the]

    cases which have broadly construed that protection." Id. at 509- ___

    10. The Court added: "Where we are presented with an attempt to

    interfere with an ongoing activity by Congress, and that activity

    is found to be within the legitimate legislative sphere, [First

    Amendment] balancing plays no part." Id. at 510 n.16. The Ninth ___

    Circuit put matters even more bluntly, writing that "nothing in

    the First or Fourteenth Amendments or in 42 U.S.C. 1983 . . .

    can justify [an] attempt to inject the Federal Judiciary into the

    internal procedures of a House of a state legislature." Davids, ______

    549 F.2d at 123.

    The plaintiffs' also assert that the differential

    treatment of public and private lobbyists violates the Equal

    Protection Clause. This assertion does not derail the engine of

    legislative immunity. Activities that comprise part and parcel

    of the legislative process are protected by legislative immunity;


    26












    that immunity is not forfeited simply because the activities, if

    unprotected, might violate a plaintiff's constitutional rights.

    See Doe, 412 U.S. at 312-13; see also Colon Berrios, 716 F.2d at ___ ___ ___ ____ _____________

    91. Thus, in Doe, the Supreme Court ruled that the Speech or ___

    Debate Clause shields legislators' actions "within the

    legislative sphere, even though [the] conduct, if performed in

    other than legislative contexts, would in itself be

    unconstitutional." 412 U.S. at 312-13 (internal citation and

    quotation marks omitted).

    For obvious reasons, the plaintiffs chafe at the broad

    sweep of the doctrine of legislative immunity, and, in struggling

    to make their point, they marshal a parade of horribles. To cite

    a typical example, they raise the specter of a hypothetical

    legislature that votes to allow access to its chambers to members

    of only one race or to adherents of only one religion.

    The plaintiffs have the right to march, but their

    parade is on the wrong route. The Court has explicitly

    recognized that there may be some conduct, even within the

    legislative sphere, that is so flagrantly violative of

    fundamental constitutional protections that traditional notions

    of legislative immunity would not deter judicial intervention.

    See, e.g., Kilbourn, 103 U.S. at 204 (leaving open the question ___ ____ ________

    of whether "there may not be things done, in the one House or the

    other, of an extraordinary character, for which the members who

    take part in the act may be held legally responsible"); see also ___ ____

    Tenney, 341 U.S. at 379 (Black, J., concurring) (recognizing that ______


    27












    the Court's jurisprudence "indicates that there is a point at

    which a legislator's conduct so far exceeds the bounds of

    legislative power that he may be held personally liable in a suit

    brought under the Civil Rights Act"). Whatever may be the outer

    limits of the doctrine of legislative immunity, however, it is

    clear that the instant case is not so extreme as to cross (or

    even closely approach) the border.

    Taking the district court's factual findings at face

    value, Rule 45, as applied, may arguably be wrong as a matter of

    policy and as a matter of constitutional law but it is not

    invidiously discriminatory. To the contrary, the differentiation

    between private and public lobbyists appears to be based on two

    factors that bear some rational relationship to legitimate ____

    legislative purposes. First, the House leadership explained

    that, in its view, the exclusion of private lobbyists from the

    floor was a useful tool to bolster public confidence in

    legislative independence and integrity.12 Second, the
    ____________________

    12In a debate over a motion to reconsider Rule 45, the
    Majority Leader, Representative George Caruolo, stated:

    This isn't trying to retard lobbyists from
    pursuing their vocation . . . It's a rule
    that says, quite simply, this is the people's
    chamber, the public is invited. But the
    business of the people should be conducted by
    the people's representatives. It should not
    be in any way affected by people who are
    registered to advocate particular positions,
    whether they are paid or unpaid . . . .

    Later, Representative Caruolo explained why he thought
    that governmental lobbyists on the floor of the House do not
    trigger the same public perceptions as private lobbyists:


    28












    defendants consistently have taken the position that government

    lobbyists act in effect as support staff for legislators by

    giving them neutral statistical and factual information relevant

    to pending legislation. These justifications for the continued

    presence of government lobbyists, found by the district court to

    be authentic (if asthenic), see Social Workers, 874 F. Supp. at ___ ______________

    541-42, afford a sufficiently rational basis to persuade us that

    this case does not give rise to the question reserved by the

    Kilbourn Court.13 ________

    Thus, we conclude that, insofar as the appellants

    enforced Rule 45's prohibitions against private lobbyists, but

    spared governmental lobbyists from exclusion, they acted within

    the legislative sphere and are protected from judicial
    ____________________

    [A]ny general officer or any government
    employee who is here, working in this
    building [the State House] on government
    policy they're paid by the government. We
    are the government. That's the distinction .
    . . Let's not have private groups out here
    trying to manipulate this floor while we are
    taking votes.

    In the same vein, Edward Clement, the House's legislative
    coordinator, testified that he did not consider government
    lobbyists to be lobbyists per se, but, rather, "people called [to
    the floor] by members of the House for informational purposes."
    Speaker Harwood echoed the same themes, describing the principal
    spokesman for the state Budget Office as "a dollars-and-cents
    guy. . . . a resource factual guy," in contradistinction to "a
    lobbying, influence guy."

    13This conclusion is not undermined by the lower court's
    determination that these reasons were insufficient to warrant an
    infringement on the First Amendment rights of private lobbyists.
    See Social Workers, 874 F. Supp. at 541-42. Such rigorous ___ ______________
    testing, appropriate in the First Amendment context, is out of
    place in the context of legislative immunity. See Eastland, 421 ___ ________
    U.S. at 509 n.16.

    29









    interference by the doctrine of absolute legislative immunity.

    IV. CONCLUSION IV. CONCLUSION

    We need go no further.14 In our republican system,

    different institutions of government occupy different spheres.

    Within its own domain, the legislative branch of a state

    government is entitled to a reasonable measure of independence in

    conducting its internal affairs. As a rule, a legislature's

    regulation of the atmosphere in which it conducts its core

    legislative activities debating, voting, passing legislation,

    and the like is part and parcel of the legislative process,

    and, hence, not subject to a judicial veto. See Eastland, 421 ___ ________

    U.S. at 509. Because Rule 45, and the defendants' actions in

    interpreting and enforcing it, fit within the sweep of this

    generality, the doctrine of absolute legislative immunity

    requires that the federal courts refuse to entertain the suit.



    Reversed. No costs. Reversed. No costs. ________ ________



    Appendix follows; Dissenting opinion follows appendix Appendix follows; Dissenting opinion follows appendix













    ____________________

    14We do not reach and, accordingly, express no opinion on,
    the soundness of the district court's First Amendment analyses
    and rulings.

    30












    APPENDIX APPENDIX

    Text of Rule 45 Text of Rule 45 _______________



    SIXTHLY - OF ADMISSION TO THE FLOOR

    45(a) The following persons shall be entitled
    to admission to the floor of the House during
    the session thereof: The Governor, the
    Lieutenant Governor, the Secretary of State,
    the Attorney General, the General Treasurer,
    the state controller, and members of the
    Senate, judges and ex-judges of the United
    States court and of the state courts, ex-
    governors, ex-Speakers of the House, ex-
    members of the General Assembly,
    representatives of the legislative council,
    legislative staff, director of the department
    of administration, the budget officer,
    assistant in charge of law revision, and
    clerks of the Senate and House committees,
    superintendent of public buildings, state
    librarian, and the authorized representatives
    of the press, as provided in the rule next
    following, and such other persons as shall be
    admitted to the floor by the Speaker. At the
    discretion of the Speaker, members of the
    public may be admitted to the House floor,
    provided, however, that all such persons may
    not stay in the House chamber unless they
    remain seated along the sides of the chamber,
    refrain from conversation, and maintain the
    decorum of the House. All persons who are
    unable to access the House galleries by
    reason of physical handicap shall be entitled
    to admission to the House floor.

    (b) Lobbyists including former state
    legislators who are lobbyists shall not be
    entitled to admission to the floor of the
    House during the session thereof. No person
    entitled to admission to the floor of the
    House during the session thereof, shall
    either directly or indirectly engage in the
    practice of lobbying as defined in Rhode
    Island General Laws (22-10-2).

    (c) Admission to the House Lounge is limited
    to House members and persons invited and
    accompanied by a House member who will be

    31












    responsible for them while in the lounge.
    Such persons when no longer accompanied by
    the House member with whom they entered,
    shall leave the lounge. No lobbyists shall
    be admitted to the House lounge during the
    House session.















































    32













    LYNCH, Circuit Judge, dissenting. When the LYNCH, Circuit Judge, dissenting. ____________________________

    government chooses to listen only to its own voice in the

    political process by excluding the voices of private

    citizens, core First Amendment values are violated. At the

    heart of this case is not the ability of the Rhode Island

    House to promulgate rules for the conduct of its own

    business, but the defendants' actual practice, directly

    contrary to the Rule adopted by the House, of excluding

    speakers unless they represent the government and thus

    express the government's own viewpoint. While, in my view,

    the House could have legitimately closed the floor of its

    Chamber to all who sought to influence its work, defendants

    may not permit government lobbyists to lobby on the House

    floor while prohibiting private citizens and private

    lobbyists from doing the same. The First Amendment does not

    permit the government to put its thumb on the scale in this

    way and favor itself in the arena of political speech. With

    respect, I dissent.

    Unlike the majority, I would not take the

    extraordinary step of affording defendants absolute

    legislative immunity, thus preventing the court from reaching

    the First Amendment issue. The majority does so in the name

    of federalism and comity, important values to be sure. But

    naming those values may obscure the issues involved here.

    This case does not implicate traditional issues of



    -33- 33













    "federalism" at all, such as the limits on enumerated

    congressional powers, see United States v. Lopez, 115 S. Ct. ___ _____________ _____

    1624 (1995), or the relative allocation of legislative power

    between state and federal governments, see U.S. Term Limits, ___ _________________

    Inc. v. Thornton, 115 S. Ct. 1842 (1995). Rather, this case ____ ________

    raises thorny issues of the constitutional allocation of

    powers between the people and those elected to represent

    them, and of the appropriate role of federal courts in

    resolving such issues.

    Facts _____

    Rule 45 on its face does not permit any lobbyists,

    government or private, to be on the House floor and prohibits

    lobbying on the floor by anyone, private citizen15 or

    professional lobbyist, while the House is in session. It is

    that Rule which reflects the decision of the House as to the

    running of its affairs. Permitting government lobbyists to

    lobby on the floor of the House violates the House Rule.

    The defendants claimed that such were not their

    practices. But the district court, after trial, found to the

    contrary and the defendants have not appealed from that

    factual determination. The record amply demonstrates that

    government lobbyists were regularly plying their trade on the


    ____________________

    15. Under the terms of Rule 45, certain government officials
    including the Governor, the Secretary of State, and the
    Attorney General have access to the floor. The Rule
    nonetheless prohibits anyone from lobbying.

    -34- 34













    floor after adoption of the House Rule which ostensibly kept

    them out. And, as the district court found, defendants

    "flagrantly permitted" such activities.

    The Rhode Island House presents a factual setting

    perhaps unique in this country. Unlike many legislative

    bodies, including the United States Congress, most Rhode

    Island legislators are part-time and have neither offices nor

    staff. The House meets for six months or less in a year, and

    then only for three or four afternoons and evenings a week.

    Once the session starts, it rarely breaks until it is

    concluded. Legislators typically arrive just in time for the

    session and leave immediately on its conclusion. Legislators

    have no desks other than their desks on the floor of the

    Chamber. Often there is no other place but the floor for

    direct communication with the legislators, apart from

    disturbing legislators in their capacities as private

    citizens where they live or work.

    Amendments to bills are often introduced for the

    first time on the floor. They are often unavailable to the

    public before being introduced and are available only in the

    House Chamber after being introduced. Frequently, especially

    toward the close of the session, the House votes on such an

    amendment on the same day, and sometimes within minutes, of

    the amendment being introduced.





    -35- 35













    Around the perimeter of the floor of the House

    Chamber are approximately eighteen chairs. Some of those

    chairs have been filled on a daily basis by government

    lobbyists since Rule 45 was enacted. The remainder are

    filled by members of the public. Private lobbyists are

    relegated to balcony seating.

    Government officials sitting in the perimeter seats

    have and use a decided advantage in communicating with

    legislators and in collecting and disseminating information.

    Individual legislators frequently walk over to the perimeter

    to speak with the government lobbyists. These lobbyists send

    notes to legislators indicating that they would like to speak

    and they get the attention of individual legislators by

    signalling them. People seated along the perimeter of the

    floor receive more information than others concerning floor

    amendments, which are distributed to the legislators only

    when they are introduced. Thus, government lobbyists who are

    sitting on the floor can see copies of floor amendments and

    have the opportunity to communicate their views, including

    pertinent information, to the legislators. It is virtually

    impossible for those who are not permitted onto the floor to

    learn the exact language of an offered amendment because the

    text of floor amendments is not distributed outside of the

    Chamber.





    -36- 36













    Government lobbyists have actively lobbied for

    their positions both from the perimeter seats and from the

    floor itself. They have done so on bills which government

    officials have supported and which private groups have

    opposed. Those bills often concerned matters of great public

    debate. For example, the topic of public funding of abortion

    was taken up by the legislature. Agents of the Governor's

    office, which supported such funding, sat on the floor and

    talked to legislators while the lobbyist from the Rhode

    Island State Right to Life Committee, Inc., which opposed

    such funding, was relegated to the balcony. Similarly, the

    Attorney General of Rhode Island introduced a bill to

    reinstate the death penalty and he and his staff were on the

    floor during debates on the bill, speaking with legislators.

    Private group lobbyists opposed to the bill, including those

    from the Rhode Island Affiliate of the American Civil

    Liberties Union, could only watch from the balcony and were

    precluded from the floor and from lobbying.

    The same duality characterized the influencing of

    bills on welfare reform. Government lobbyists from the

    Department of Human Services were present for floor debates

    on an amendment which would restore a General Public

    Assistance program cut from the Governor's budget. The

    Department favored elimination of the program. Lobbyists

    from the National Association of Social Workers (NASW), which



    -37- 37













    opposed eliminating the program, were excluded. There was no

    break in the session between the time the amendment was

    introduced and it was voted upon. Similarly, in debate over

    an amendment to an AFDC program, lobbyists for the Department

    in the perimeter seats attempted to influence the vote, while

    a NASW lobbyist in the balcony ineffectively tried to convey

    the NASW's position by waving hands. Prison-related bills

    received the same treatment. Department of Corrections

    officials were on the floor with legislators during debate

    while ACLU lobbyists who opposed the Department's position

    watched ineffectively from the balcony. There were numerous

    other instances where the Governor's Office, the State

    Police, the Department of Economic Development, the Banking

    and Insurance Department, the Fire Marshal, the General

    Treasurer's Office and the Department of Business Regulation

    lobbyists spoke directly with legislators on the floor

    regarding pending legislation.16

    Nor were the advantages given to government

    lobbyists limited to lobbyists from state government

    agencies. The lobbyist for the Mayor of Providence was on

    the floor of the House every day, frequently conversing with

    legislators. She spoke with legislators on issues as varied

    ____________________

    16. The ability of government employees to sit in the few
    perimeter seats may have been used to advance their personal
    interests as well. For example, during debates on incentive
    pay for court clerks, two court clerks sat in the aisle
    seats.

    -38- 38













    as a proposed gun court, the Providence water supply, and

    funding for the city.

    Lobbying by government lobbyists at times took

    place among the seats of the legislators, even with the

    knowledge of the Speaker. For example, when the House was in

    session, the Providence lobbyist was on a cellular telephone

    and walked in between the rows of the legislators' seats,

    passing the telephone to certain members of the House, who

    listened and spoke into the telephone. The telephone was

    eventually passed to the Speaker, who also listened, spoke

    and chuckled. Only when a member of the House raised an

    objection did the Providence lobbyist move to the outer

    aisles. But she was not asked to leave the floor and was not

    asked to refrain from speaking to the legislators.


    Immunity ________

    I respectfully disagree with the decision of my

    very able colleagues to afford absolute legislative immunity

    to both of the defendants. Not only was the defense waived,

    but even if it had been properly raised, the doctrine of

    legislative immunity does not, in my view, foreclose a

    judicial determination of the constitutionality of the

    defendants' practices. The challenged practices do not

    constitute the kind of "purely legislative activities" that

    have traditionally triggered the protections of the

    legislative immunity bar. Raising that bar in this case is


    -39- 39













    not necessary to vindicate the vital interests that the

    doctrine was intended to safeguard, and indeed undercuts

    those interests.

    This case does not present the kind of exceptional

    circumstances that would even permit consideration of the

    defendants' legislative immunity arguments, because those

    arguments were not raised in the district court. Cf. ___

    Eastland v. United States Servicemen's Fund, 421 U.S. 491, ________ ________________________________

    510 n.17 (1975) ("[T]he Speech or Debate Clause has never

    been read so broadly that legislators are 'absolved of the

    responsibility of filing a motion to dismiss.'" (citation

    omitted)); Powell v. McCormack, 395 U.S. 486, 505 n.25 ______ _________

    (1969). Here, the immunity doctrine -- hardly an obscure

    legal concept -- was never raised as a defense to liability,

    even when the distinguished trial court was solicitous about

    minimizing the intrusion of the litigation into the

    functioning of the state legislature. Defendant Harwood is

    himself an attorney and both defendants were ably represented

    in the district court. I see no reason not to hold the

    defendants to their waivers. See Singleton v. Wulff, 428 ___ _________ _____

    U.S. 106, 121 (1976) (reversing court of appeals in a civil

    case for deciding issues not argued in the district court).

    In reaching the immunity issue, the majority sets

    up a virtually no-lose proposition for legislators.

    Legislators are certainly cognizant of the public perception



    -40- 40













    that raising an immunity defense is tantamount to a claim of

    being above the Constitution. Thus, raising a defense of

    legislative immunity at the outset of litigation is not

    without its political costs. The majority's approach, which

    permits the defense to be raised after trial, virtually _____

    eliminates any incentive to raise it sooner. If the trial

    were to produce an unfavorable outcome, the legislator-

    defendant could simply assert immunity on appeal, claiming

    that the failure to raise the defense earlier had been

    inadvertent. Because there rarely will be direct evidence to

    counter such a claim of inadvertence, and because the defense

    of absolute legislative immunity will always present a law-

    based, potentially dispositive question of constitutional

    magnitude, a court of appeals applying the majority's

    approach would almost inevitably consider the defense, even

    though raised for the first time on appeal.

    Moreover, to the extent that one of the rationales

    underlying legislative immunity is to prevent vexatious

    litigation against legislators, that rationale is undermined

    where (as here) the legislator-defendant goes through the

    entire trial and raises the defense only on appeal. "The

    purpose of the protection afforded legislators is not to

    forestall judicial review of legislative action but to insure

    that legislators are not distracted from or hindered in the

    performance of their legislative tasks by being called into



    -41- -41-













    court to defend their actions." Powell, 395 U.S. at 505. ______

    Denials of legislative immunity are immediately appealable

    because the immunity is not simply a defense to liability but

    is also an immunity from suit. Helstoski v. Meanor, 442 U.S. _________ ______

    500, 508 (1979). Appellate courts are unable to vindicate

    that interest where defendants wait until after trial to

    raise the immunity defense. See id. There thus may be a ___ ___

    greater systemic interest in ensuring that the interest is

    raised early.

    Much of what the immunity protects cannot be

    remedied here. Because the defendants never asserted a

    defense of immunity, the action was fully tried before the

    question was ever put to the district court. Legislators

    have already testified. Deciding the merits of the

    constitutional question entails no additional burden or

    inconvenience upon the defendants. The need to ignore the

    defendants' waiver in order to reach the immunity issue is,

    as a result, greatly reduced.17

    ____________________

    17. Even if one could overlook defendants' waiver, we could
    not reach the immunity issue absent a showing of plain error
    by the district court. Cf. United States v. Olano, 113 S. ___ _____________ _____
    Ct. 1770, 1776-78 (1993); United States v. Saccoccia, 58 F.3d _____________ _________
    754, 790 (1st Cir. 1995). Plain error analysis does apply in
    the civil context. See, e.g., Consolo v. George, 58 F.3d ___ ____ _______ ______
    791, 793 (1st Cir. 1995) (jury instructions to which no
    objection lodged subject only to plain error review); Lewis _____
    v. Kendrick, 944 F.2d 949, 953 (1st Cir. 1991) (district ________
    court's failure to grant qualified immunity reviewable only
    for plain error where defense was not timely raised); Javelin _______
    Investment, S.A. v. Municipality of Ponce, 645 F.2d 92, 94-95 ________________ _____________________
    (1st Cir. 1981) (same, for a sufficiency-of-evidence claim).

    -42- -42-













    Even overlooking the defendants' waiver, however, I

    believe that their claim of absolute legislative immunity

    fails. The Supreme Court's case law demonstrates that even

    if a suit asserting individual rights could not be brought to

    challenge a legislative act per se, it is not barred by ___ __

    legislative immunity if it merely seeks prospective relief

    against a legislative employee for his role in carrying out

    or enforcing the directives of that same legislative act.

    That is precisely what the plaintiffs seek here.

    There is no immunity for practices that simply

    relate to legislative activities. See Doe v. McMillan, 412 ___ ___ ________

    U.S. 306, 313 (1973) ("Our cases make perfectly apparent

    . . . that everything a [legislator] may regularly do is not

    a legislative act within the protection of the Speech or

    Debate Clause."); United States v. Brewster, 408 U.S. 501, _____________ ________

    515 (1972) ("In no case has this Court ever treated the

    Clause as protecting all conduct relating to the legislative ________

    process." (emphasis in original; footnote omitted)); Powell, ______

    395 U.S. at 503 ("Legislative immunity does not, of course,

    bar all judicial review of legislative acts."). Moreover,

    "[t]hat [legislators] generally perform certain acts in their

    ____________________

    Whatever difference of opinion the question of legislative
    immunity might allow, the district court's "failure" to
    afford such immunity to defendants sua sponte was not clearly ___ ______
    in error, and certainly did not produce a gross miscarriage
    of justice or seriously affect the fairness, integrity or
    public reputation of the judicial proceedings. See Olano, ___ _____
    113 S. Ct. at 1779. There was no plain error.

    -43- -43-













    official capacity as [legislators] does not necessarily make

    all such acts legislative in nature." Gravel v. United ______ ______

    States, 408 U.S. 606, 625 (1972). Rather, as the majority ______

    agrees, the doctrine of legislative immunity protects "only

    purely legislative activities." Brewster, 408 U.S. at 512; ________

    Chastain v. Sundquist, 833 F.2d 311, 314 (D.C. Cir. 1987) ________ _________

    (quoting Brewster), cert. denied, 487 U.S. 1240 (1988). ________ ____________

    The basic protection of the doctrine of legislative

    immunity attaches to actual "speech or debate" by

    legislators. Gravel, 408 U.S. at 625. The Supreme Court has ______

    made clear that

    [i]nsofar as [legislative immunity] is
    construed to reach other matters, they ____
    must be an integral part of the __________________________________________
    deliberative and communicative processes __________________________________________
    by which [legislators] participate in __
    committee and House proceedings with ____________________________________
    respect to the consideration and passage
    or rejection of proposed legislation or
    with respect to other matters [within the
    legislature's constitutional
    jurisdiction].

    Hutchinson v. Proxmire, 443 U.S. 111, 126 (1979) (emphases in __________ ________

    original) (quoting Gravel, 408 U.S. at 625). The majority ______

    does not dispute this definition of the scope of legislative

    immunity.

    It is important to recognize that the plaintiffs

    here seek only to enjoin Rule 45's enforcement. In my view, ___________

    legislative immunity does not reach enforcement of the House

    Rule because such enforcement is not "an integral part of the



    -44- -44-













    deliberative and communicative processes" of the state

    legislature.

    Of course, the regulation of the admission of the

    public to the House's floor has an important impact on the ______

    legislative process -- that is what this lawsuit is about.

    But it belies common usage, I believe, to say that the

    defendants' practices relating to the admission or exclusion

    of classes of persons from the House floor constitute "an

    integral part of the deliberative and communicative

    processes" of the legislature. Certainly, such practices are

    not part and parcel of the legislative process in the same

    fashion as are the kinds of legislative acts to which the

    Supreme Court has previously extended legislative immunity:

    e.g., voting for a resolution, Kilbourn v. Thompson, 103 U.S. ____ ________ ________

    168, 204 (1881), making a speech on the floor, United States _____________

    v. Johnson, 383 U.S. 169, 180 (1966), circulating documents _______

    to other legislators, McMillan, 412 U.S. at 312, or the ________

    gathering of information for a committee hearing, Dombrowski __________

    v. Eastland, 387 U.S. 82, 84 (1967) (per curiam).18 See ________ ___


    ____________________

    18. An action challenging any of these immunized activities
    would have required proof, as this case does not, of the
    substance of a legislator's act -- e.g., how the legislator ____
    voted, or the content of a speech or the content of
    communications to other legislators. See Gravel, 408 U.S. at ___ ______
    618-21 (drawing this distinction); see also Brewster, 408 ___ ____ ________
    U.S. at 526 (holding that act of bribery was not immune from
    prosecution if government did not need to prove "how
    [defendant] spoke, how he debated, how he voted, or anything
    he did in the chamber or in committee").

    -45- -45-













    Brewster, 408 U.S. at 516 ("In every case thus far before ________

    this Court, the Speech or Debate Clause has been limited to

    an act which was clearly a part of the legislative process." _________________________________________

    (emphasis added)).

    It is not enough, as the majority suggests, that

    the practice challenged here "affects" the way the

    legislature conducts its affairs or "colors the very

    conditions under which legislators" do their work. In

    Hutchinson v. Proxmire, the Supreme Court, in refusing to __________ ________

    extend legislative immunity to certain statements made by a

    senator in a press release, acknowledged that a senator's

    ability to make such statements was arguably "essential to

    the functioning of the Senate" and conceded that such

    statements affected the legislative environment. 443 U.S. at

    130, 131 ("We may assume that a Member's published statements

    exert some influence on other votes in the Congress and

    therefore have a relationship to the legislative and

    deliberative process."). Yet, the Court concluded that no

    legislative immunity attached to such statements.19 In

    doing so, it observed that it had, in the past, "carefully

    distinguished between what is only 'related to the due _____________________

    ____________________

    19. Similarly, in Bond v. Floyd, 385 U.S. 116 (1966), the ____ _____
    Supreme Court allowed a suit to go forward challenging on
    First Amendment grounds the constitutionality of certain
    legislative resolutions preventing the seating of Julian Bond
    in the Georgia legislature that had been passed in response
    to political statements by Bond that had apparently
    displeased his fellow legislators.

    -46- -46-













    functioning of the legislative process,' and what constitutes ___________ ___________

    the legislative process entitled to immunity under the _________________________

    [Speech or Debate] Clause." Id. at 131 (emphases added; ___

    citation omitted). Here, the defendants' challenged

    practices, while perhaps "related to the due functioning of

    the legislative process," simply do not "constitute[] the

    legislative process" in the sense necessary to trigger

    absolute legislative immunity. Cf. United States v. McDade, ___ _____________ ______

    28 F.3d 283, 299 (3d Cir. 1994) (declining to extend

    legislative immunity for acts which, "although [they

    comprised] a necessary precondition for the performance of

    [legislative] acts," could not be said to be "an integral

    part of Congress's deliberative and communicative

    processes"), cert. denied, 115 S. Ct. 1312 (1995). ____________

    That the defendants' challenged practices are not

    "legislative" in the sense necessary to trigger immunity and

    that the plaintiffs' claim for injunctive relief is not

    barred -- most clearly as it names the House doorkeeper -- is

    established by a venerable line of Supreme Court authority.

    In Kilbourn v. Thompson, 103 U.S. 168 (1881), the Court found ________ ________

    that members of the U.S. House of Representatives were

    entitled to legislative immunity in a lawsuit arising from an

    unconstitutional House resolution that had authorized the

    arrest of the plaintiff. However, the Court permitted the _________

    suit to go forward against the House's Sergeant at Arms, who



    -47- -47-













    had merely executed the unconstitutional arrest warrant. See ________ ___

    id. at 202. As the Supreme Court later summarized the ___

    holding of Kilbourn: "That the House could with impunity ________

    order an unconstitutional arrest afforded no protection for

    those who made the arrest." Gravel, 408 U.S. at 618. The ______

    unconstitutional "resolution was subject to judicial review,"

    the Court explained, "insofar as its execution impinged on a

    citizen's rights." Id. ___

    Some ninety years after Kilbourn, in Powell v. ________ ______

    McCormack, the Court reaffirmed the principle that a suit for _________

    injunctive relief brought against a legislative employee in

    an enforcement-type capacity is not barred by legislative ___

    immunity. 395 U.S. at 504-05. There, the Court held that

    the defendant congressmen were entitled to legislative

    immunity for their unconstitutional refusal to seat Adam

    Clayton Powell as a Member of the U.S. House of

    Representatives. See id. at 506. Applying the teaching of ___ ___

    Kilbourn, the Court went on to hold that the doctrine of ________

    legislative immunity did not bar a judicial determination of ___

    the merits of plaintiffs' constitutional claims, to the

    extent that those claims were asserted against the

    legislative employees who had merely been responsible for

    enforcing the House's resolution, namely, the Sergeant at _________

    Arms, the Clerk, and the Doorkeeper. See id. at 504-06. The ___ ___

    Court added that those officials could not assert legislative



    -48- -48-













    immunity on the ground that they had simply been "acting

    pursuant to express orders of the House." Id. at 504.20 ___

    The Court in Powell thus "reasserted judicial power to ______

    determine the validity of legislative actions impinging on

    individual rights" in an action for prospective relief

    brought against the legislative functionaries charged with

    implementing the allegedly unconstitutional activity.

    Gravel, 408 U.S. at 620. ______

    The Court had applied similar reasoning in

    Dombrowski v. Eastland, 387 U.S. 82 (1967) (per curiam), __________ ________

    decided shortly before Powell. In that case, which arose out ______

    of an allegedly illegal raid, the Court sustained the defense

    of legislative immunity with respect to the Chairman of a

    subcommittee of the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee for

    issuing subpoenas to gather information, but declined to

    extend immunity to the subcommittee's counsel, who had

    allegedly participated in the execution of the illegal raid

    to obtain the same information. See id. at 84. Dombrowski ___ ___ __________

    thus supports the principle that a legislative employee sued

    for his role in carrying out or executing an (immunized)

    ____________________

    20. I respectfully disagree, therefore, with the majority's
    suggestion that the legislative immunity doctrine protects
    any legislative officials "who do no more than carry out the
    will of the body by enforcing [Rule 45] as a part of their
    official duties." To the extent that the decision in
    Consumers Union of United States, Inc. v. Periodical _____________________________________________ __________
    Correspondents' Ass'n, 515 F.2d 1341 (D.C. Cir. 1975), can be _____________________
    read for a contrary proposition, I would decline to follow
    it.

    -49- -49-













    legislative directive may be answerable to a private citizen

    whose rights have been violated. See Gravel, 408 U.S. at ___ ______

    619-20.

    More recently, in Supreme Court of Virginia v. ___________________________

    Consumers Union of the United States, Inc., 446 U.S. 719 _____________________________________________

    (1980), the Supreme Court was presented with an action

    brought under 42 U.S.C. 1983 asserting a First Amendment

    challenge against certain attorney disciplinary rules that

    had been enacted by the Virginia Supreme Court. The

    plaintiffs sought declaratory and injunctive relief, naming

    the Virginia Court and its Chief Justice (among others) as

    defendants. The Supreme Court concluded that the Virginia

    Court, in propounding the disciplinary rules, had acted in a

    legislative (not judicial) capacity. The Virginia Court was

    held entitled to absolute legislative immunity for acts

    pertaining to the enactment of the disciplinary rules, e.g., ____

    refusing to amend the rules to comport with the Constitution.

    See id. at 733-34. The Supreme Court further observed, ___ ___

    however, that the Virginia Court performed not only a

    legislative role with respect to the disciplinary rules, but

    also had enforcement authority. See id. at 734. The Court ___________ ___ ___

    concluded that to the extent that the plaintiffs' section

    1983 action sought prospective relief against the Virginia

    Court in its enforcement capacity, the doctrine of ___________

    legislative immunity did not bar the suit. Id. at 736 ("[W]e ___



    -50- -50-













    believe that the Virginia Court and its chief justice

    properly were held liable in their enforcement capacities.

    . . . For this reason the Virginia Court and its members were

    proper defendants in a suit for declaratory and injunctive

    relief, just as other enforcement officers and agencies

    were."). ____________________

    21. Moreover, the defendants' actions in restricting access The Supreme Court's decisions in Kilbourn, ________
    to the floor and lobbying can be viewed as administrative
    (rather than legislative) in nature, and thus not entitled to Dombrowski, Powell, and Supreme Court of Virginia establish __________ ______ _________________________
    immunity on that additional ground. Because immunity is
    defined by the functions it serves, Forrester v. White, 484 _________ _____ that the doctrine of legislative immunity does not bar a
    U.S. 219, 227 (1988), even legislators themselves are not
    immune for actions taken in an administrative capacity. In judicial determination of a plaintiff's constitutional claim
    Forrester, a state court judge enjoyed no judicial immunity _________
    for the administrative acts of demoting and dismissing a to the extent that the claim is one for injunctive relief and
    probation officer. Even though the acts "may have been quite
    important in providing the necessary conditions of a sound is asserted against a defendant simply for his role in
    adjudicative system," the decisions underlying the acts were
    generic in nature, not intrinsically adjudicative or peculiar enforcing a legislative directive that affects individual _________
    to the judicial function. See id. at 229. A "judge who ___ ___
    hires or fires a probation officer [could not] meaningfully rights. See Gravel, 408 U.S. at 618-21. The plaintiffs' ___ ______
    be distinguished from a district attorney who hires and fires
    assistant district attorneys, or indeed from any other action here -- most clearly as it names the House doorkeeper
    Executive Branch official who is responsible for making such
    employment decisions." Id.; see also Negron-Gaztambide v. ___ ________ _________________ -- comprises precisely such a claim: the doorkeeper is being
    Hernandez-Torres, 35 F.3d 25, 28 (1st Cir. 1994) (legislators ________________
    not protected by legislative immunity for administrative act sued solely for his role in enforcing the challenged
    of dismissing librarian), cert. denied, 115 S. Ct. 1098 _____________
    (1995). exclusion of all but government lobbyists from lobbying on
    Under this functional analysis, the defendant
    doorkeeper's acts in determining whether particular the House floor, and the claim seeks only to enjoin such
    individuals were authorized to enter the House chamber are of
    an "administrative" nature within the meaning of Negron- _______ enforcement. The defendant doorkeeper is not distinguishable
    Gaztambide. See id. These acts constitute determinations __________ ___ ___
    concerning admission and exclusion, no different in nature in any meaningful way from the doorkeeper whose claim of
    than those that might be made by an official in the executive
    branch entrusted with controlling access to a Governor's absolute legislative immunity was rejected in Powell. See ______ ___
    press conference or, indeed, a doorkeeper standing outside a
    privately-owned building. The doorkeeper's acts do not Powell, 395 U.S. at 504. I would conclude, therefore, that ______
    entail any peculiarly legislative decisionmaking -- in this
    case, those decisions were already embodied in the House's the defendant doorkeeper is not entitled to assert the
    adoption of Rule 45. The acts of the doorkeeper in
    administering Rule 45 to particular persons seeking access to defense of absolute legislative immunity,21 and I would
    the House chamber are thus not legislative, but
    administrative and not entitled to absolute immunity.

    -51- -51-













    accordingly proceed to a determination of the First Amendment

    question presented.22

    Reaching the merits of plaintiffs' constitutional

    claim, importantly, does no injury to the classic interests

    protected by the legislative immunity doctrine. The common

    law immunity that state legislators enjoy is "similar in

    origin and rationale to that accorded Congressmen under the

    Speech or Debate Clause." Supreme Court of Virginia, 446 ___________________________

    U.S. at 731. The actions of members of the House in

    speaking, debating, or voting on matters before the Rhode

    Island House are not being challenged. There is no

    infringement on the "fullest liberty of speech" of House

    members, nor does this case raise the need to protect House

    members "from the resentment of every one, however powerful,

    to whom the exercise of that liberty may occasion offense."

    Tenney v. Brandhove, 341 U.S. 367, 373 (1951) (citation ______ _________

    omitted).

    The legislative immunity doctrine is not meant for

    the protection of the legislators for their own benefit, "but

    to support the rights of the people, by enabling their

    ____________________

    22. As far as the record shows, the defendant Speaker did
    not participate in the exclusion of private lobbyists from
    the legislative floor. There is no need to decide, at this
    time, whether, if the Speaker did participate in other
    aspects of Rule 45's enforcement, he would be entitled to
    legislative immunity in an action brought against him solely
    for his role in such enforcement. Relief against the
    doorkeeper's enforcement of the Rule may provide plaintiffs
    with all the relief necessary.

    -52- -52-













    representatives to execute the functions of their office

    without fear of prosecutions, civil or criminal." Id. at __

    373-74 (citation omitted); see also Brewster, 408 U.S. at 507 ________ ________

    ("The immunities of the Speech or Debate Clause were not

    written into the Constitution simply for the personal or

    private benefit of Members of Congress, but to protect the

    integrity of the legislative process by insuring the

    independence of individual legislators."). Reaching the

    merits of the constitutional question presented here poses no

    threat to the independence of the Rhode Island state

    legislators.23

    Historically, the privileges of the Speech or

    Debate Clause emerged from a need to protect the legislature

    from executive intimidation and harassment. See Robert J. ___

    Reinstein & Harvey A. Silverglate, Legislative Privilege and _________________________

    the Separation of Powers, 86 Harv. L. Rev. 1113, 1120-44 __________________________

    (1973). Indeed, the purpose underlying the Speech or Debate

    Clause, that is, to enable speech critical of the government,

    also underlies the First Amendment's protection of free

    speech. Cf. Akhil R. Amar, The Bill of Rights as a ___ ___________________________

    Constitution, 100 Yale L.J. 1131, 1151 (1991). It would be ____________

    ironic indeed to permit the defendants to invoke those

    ____________________

    23. Davids v. Akers, 549 F.2d 120 (9th Cir. 1977), does not ______ _____
    support the proposition that the defendants' practices are
    immune from constitutional scrutiny. The court there in fact
    reached the merits and scrutinized the plaintiffs' First
    Amendment claims, but found them wanting.

    -53- -53-













    immunities to benefit communications between the executive

    branch (government lobbyists) and the legislative branch, to

    the exclusion of communication from groups of private

    citizens. Judicial illumination of the immunity, as James

    Madison said, must be guided by "the reason and the necessity

    of the privilege." Letter from James Madison to Philip

    Doddridge (June 6, 1832), in 4 Letters and Other Writings of __ _____________________________

    James Madison 221 (1884). That reason and necessity dictate _____________

    that this court not credit the immunity defense on the facts

    of this case.


    First Amendment _______________

    Is the First Amendment violated by the defendants'

    practice of admitting government lobbyists onto the House

    floor to lobby while excluding those not employed by the

    government? The answer, I believe, is that the defendants

    have violated the First Amendment.

    Several interrelated and fundamental First

    Amendment interests are offended by the defendants'

    practices. The defendants have excluded the plaintiffs'

    political speech and have done so in a discriminatory manner.

    The defendants' practices have resulted in viewpoint- and

    content-based discrimination, favoring government speakers

    and government viewpoints and excluding non-government

    speakers and non-government viewpoints. The restrictions on

    speech posed by the practices are severe in their effects.


    -54- -54-













    Defendants' discriminatory practices also permit the

    government unchecked power to act in its self interest,

    rather than in the interest of the citizens. These effects

    strike at the heart of the First Amendment, and subject

    defendants' practices to the highest level of scrutiny, a

    scrutiny defendants cannot withstand.24 Those practices

    are not narrowly tailored to meet a compelling state

    interest, and therefore fail to pass constitutional muster.

    The parties have framed the First Amendment issue

    in terms of whether the House Chamber floor is a "public

    forum." But the "public forum" doctrine, itself

    problematic,25 is particularly ill-suited to this case. It

    ____________________

    24. There are additional reasons to apply heightened
    scrutiny. In footnote 4 of United States v. Carolene ______________ ________
    Products Co., 304 U.S. 144, 152 (1938), oft-quoted for other ____________
    language, the Court noted the possibility that:

    legislation which restricts those
    political processes which can ordinarily
    be expected to bring about repeal of
    undesirable legislation [might] be
    subjected to more exacting judicial
    scrutiny under the general prohibitions
    of the Fourteenth Amendment than are most
    other types of legislation.

    The defendants' practices are analogous to just such
    restrictive legislation. See John H. Ely, Democracy and ___ ______________
    Distrust 76-77 (1980). ________

    25. At best, the public forum doctrine is an "analytical
    shorthand for the principles that have guided the Court's
    decisions." Cornelius v. NAACP Legal Defense and Educational _________ ___________________________________
    Fund, Inc., 473 U.S. 788, 820 (Blackmun, J., dissenting). ___________
    "Beyond confusing the issues, an excessive focus on the
    public character of some forums, coupled with inadequate
    attention to the precise details of the restrictions on

    -55- -55-













    is peculiar to attempt to fit the doctrine to the floor of

    the chamber of a legislative body at work. Indeed, the very

    language of "public forum" masks the issues at stake.

    As recognized by the district court, the approach

    taken by this Court in AIDS Action Committee of _____________________________

    Massachusetts, Inc. v. Massachusetts Bay Transportation ____________________ ___________________________________

    Authority, 42 F.3d 1 (1994), is more apt. This court held _________

    that where the government was the proprietor of the property

    it was inappropriate to analyze under the "relatively murky"

    public forum doctrine a discriminatory government practice

    affecting First Amendment rights. Id. at 9. At issue in ___

    AIDS Action Committee was the MBTA's practice of refusing, on _____________________

    the grounds that its policy was not to run any sexually

    suggestive advertisements, to display condom advertisements

    in its subway and trolley cars, while it was at the same time

    running sexually suggestive movie advertisements. This court

    analyzed and rejected the government's claim that its

    practices were viewpoint neutral, finding the government

    practice gave rise to an impermissible appearance of

    viewpoint discrimination. Because this viewpoint

    discrimination disposed of the case, there was no need for

    ____________________

    expression, can leave speech inadequately protected in some
    cases, while unduly hampering state and local authorities in
    others." Laurence H. Tribe, American Constitutional Law 992- ___________________________
    93 (2d ed. 1988) (footnotes omitted); see also Daniel A. ___ ____
    Farber & John E. Nowak, The Misleading Nature of Public Forum _____________________________________
    Analysis: Content and Context in First Amendment _____________________________________________________________
    Adjudication, 70 Va. L. Rev. 1219 (1984). ____________

    -56- -56-













    the court to determine whether the cars were a public forum.

    For similar reasons, I do not use conventional "public forum"

    terminology.

    The discrimination in speech practiced by the

    defendant must be understood against those interests that the

    First Amendment has repeatedly been recognized as serving.

    The First Amendment reflects a distrust of the government

    making judgments about what speech is worthwhile,

    particularly where political speech is involved.26 A

    central commitment of the First Amendment is that "debate on

    public issues should be uninhibited, robust, and wide-open."

    New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254, 270 (1964). ___________________ ________

    "The maintenance of the opportunity for free political

    discussion to the end that government may be responsive to __ ___ ___ ____ __________ ___ __ __________ __

    the will of the people and that changes may be obtained by ___ ____ __ ___ ______

    lawful means, an opportunity essential to the security of the

    Republic, is a fundamental principle of our constitutional

    system." Stromberg v. California, 283 U.S. 359, 369 (1931) _________ __________

    ____________________

    26. "An insistence that government's burden is greatest for
    regulating political speech is based on a sensible view of
    government's incentives. It is in this setting that
    government is most likely to be biased or to be acting on the
    basis of illegitimate, venal, or partial considerations.
    Government is rightly distrusted when it is regulating speech
    that might harm its own interests; and when the speech at
    issue is political, its own interests are almost always at
    stake. It follows that the premise of distrust of government
    is strongest when politics is at issue. And when the premise
    of distrust is strongest, the burden of justification is
    highest." Cass R. Sunstein, Democracy and the Problem of ______________________________
    Free Speech 134 (1993). ___________

    -57- -57-













    (emphasis added). "'[T]here is practically universal

    agreement that a major purpose of [the First] Amendment [is]

    to protect the free discussion of governmental affairs' . . .

    . 'For speech concerning public affairs is more than self-

    expression; it is the essence of self-government.'" Burson ______

    v. Freeman, 504 U.S. 191, 196 (1992) (quoting Mills v. _______ _____

    Alabama, 384 U.S. 214, 218 (1966) and Garrison v. Louisiana, _______ ________ _________

    379 U.S. 64, 74-75 (1964)). Political expression is at the

    center of the rights protected by the First Amendment. See ___

    id.; Robert H. Bork, Neutral Principles and Some First ___ ____________________________________

    Amendment Problems, 47 Ind. L.J. 1, 29 (1971); Cass R. ___________________

    Sunstein, Free Speech Now, 59 U. Chi. L. Rev. 255, 301 ________________

    (1992).

    The defendants' practices in excluding the voice of

    private, but not government, lobbyists from the House floor

    imposes a severe burden on political speech. Lobbying aims

    at influencing the votes of legislators; it attempts to

    affect the outcome of the political processes. Such speech

    is "at the heart of the First Amendment's protection." First _____

    National Bank of Boston v. Bellotti, 435 U.S. 765, 776 _________________________ ________

    (1978). More specifically, lobbying involves the attempt by

    groups of citizens to have their hired representatives

    persuade legislators to legislate in ways that are favorable







    -58- -58-













    to the interests of those citizens.27 "In a representative

    democracy such as this, these branches of government act on

    behalf of the people and, to a very large extent, the whole

    concept of representation depends upon the ability of the

    people to make their wishes known to their representatives."

    Eastern Railroad Presidents Conf. v. Noerr Motor Freight, ___________________________________ _____________________

    Inc., 365 U.S. 127, 137 (1961); see also Meyer v. Grant, 486 ____ ___ ____ _____ _____

    U.S. 414, 421 (1988) ("[B]oth the expression of a desire for

    political change and a discussion of the merits of the

    proposed change" are "core political speech."). Where a

    challenged practice, as here, imposes a severe burden on

    political expression, courts must review the practice with






    ____________________

    27. Lobbying may be protected not only as speech, but also
    as an exercise of the right to petition. That right,
    explicitly embodied in the First Amendment, encompasses the
    right of citizens to communicate with their legislative
    representatives. See Eastern Railroad Presidents Conf. v. ___ __________________________________
    Noerr Motor Freight, Inc., 365 U.S. 127, 137 (1961) (stating __________________________
    that the right of petition protects "the ability of the
    people to make their wishes known to their representatives").
    As lobbying constitutes an important means by which citizens
    can collectively make their wishes known to the legislature,
    lobbying itself may fall under the coverage of the Petition
    Clause. See id. at 137-38; United States v. Nofziger, 878 ___ ___ _____________ ________
    F.2d 442, 453 (D.C. Cir.) (reading Supreme Court precedents
    for the proposition that lobbying, "insofar as it constitutes
    self-representation," is protected by the First Amendment
    right to petition), cert. denied, 493 U.S. 1003 (1989); see ____________ ___
    generally Amar, Bill of Rights, supra, at 1155-56 (suggesting _________ ______________ _____
    that part of the purpose of the Petition Clause was to
    guarantee that citizens would have a means of informing
    representatives of their needs and concerns).

    -59- -59-













    strict scrutiny. Cf. Burdick v. Takushi, 504 U.S. 428, 434 ___ _______ _______

    (1992).28

    The private lobbyist restriction is subject to

    strict scrutiny not only because it severely burdens

    political speech, but also because it discriminates both on

    the basis of viewpoint and content. See Burson, 504 U.S. at ___ ______

    197. The restriction constitutes content-based

    discrimination because it targets a particular kind of

    speech. It is also viewpoint-based discrimination because it

    excludes a particular set of messages. The result is a

    speaker-based ban and a content-based bar that gives

    advantage to the government's viewpoint.29 The

    discrimination practiced by defendants thus permits

    expression of the "particular message favored by the

    government" and stifles all other speech. See Turner ___ ______

    Broadcasting System, Inc. v. FCC, 114 S. Ct. 2445, 2458 ___________________________ ___

    (1994); id. at 2477 (O'Connor, J., concurring in part and ___


    ____________________

    28. Lobbying is not subject to a lower standard of
    protection even if the hired representatives do it for a
    profit. See Board of Trustees of the State Univ. of N.Y. v. ___ _____________________________________________
    Fox, 492 U.S. 469, 482 (1989). ___

    29. That the non-governmental viewpoint may in fact be an
    entire class of varying viewpoints does not make the
    restriction any the less viewpoint discrimination. See ___
    Rosenberger v. Rector and Visitors of the Univ. of Va., 115 ___________ _________________________________________
    S. Ct. 2510, 2518 (1995) (rejecting argument that "no
    viewpoint discrimination occurs because the [challenged
    rules] discriminate against an entire class of viewpoints",
    and saying that the "declaration that debate is not skewed so
    long as multiple voices are silenced is simply wrong").

    -60- -60-













    dissenting in part) ("The First Amendment does more than just

    bar government from intentionally suppressing speech of which

    it disapproves. It also generally prohibits the government

    from excepting certain kinds of speech from regulation

    because it thinks the speech is especially valuable.").

    The defendants' practices thus cannot be

    constitutional unless they are narrowly tailored to achieve a

    compelling state interest. Id. at 2467 ("[S]peaker-based laws ___

    demand strict scrutiny when they reflect the Government's

    preference for the substance of what the favored speakers

    have to say (or aversion to what the disfavored speakers have

    to say)."); First Nat'l Bank of Boston, 435 U.S. at 785 ____________________________

    (First Amendment forbids government from "dictating the

    subjects about which persons may speak and the speakers who

    may address a public issue."). The government lobbyist

    preference as applied here fails that test.

    The dangers of the defendants' practices are

    plain.30 By simply excluding all voices save the voices of

    government lobbyists, the government could easily


    ____________________

    30. In the franchise cases, corollary concerns about the
    representative nature of government led the Supreme Court to
    invalidate laws which resulted in groups of persons being
    frozen out of the decision process. Reynolds v. Sims, 377 ________ ____
    U.S. 533 (1964); Harper v. Virginia Bd. of Elections, 383 ______ __________________________
    U.S. 663 (1966); Carrington v. Rash, 380 U.S. 89 (1965) __________ ____
    (invalidating Texas statute denying franchise to those in
    military who moved into the state where Texas attempted to
    justify the statute by arguing military personnel might
    otherwise start influencing elections).

    -61- -61-













    suppress support for a minority party or
    an unpopular cause, or . . . exclude the
    expression of certain points of view from
    the marketplace of ideas.

    Members of the City Council v. Taxpayers for Vincent, 466 _____________________________ ______________________

    U.S. 789, 804 (1984). These effects are "so plainly

    illegitimate that they would immediately invalidate the

    rule." Id. "[Rhode Island] has no . . . authority to ___

    license one side of [the] debate to fight freestyle, while

    requiring the other to follow Marquis of Queensbury Rules."

    R.A.V. v. City of St. Paul, Minn., 112 S. Ct. 2538, 2548 ______ _________________________

    (1992).

    Nor is this risk hypothetical. The Rhode Island

    House is singular in the lack of opportunity for private

    citizens to have direct, effective communications with

    legislators. The ability to communicate directly is a

    considerable advantage. The situation created by the private

    lobbyist ban is that akin to a monopoly over a single channel

    of communication, where the government has discriminated in

    providing access to that channel and also determined the

    content of what flows through the channel.

    Against this panoply of dangers31 must be

    ____________________

    31. Defendants' argument poses yet other dangers too. If
    the legislature gets information from nowhere but the
    executive branch, the legislature's ability to act
    independently, and thus to be a check and balance to the
    executive is undercut. This corollary danger of the
    undercutting of the separation of powers at the state level
    is keenly illustrated by the amicus brief filed by the
    executive branch, urging strongly its interest in

    -62- -62-













    measured the interests attributed to the defendants. The

    majority finds, in the immunity analysis, that there are two

    such interests32 and that the interests would pass a rational

    basis test, at least for determining whether to carve out an

    exception to the immunity it would grant. Without accepting

    the premise that the only exceptions to immunity are

    irrational legislative acts, neither of those interests is

    sufficient to withstand strict scrutiny.33 Indeed, the

    ____________________

    communicating with the legislature and supporting the
    exclusion of private voices.

    32. To the extent that the House Rule on its face was
    justified as an effort to maintain decorum and control noise
    to a level which did not interfere with the members work, the
    record shows instances in which government lobbyists on the __________
    floor were objected to by members as causing problems. The
    defendants accordingly do not try to justify their
    discriminatory distinction on such grounds.

    33. Defendants' practice does not even meet the less
    rigorous test of intermediate scrutiny. Intermediate
    scrutiny of restrictions has traditionally been applied to
    commercial speech that concerns unlawful activity or is
    misleading, see Florida Bar v. Went For It, Inc., 115 S. Ct. ___ ___________ _________________
    2371, 2375 (1995), and to content-neutral restrictions that
    impose an incidental burden on speech, see Turner ___ ______
    Broadcasting, 114 S. Ct. at 2469. The test has three related ____________
    prongs: first, the government must assert a substantial
    interest in support of the regulation; second, the government
    must demonstrate that the restriction directly and materially
    advances that interest; and third, the regulation must be
    "narrowly drawn." Florida Bar, 115 S. Ct. at 2376. The ___________
    government's asserted interest in having government lobbyists
    on the floor of the House, to the exclusion of private
    lobbyists, is to have them provide information. But the
    government has not shown why the interest in having only
    government provide information, and not private groups, is
    "substantial." Relatedly, the restriction is not "narrowly
    tailored" to meet the information provision goal because it
    is overbroad and serves to exclude valuable information that
    private lobbyists might provide.

    -63- -63-













    defendants' bedrock argument is different again, and it, too,

    is insufficient.

    The majority credits reasons of bolstering

    legislative independence and of having government lobbyists

    act to provide information. But legislative independence was

    proffered as a reason for Rule 45 on its face, which excludes

    all lobbyists, and not to the distinction between government

    and non-government lobbyists.34

    Defendants argue that allowing only governmental

    lobbyists access to the floor of the legislature serves the

    goal of allowing legislators to receive valuable information.

    Defendants, however, have established no demonstrable

    interest in receiving information from the government to the

    exclusion of private sources. The state's purported interest

    in limiting the information available to legislators to those

    ____________________

    34. A goal of legislative independence is quite legitimate.
    But the interest distinctively served by the private lobbyist
    restriction is to display to the public the legislature's
    special hostility towards the private interest groups that
    attempt to influence their votes. "The politicians of [Rhode
    Island] are entitled to express that hostility -- but not
    through the means of imposing unique limitations upon
    speakers who (however benightedly) disagree." R.A.V., 112 S. ______
    Ct. at 2550. "The point of the First Amendment is that
    majority preferences must be expressed in some fashion other
    than silencing speech on the basis of its content." Id. at ___
    2548. "[T]he First Amendment as we understand it today rests
    on the premise that it is government power, rather than
    private power, that is the main threat to free expression;
    and as a consequence, the Amendment imposes substantial
    limitations on the Government even when it is trying to serve
    concededly praiseworthy goals." Turner Broadcasting, 114 S. ___________________
    Ct. at 2480 (O'Connor, J., concurring in part and dissenting
    in part).

    -64- -64-













    sources controlled by its own interests is hardly a

    compelling one.35 "A State's claim that it is enhancing

    the ability of its citizenry to make wise decisions by

    restricting the flow of information to them must be viewed

    with some skepticism. . . . '[I]t is often true that the best

    means to that end is to open the channels of communication

    rather than to close them.'" Anderson v. Celebrezze, 460 U.S. ________ __________

    780, 798 (1983) (quoting Virginia Pharmacy Board v. Virginia _______________________ ________

    Consumer Council, 425 U.S. 748, 770 (1976)). ________________

    Further, the private lobbyist restriction is not

    narrowly tailored to serve the legislature's asserted

    interest in receiving information. Simon & Schuster, Inc. v. ______________________

    Members of the New York State Crime Victims Bd., 112 S. Ct. ________________________________________________


    ____________________

    35. Defendants attempt to liken their private lobbying
    restriction to the restrictions on lobbying imposed by Rule
    XXXII of the United States House of Representatives.
    Defendants' analogy, however, works against them and
    demonstrates that there is no "compelling" need to give
    government lobbyists access to the floor to lobby while
    excluding others. Unlike the defendants' practices, the U.S.
    House of Representatives Rule does not allow government
    lobbyists to lobby while excluding private lobbyists. Rule
    XXXII is neutral and excludes all lobbyists. Even those
    normally afforded the courtesy of admission to the floor --
    former Members of the House, former Parliamentarians, former
    elected officers, and former elected minority employees of
    the House -- are denied admission if they or their
    organizations have any interest in matters before the House.
    Similarly, staff of a Member are not allowed to lobby on the
    occasions they are admitted to the House. That the United
    States House of Representatives has chosen neutrality and not
    to grant preference to the government lobbyists and
    information providers (if there is any distinction) undercuts
    any argument by defendants that they have a compelling need
    to give preference to the government.

    -65- -65-













    501, 511 n.** (1991). In this case the restriction excludes

    valuable information from the legislative purview. As the

    majority points out, lobbying groups have vastly different

    interests and perspectives. Access to such varied and

    independent sources of information, far from impeding the

    legislature's access to useful information, surely functions

    to increase both the quality and the quantity of the total

    set of information available.

    The provision of information from executive branch

    agencies to members of the legislature is a very legitimate

    interest of government. The majority suggests there is a

    distinction between mere information providing and lobbying,

    but that distinction is contradicted by the record. The

    factual findings of the district court leave no doubt that

    the court considered the contention that government lobbyists

    were engaging in mere "information-providing" and rejected it

    as a factual matter.

    Even if the distinction were tenable on the facts

    here, as it is not, it does not provide refuge from the First

    Amendment. There is plainly value to the speech by

    government lobbyists, whether it be heavy-handed lobbying or

    more lightly dexterous provision of information. See Block ___ _____

    v. Meese, 793 F.2d 1303, 1312-14 (D.C. Cir.) (Scalia, J.), _____

    cert. denied, 478 U.S. 1021 (1986). But the value of _____________

    government speech is not the point. Rather, the point is



    -66- -66-













    that the government has permitted itself to speak while

    prohibiting non-government speech.

    Speech from non-government speakers, including

    lobbyists, is also valuable. Indeed, while lobbying may be

    subject to registration and disclosure,36 no case has ever

    suggested that lobbying, including its information-gathering

    and providing component, could be banned entirely. But that

    issue need not be reached here, for what is clear is that the

    government must keep the playing field level.37

    Moreover, even if there were greater reason to

    credit the distinction between "information providing" and

    "lobbying," First Amendment "due process" type issues would

    still preclude reliance on the distinction to justify the

    restriction of First Amendment rights. See Henry P. ___

    Monaghan, First Amendment "Due Process", 83 Harv. L. Rev. ______________________________

    ____________________

    36. This case does not involve any issue of government
    subsidy, creation of a government program, or of the taxable
    status of organizations involved in lobbying. Cf. Regan v. ___ _____
    Taxation With Representation, 461 U.S. 540 (1983). ____________________________

    37. It is recognized in the political science literature
    that much of what modern day lobbyists do involves the
    gathering and provision of information to legislators. Cf. ___
    Edward O. Laumann et al., Washington Lawyers and Others: The __________________________________
    Structure of Washington Representation, 37 Stan. L. Rev. 465, ______________________________________
    495 (1985); James Q. Wilson, Political Organizations xix-xx _______________________
    (1995); Jeffrey S. Banks & Barry R. Weingast, The Political ______________
    Control of Bureaucracies under Asymmetric Information, 36 Am. _____________________________________________________
    J. Pol. Sci. 509 (1992). Political scientists have found
    that lobbyists' primary strategy in influencing legislators
    is to provide information to counteract the similar efforts
    of other groups, not to achieve influence through pressure
    tactics. See David Austen-Smith & John R. Wright, ___
    Counteractive Lobbying, 38 Am. J. Pol. Sci. 25 (1994). ______________________

    -67- -67-













    518, 519 (1970) ("If the Constitution requires elaborate

    procedural safeguards in the obscenity area, a fortiori it

    should require equivalent procedural protection when the

    speech involved - for example, political speech - implicates

    more central first amendment concerns."). Even if there were

    a discernible distinction, the "difference between factual

    statement and advocacy may turn upon the debatability of the

    facts described as true, or the pertinency of facts omitted."

    Block, 793 F.2d at 1313. The distinction between providing _____

    information and acting for the purpose of "influencing in any

    manner the passage of legislation" is exceedingly fine.

    Here, legislators testified that "information" provided did

    in fact influence them on how to vote. The House has

    recognized that information may influence votes. Rule 45 on

    its face provides that "no person . . . shall either directly ________

    or indirectly" engage in the practice of lobbying. The House _____________

    has thus drawn the line to preclude any activity, even

    indirect, to influence votes. The First Amendment puts the

    burden on the government to finely tailor its practices to

    permissible goals, and no such fine tailoring was done by

    defendants' practices here. See Rubin v. Coors Brewing Co., ___ _____ _________________

    115 S. Ct. 1585, 1593 (1995).

    The real argument that the defendants have

    articulated to justify their actions is their claim that

    government lobbyists represent the people while non-



    -68- -68-













    government lobbyists do not. Accordingly, they say, there is

    no cause to worry. That is an inversion of constitutional

    values. While there may be value to the government voice, it

    cannot be the only voice. To permit that to be so would be

    to stifle discussion. See Buckley v. Valeo, 424 U.S. 1, 14 ___ _______ _____

    (1976) ("Discussion of public issues . . .[is] integral to

    the operation of the system of government established by our

    Constitution. The First Amendment affords the broadest

    protection to such political expression in order 'to assure

    [the] unfettered interchange of ideas for the bringing about

    of political and social changes desired by the people.'"

    (citing Roth v. United States, 354 U.S. 476 (1957))). ____ _____________

    There is another danger, and that is that the

    government's voice will not truly represent the interests of

    the public.38 Government should theoretically represent

    ____________________

    38. Defendants express a legitimate concern that government
    may be captured by "special interests." Apart from the fact
    that the government itself is frequently its own special
    interest group, the solution to the problem of a government
    captured by "special interests" would hardly be to have the
    government speak only to itself.
    Moreover, many of the plaintiff groups may hardly
    be characterized as the centers of wealth, power and
    privilege. Citizens, who themselves may not be affluent or
    powerful, band together in groups to lobby the government,
    whether the groups be, to give but two examples, the Rhode
    Island State Right To Life Committee, Inc., or the local
    chapter of the ACLU. These groups may be thought to be a way
    to avoid the capturing of government by "special interests."
    Defendants' practices may thus thrust them headlong into the
    dangers they profess to wish to avoid. Central to effecting
    a system of democratic self-governance is enabling private
    interests to be able to act in concert. Without collective
    action it may be impossible to alter the status quo. See ___

    -69- -69-













    the people and not represent itself. Theory and reality

    often depart. The government is not always a mirror of the

    people. Government employees today are recognized as

    constituting their own interest group. See E. Nordlinger, On ___ __

    the Autonomy of the Democratic State (1981). ____________________________________

    The Framers had a fear that, once in power,

    legislators had an obvious incentive to use "that power to

    perpetuate themselves or their ilk in office." U.S. Term _________

    Limits, Inc. v. Thornton, 115 S. Ct. 1842, 1911-12 (1995) _____________ ________

    (Thomas, J., dissenting) (pointing out numerous instances of

    modern day legislation and rulemaking that produce the effect

    of perpetuating incumbents in office). T h e F r a m e r s

    recognized this would happen and intended the First Amendment

    to act as a check. James Madison identified the problem of

    government acting in its self-interest, in contrast to the

    interests of those it purported to represent, as one of the

    two fundamental problems of the republican form of

    government.39 "It is of great importance in a republic not

    ____________________

    Sunstein, Democracy and the Problem of Free Speech, supra, at ________________________________________ _____
    245-46.

    39. In a seminal immunity case, Justice Black recognized

    Unfortunately, it is true that
    legislative assemblies, born to defend
    the liberty of the people, have at times
    violated their sacred trusts and become
    the instruments of oppression. . . .
    Those who cherish freedom [under the
    First Amendment] here would do well to
    remember that this freedom cannot long

    -70- -70-













    only to guard the society against the oppression of the _______________________________________________________

    rulers, but to guard one part of society against the ______

    injustice of the other part." The Federalist No. 51, at 161 _____________________

    (James Madison) (Roy P. Fairfield 2d ed. 1981) (emphasis

    added). Madison feared that government might choose to serve

    itself instead of the citizens, saying:

    In framing a government which is to be
    administered by men over men, the great
    difficulty lies in this: you must first
    enable the government to control the
    governed; and in the next place oblige it
    to control itself. A dependence on the
    people is, no doubt, the primary control
    on government; but experience has taught
    mankind the necessity of auxiliary
    precautions.

    Id. at 160; see also Amar, The Bill of Rights, supra, at ___ ___ ____ ____________________ _____

    1132-33. Central among those "auxiliary precautions" in

    obliging the government to control itself from self-interest

    and self-dealing are the protections afforded to citizens by


    ____________________

    survive the legislative snuffing out of
    freedom . . . to speak.

    Tenney v. Brandhove, 341 U.S. 367, 380-81 (1951) (Black, J., ______ _________
    concurring).
    Justice Black echoed concerns voiced earlier by one
    of the Framers of the Constitution and advocates for adoption
    of the Bill of Rights: "No legislative act, therefore,
    Contrary to the Constitution, can be valid. To deny this
    would be to affirm . . . that the representatives of the
    people are superior to the people themselves." The ___
    Federalist No. 78, at 228 (Alexander Hamilton) (Roy P. ___________________
    Fairfield 2d ed. 1981) (reply to "Brutus").





    -71- -71-













    the First Amendment. Defendants' actions violate this

    essential purpose of the First Amendment.

    Accordingly, I would affirm the declaration by the

    district court that the practices of the defendants are

    unconstitutional.40 In my view, the defendants must either

    adhere to the House Rule and exclude all from its floor who

    speak to influence its vote or the House must equally open

    its floor, and not prefer the government's voice. That

    choice belongs to the House. Under the Constitution, the

    choice of preferring the government voice and excluding the

    non-government voices does not.


























    ____________________

    40. The injunction entered by the District Court against the
    House, which was not a party to the suit, was in error.

    -72- -72-