Alliance for Open Society Int'l v. U.S. Agency for Int'l Dev. ( 2012 )


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  •      08-4917-cv
    Alliance for Open Society Int’l v. U.S. Agency for Int’l Dev.
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
    ORDER
    1        At a stated term of the United States Court of Appeals
    2   for the Second Circuit, held at the Daniel Patrick Moynihan
    3   United States Courthouse, 500 Pearl Street, in the City of
    4   New York, on the 2nd day of February, two thousand twelve
    5
    6   - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -X
    7   ALLIANCE FOR OPEN SOCIETY INTERNATIONAL,
    8   INC., PATHFINDER INTERNATIONAL, GLOBAL
    9   HEALTH COUNCIL, INTERACTION,
    10
    11               Plaintiffs-Appellees,
    12
    13   OPEN SOCIETY INSTITUTE,
    14
    15               Plaintiff,
    16
    17               -v.-                                            08-4917-cv
    18
    19   UNITED STATES AGENCY FOR INTERNATIONAL
    20   DEVELOPMENT, RAJIV SHAH,* in his official
    21   capacity as Administrator of the U.S.
    22   Agency for International Development,
    23   and his successors, UNITED STATES CENTERS
    24   FOR DISEASE CONTROL AND PREVENTION, THOMAS R.
    25   FRIEDEN, in his official capacity as
    26   Director of the U.S. Centers for
    27   Disease Control and Prevention, and
    28   his successors, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT
    29   OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES, KATHLEEN
    30   SEBELIUS, in her official capacity as
    31   Secretary of the U.S. Department of
    32   Health and Human Services, and her
    33   successors,
    34
    35            Defendants-Appellants.
    36   - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -X
    *
    Named officials have been substituted for their predecessors
    pursuant to Fed. R. App. P. 43(c)(2).
    1
    2   FOR PLAINTIFFS-APPELLEES:    Rebekah Diller, Benjamin N.
    3                                Cardozo School of Law, New York,
    4                                NY (Laura K. Abel, Brennan
    5                                Center for Justice, NYU School
    6                                of Law, New York, NY; David W.
    7                                Bowker, Wilmer Cutler Pickering
    8                                Hale and Dorr LLP, Washington,
    9                                D.C.; Jason D. Hirsch, Michael
    10                                D. Gottesman, Wilmer Cutler
    11                                Pickering Hale and Dorr LLP, New
    12                                York, NY, on the brief)
    13
    14   FOR DEFENDANTS-APPELLANTS:   Benjamin H. Torrance, Assistant
    15                                United States Attorney for the
    16                                Southern District of New York
    17                                (David S. Jones, Assistant
    18                                United States Attorney, of
    19                                counsel, on the brief) for Preet
    20                                Bharara, United States Attorney
    21                                for the Southern District of New
    22                                York.
    23
    24
    25        Following disposition of this appeal on July 6, 2011,
    26   Defendants-Appellants United States Agency for International
    27   Development, et al., filed a petition for rehearing in banc.
    28   A poll of the active members of the Court having been
    29   conducted, and there being no majority favoring in banc
    30   review, rehearing in banc is hereby DENIED.
    31
    32        Rosemary S. Pooler, Circuit Judge, concurs by opinion
    33   from the denial of rehearing in banc.
    34
    35        José A. Cabranes, Circuit Judge, joined by Reena Raggi
    36   and Debra Ann Livingston, Circuit Judges, dissents by
    37   opinion from the denial of rehearing in banc.
    38
    39
    40                                FOR THE COURT:
    41                                CATHERINE O’HAGAN WOLFE, CLERK
    42
    43
    2
    1   08-4917-cv
    2   Alliance for Open Soc’y Int’l, Inc. v. U.S. Agency for Int’l Dev.
    3
    4
    5                                           UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    6                                              FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
    7
    8                                                               August Term, 2010
    9
    10                             Argued: December 9, 2010                     Decided: July 6, 2011
    11                                          Opinion on Rehearing: February 2, 2012
    12
    13                                                            Docket No. 08-4917-cv
    14
    15   ALLIANCE FOR OPEN SOCIETY INTERNATIONAL, INC., Pathfinder International, Global
    16   Health Council, Interaction,
    17
    18                        Plaintiffs-Appellees,
    19
    20   Open Society Institute,
    21
    22                        Plaintiff,
    23
    24                        v.
    25
    26   UNITED STATES AGENCY FOR INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT, Rajiv Shah, in his official
    27   capacity as Administrator of the U.S. Agency for International Development, and his
    28   successors, United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Thomas R. Frieden,
    29   in his official capacity as Director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
    30   and his successors, United States Department of Health and Human Services, Kathleen
    31   Sebelius, in her official capacity as Secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human
    32   Services, and her successors,
    33
    34                        Defendants-Appellants.
    35
    36
    37                                                                       ***
    38
    39   JOSÉ A. CABRANES, Circuit Judge, with whom Judge RAGGI and Judge LIVINGSTON join, dissenting
    40   from the denial of rehearing en banc:
    41             I respectfully dissent from the decision of the Court to deny rehearing en banc in this case. The
    42   question presented is indisputably one of exceptional importance. It is also one that has divided the
    43   Courts of Appeals.
    1
    1             In appropriating billions of dollars to combat the global HIV/AIDS epidemic, Congress found
    2    that “[p]rostitution and other sexual victimization are degrading to women and children and it should
    3    be the policy of the United States to eradicate such practices. The sex industry, the trafficking of
    4    individuals into such industry, and sexual violence are additional causes of and factors in the spread of
    5    the HIV/AIDS epidemic.” 22 U.S.C. § 7601(23). It thus required, among other things, that in order to
    6    receive funds under this law, organizations must have “a policy explicitly opposing prostitution and sex
    7    trafficking.”    
    Id. § 7631(f).
         This is an uncomplicated and commonsensical condition of federal
    8    funding—but a divided panel of our Court has affirmed an injunction forbidding its enforcement.
    9             Despite Congress’s broad powers under the Spending Clause,1 the panel majority in this case
    10   held that requiring organizations that accept federal program funds to have a policy consistent with a
    11   clearly-stated purpose of that funding program “infringes” the freedom of speech guaranteed by the
    12   First Amendment. The decision of the panel majority, which diverges from that of our sister circuit in
    13   the District of Columbia, is based on a newly uncovered constitutional distinction between
    14   “affirmative” and “negative” speech restrictions. See Alliance for Open Soc’y Int’l, Inc. v. U.S. Agency for Int’l
    15   Dev., 
    651 F.3d 218
    , 239 (2d Cir. 2011). Presented with the opportunity to restore uniformity in the
    16   enforcement of a federal statute by rehearing the case en banc, a majority of this Court voted to avoid
    17   doing so. I dissent from that decision.2
    1 The Spending Clause of the Constitution empowers Congress to “lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises, to
    pay the Debts and provide for the common Defence and general Welfare of the United States.” U.S. Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 1.
    Incident to the Spending Clause power, “Congress may attach conditions on the receipt of federal funds, and has repeatedly
    employed the power ‘to further broad policy objectives by conditioning receipt of federal moneys upon compliance by the
    recipient with federal statutory and administrative directives.’” South Dakota v. Dole, 
    483 U.S. 203
    , 206 (1987) (quoting
    Fullilove v. Klutznick, 
    448 U.S. 448
    , 474 (1980)).
    2  In her opinion concurring in the denial of en banc review, Judge Pooler asserts that this opinion “adds little to Judge
    Straub’s dissent from the panel’s opinion.” Pooler, J., Op. Concurring in Denial of Reh’g En Banc, at 1 (“Pooler Op.”).
    Maybe so—but the purpose of this opinion is not to propose a new theory of dissent, but to suggest that the reasons
    already articulated form a compelling basis for en banc review. Indeed, if the controlling body of law is as “complicated,”
    “contentious,” “messy,” and “unsettled,” as Judge Pooler claims, 
    id. at 1-2,
    that assessment favors careful en banc review of
    an opinion—by a divided panel—that affirms an injunction of federal legislation.
    2
    1                                                              I.
    2             The statute at issue is the United States Leadership Against HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis, and
    3    Malaria Act (the “Leadership Act”), 22 U.S.C. § 7601 et seq., which provides $48 billion in taxpayer
    4    funds to combat the global HIV/AIDS epidemic,3 
    id. § 7671(a),
    and includes an explicit congressional
    5    finding that “[p]rostitution and other sexual victimization are degrading to women and children and it
    6    should be the policy of the United States to eradicate such practices,” 
    id. § 7601(23).
    In keeping with
    7    that finding, Congress imposed two relevant conditions on the use of Leadership Act funds: that (1)
    8    “no funds . . . may be used to promote or advocate the legalization or practice of prostitution or sex
    9   trafficking,” 
    id. § 7631(e);
    and (2) with specified exceptions, “[n]o funds . . . may be used to provide
    10   assistance to any group or organization that does not have a policy explicitly opposing prostitution and
    11   sex trafficking,” 
    id. § 7631(f).
    The latter provision, known as the “policy requirement,” forms the
    12   subject of this appeal.
    13            The panel decision in this case characterized the policy requirement as “impermissibly
    14   compelling Plaintiffs to espouse the government’s viewpoint on prostitution.” Alliance for Open Soc’y,
    
    15 651 F.3d at 230
    . Based substantially on the “affirmative” nature of the policy requirement, the panel
    16   declared that “[i]t is this bold combination in a funding condition of a speech-targeted restriction that is
    17   both affirmative and quintessentially viewpoint-based that warrants heightened scrutiny.” 
    Id. at 236.
    18   Having applied “heightened scrutiny,” the panel of course concluded that the plaintiffs had
    19   demonstrated a likelihood of success on the merits of their First Amendment challenge and therefore
    20   affirmed the preliminary injunction. 
    Id. at 239.
    Judge Pooler would have us believe that en banc review “would occasion a monumental expenditure of the time and
    resources of our Court,” with “little prospect of resolving any of the current doctrinal disarray.” 
    Id. at 2.
    In her view, the
    daunting task of “tackl[ing]” the question presented is apparently beyond the “willing[ness]” and “ab[ility]” of the en banc
    court of the Second Circuit. 
    Id. at 4.
    Instead, Judge Pooler would prefer “the Supreme Court’s attention.” 
    Id. So be
    it.
    3 The original statute authorized $3 billion for each of the fiscal years 2004 through 2008; the current version, which was
    reauthorized and amended in 2008, authorizes $48 billion for the five-year period beginning October 1, 2008.
    3
    1            Notwithstanding the language of compulsion that riddles the majority opinion, it bears noting
    2   that the policy requirement does not actually “mandate,” “compel,” or “require” the plaintiffs to say
    3   anything at all. 
    Id. at 223,
    228, 230, 234–39. Rather, the policy requirement is simply “a condition on
    4   the voluntary receipt of Leadership Act funds,” 
    id. at 254
    (Straub, J., dissenting), and the plaintiffs
    5   remain at liberty “to avoid the force of the regulations” by “simply declin[ing] the subsidy,” Rust v.
    6   Sullivan, 
    500 U.S. 173
    , 199 n.5 (1991). As Judge Straub observed in a lengthy and careful dissent,
    7   “[t]here is a basic difference between the denial of government funding and a direct compulsion to
    8   speak.” Alliance for Open 
    Soc’y, 651 F.3d at 258
    (Straub, J., dissenting).
    9            It is well established that the unconstitutional conditions doctrine provides the jurisprudential
    10   framework for analyzing government subsidy conditions.                       See Rumsfeld v. Forum for Academic &
    11   Institutional Rights, Inc., 
    547 U.S. 47
    , 59 (2006). Although the majority engaged in a detailed discussion of
    12   the unconstitutional conditions cases, the panel decision does not rest on the unconstitutional
    13   conditions jurisprudence. Professing that the doctrine does not “neatly” capture this case, Alliance for
    14   Open 
    Soc’y, 651 F.3d at 234
    n.3, the majority instead relied on a purported distinction between
    15   affirmative and negative speech restrictions, 
    id. at 234
    (“[W]here, as here, the government seeks to
    16   affirmatively require government-preferred speech, its efforts raise serious First Amendment
    17   concerns.”). But no unconstitutional conditions case has ever turned on such a distinction.4 Indeed, in
    18   the context of protected speech, the Supreme Court has held that the “difference between compelled
    19   speech and compelled silence” is “without constitutional significance.” Riley v. Nat’l Fed’n of the Blind of
    20   N.C., Inc., 
    487 U.S. 781
    , 796 (1988).
    21            The panel decision thus presents the exceptionally important question of whether, despite
    22   Congress’s broad powers under the Spending Clause, a funding condition that imposes an affirmative
    4 The majority implicitly acknowledges the novelty of this constitutional question by noting that “none of those
    [unconstitutional conditions] cases involved an affirmative speech restriction.” Alliance for Open 
    Soc’y, 651 F.3d at 235
    n.3
    (emphasis omitted).
    4
    1   speech requirement “infringes” constitutionally protected speech. See Forum for Academic & Institutional
    2   
    Rights, 547 U.S. at 59
    (internal citation and quotation marks omitted). Although the majority has
    3   vigorously denied “put[ting] . . . aside” the unconstitutional conditions doctrine in answering that
    4   question with respect to the policy requirement, 
    id. at 234
    n.3, it is clear that the disposition of this case
    5   turns not on the existing jurisprudential framework, but on an affirmative-negative paradigm of the
    6   panel’s own invention.
    7           In so holding, the panel decision “splits” from the District of Columbia Circuit, which rejected
    8   a nearly identical challenge to the Leadership Act by another grantee that refused to adopt a policy
    9   opposing prostitution. DKT Int’l, Inc. v. U.S. Agency for Int’l Dev., 
    477 F.3d 758
    (D.C. Cir. 2007). That
    10   circuit, writing prior to the amendment of the Agency Guidelines, explained that the funding condition
    11   was permissible because “the government has not created a program to encourage private speech”—
    12   rather, “the government’s own message is being delivered.” 
    Id. at 762
    (internal citations and quotation
    13   marks omitted). Our sister circuit concluded that the Leadership Act “does not compel [the plaintiff]
    14   to advocate the government’s position on prostitution and sex trafficking; it requires only that if [the
    15   plaintiff] wishes to receive funds it must communicate the message the government chooses to fund.
    16   This does not violate the First Amendment.” 
    Id. at 764.
    17           By reaching the opposite conclusion with respect to the constitutionality of the funding
    18   condition, the divided Second Circuit panel has created a “circuit split,” so that, as the government’s
    19   petition for rehearing en banc observes, the statute is enforceable in some jurisdictions but not in others.
    20   See Pet. for Rehearing 1. This is another reason why the panel decision indisputably raises a “question[]
    21   of exceptional importance.” Fed. R. App. P. 35(b)(1)(B) (“[A] petition [for rehearing en banc] may assert
    22   that a proceeding presents a question of exceptional importance if it involves an issue on which the
    5
    1   panel decision conflicts with the authoritative decisions of the other United States Courts of Appeals
    2   that have addressed the issue.”).
    3                                                        II.
    4           One possible argument for voting against rehearing this case is a theory that en banc review of a
    5   preliminary injunction is inappropriate, and that we should stay our consideration of these issues for a
    6   further appeal—one that will purportedly follow a final determination on the merits. The Supreme
    7   Court has, it is true, instructed that “[i]f the underlying constitutional question is close, . . . we should
    8   uphold the injunction and remand for trial on the merits,” Ashcroft v. Am. Civil Liberties Union, 
    542 U.S. 9
      656, 664–65 (2004). But the majority opinion makes no reference to a “remand for trial on the merits,”
    10   
    id. at 665,
    and contains no decretal language to that effect. The District Court docket sheet, which was
    11   closed for administrative purposes on July 29, 2009, offers little insight as to what further proceedings,
    12   if any, are contemplated below. In the months prior to the filing of this appeal, the District Court
    13   threatened to “dismiss this action without further notice for lack of prosecution.” Alliance for Open Soc’y
    14   Int’l, Inc. v. U.S. Agency for Int’l Dev., No. 05 Civ. 8209, Doc. No. 93 (S.D.N.Y.). The last substantive
    15   entry on the District Court docket sheet is a letter from the plaintiffs dated January 6, 2010, informing
    16   the District Court of their expectation that, “following resolution of the appeal, it will be necessary to
    17   determine, at that time, whether to prosecute the action further in the District Court.” 
    Id., Doc. No.
    98
    18   (emphasis added). On these facts, I respectfully submit that it is by no means certain that this case will
    19   return to us a third time.5
    20           In any event, it is unclear how further development of the record would affect, much less alter,
    21   the decision of the panel majority that the policy requirement “falls well beyond what the Supreme
    6
    1   Court and this Court have upheld as permissible conditions on the receipt of government funds.”
    2   Alliance for Open 
    Soc’y, 651 F.3d at 223
    .
    3                                                       CONCLUSION
    4            Because this case presents a question of exceptional importance regarding the interaction of the
    5   unconstitutional conditions doctrine with an affirmative speech restriction, and because that question
    6   implicates the uniform application of a federal statute, I respectfully dissent from the denial of
    7   rehearing en banc.
    5 Judge Pooler catechistically asserts that there will be a live and continuing controversy in the District Court following the
    resolution of this appeal. Indeed, we are told that any suggestion to the contrary “is simply untrue,” since “[a] preliminary
    injunction is just that—preliminary,” Pooler Op. at 4, and “[o]nce the mandate issues, it is incumbent upon the district
    court to revive the ligitation,” 
    id. at 5.
    Whether she is right on this score remains to be seen. Much will depend upon the
    readiness vel non of the district judge to continue to pursue legal questions on which, he might well think, he has already
    received the authoritative instructions of the Court of Appeals.
    7
    ROSEMARY S. POOLER, Circuit Judge, concurring in the denial of rehearing en banc:
    I respectfully concur in the denial of the rehearing en banc. I write in response to the
    dissent from the denial of rehearing en banc, which adds little to Judge Straub’s dissent from the
    panel’s opinion. Compare Alliance for Open Soc’y Int’l, Inc. v. U.S. Agency for Int’l Dev., 
    651 F.3d 218
    , 255 (2d Cir. 2011) (“Alliance”) (Straub, J., dissenting) (declaring that “the majority
    puts [the unconstitutional conditions] doctrine aside and appears to conclude that when a funding
    condition imposes an affirmative rather than negative speech requirement, it always raises
    serious First Amendment concerns”) (quotation marks and alteration omitted), with Cabranes, J.,
    Op. Dissenting from Denial of Reh’g En Banc at [4:21-5:2] (announcing that it is “clear” that
    “the disposition of this case turns not on the existing jurisprudential framework, but on an
    affirmative-negative paradigm of the panel’s own invention”).
    The en banc dissent oversimplifies a complicated and contentious body of law. See
    Kathleen M. Sullivan, Unconstitutional Conditions, 102 Harv. L. Rev. 1413, 1415-17 (1989)
    (describing the unconstitutional conditions doctrine as “riven with inconsistencies,” “a minefield
    to be traversed gingerly,” and in a state of “doctrinal disarray”); Robert C. Post, Subsidized
    Speech, 106 Yale L.J. 151, 175 (1996) (“[T]here is at present no well-developed doctrine setting
    forth the exact test to be used to evaluate viewpoint discriminatory regulations [like those at
    issue in Rust v. Sullivan, 
    500 U.S. 173
    (1991)]”). What can be gleaned from a careful parsing of
    the case law is that the level of scrutiny applied to Government subsidies under the
    unconstitutional conditions doctrine turns on the type and scope of speech required or restricted,
    the speaker, whether the condition is viewpoint-discriminatory, its relationship to the
    Government program at issue, and other fact-specific inquiries. See, e.g., United States v. Am.
    1
    Library Ass’n, Inc., 
    539 U.S. 194
    (2003); Legal Servs. Corp. v. Velazquez, 
    531 U.S. 533
    (2001)
    (“Velazquez II”); Nat’l Endowment for the Arts v. Finley, 
    524 U.S. 569
    (1998); Rosenberger v.
    Rector & Visitors of the Univ. of Va., 
    515 U.S. 819
    (1995); Rust v. Sullivan, 
    500 U.S. 173
    (1991); FCC v. League of Women Voters of Cal., 
    468 U.S. 364
    (1984); Regan v. Taxation With
    Representation, 
    461 U.S. 540
    (1983); Brooklyn Legal Servs. Corp. v. Legal Servs. Corp., 
    462 F.3d 219
    (2d Cir. 2006) (“BLS”); Velazquez v. Legal Servs. Corp., 
    164 F.3d 757
    (2d Cir. 1999)
    (“Velazquez I”).
    According to the dissent, plaintiffs’ First Amendment claims may swiftly be rejected
    because they “remain at liberty ‘to avoid the force of the regulations’ by ‘simply declin[ing] the
    subsidy.’” En banc dissent at [3:20-4:1] (quoting 
    Rust, 500 U.S. at 199
    n.5). Respectfully, and
    as detailed in the panel opinion, such an assertion is refuted by a careful reading of Velazquez II,
    Rust, League of Women Voters, Regan, BLS, and Velazquez I. The unconstitutional conditions
    doctrine is messy and unsettled – so much so that the Government itself has changed its position
    on the question of whether the funding condition at issue is constitutional.
    Nor is it surprising that our decision created a circuit split. The dissent argues that split is
    reason to rehear this case en banc. See En banc dissent at [5:13-20]. To the contrary, such an
    exercise would occasion a monumental expenditure of the time and resources of our Court, on an
    incomplete record, with precious little prospect of resolving any of the current doctrinal disarray.
    An en banc court would force us to wade into and inevitably clash over doctrines frequently in
    tension, including those for categorizing speakers;1 testing the fit between a viewpoint-
    1
    See Post at 169 (“The doctrine of unconstitutional conditions . . . lacks any mechanism
    for determining the domain to which speech should be allocated and hence for adequately
    describing the nature of the ‘rights’ that are to be protected.”); compare Velazquez 
    II, 531 U.S. at 2
    discriminatory regulation in the context of a “government program” against the scope of, and
    message advanced by, that program;2 determining when regulations penalizing the use of private
    funds must permit alternative channels for constitutionally-protected expression;3 and assessing
    whether program integrity guidelines purportedly designed to provide such channels are, on their
    542-43 (“The advice from the attorney to the client and the advocacy by the attorney to the
    courts cannot be classified as governmental speech even under a generous understanding of the
    concept.”), with 
    id. at 554
    (Scalia, J., dissenting) (“If the private doctors’ confidential advice to
    their patients at issue in Rust constituted ‘government speech,’ it is hard to imagine what
    subsidized speech would not be government speech. . . . Even respondents agree that the true
    speaker in Rust was not the government, but a doctor.”) (internal quotation marks omitted)
    (emphasis in original).
    2
    Compare 
    Rust, 500 U.S. at 194
    , 195 n.4 (describing prohibition on abortion counseling
    as condition of funding for family planning services as “a prohibition on a project grantee or its
    employees from engaging in activities outside of the project’s scope” that was “narrowly
    tailored to fit Congress’ intent in Title X that federal funds not be used to ‘promote or advocate’
    abortion as a ‘method of family planning’”) (emphasis added), and Velazquez 
    I, 164 F.3d at 766
    (“Without diminishing its potential importance to some grantees, the speech restriction in Rust
    was nonetheless very narrow.”), with Velazquez 
    II, 531 U.S. at 548
    (“[I]n the context of [the
    Legal Services Corporation Act] there is no programmatic message of the kind recognized in
    Rust and which sufficed there to allow the Government to specify the advice deemed necessary
    for its legitimate objectives.”) (emphasis added), and 
    id. at 547
    (“Congress cannot recast a
    condition on funding as a mere definition of its program in every case, lest the First Amendment
    be reduced to a simple semantic exercise.”).
    3
    Compare League of Women 
    Voters, 468 U.S. at 400
    (striking down restriction on
    editorializing, but noting that restriction “would plainly be valid” if “Congress were to adopt a
    revised version of [the statute] that permitted [public radio] stations to establish ‘affiliate’
    organizations which could then use the station’s facilities to editorialize with non federal
    funds”), with American Library 
    Ass’n, 539 U.S. at 212
    (holding that requiring libraries to install
    filtering software on every computer with Internet access if the library receives any discount or
    funds from specified federal programs “does not ‘penalize’ libraries that choose not to install
    such software” because libraries that “wish to offer unfiltered access . . . are free to do so without
    federal assistance”), and 
    Rust, 500 U.S. at 199
    n.5 (rejecting argument that prohibition on
    abortion counseling penalized speech funded with non-federal money by requiring that recipients
    of grants help finance federally-funded projects by using matching non-federal funds).
    3
    face, inadequate.4 Even if we were willing and able to tackle these questions, our resolution
    simply could not substitute for the Supreme Court’s attention. In any event, implying that this
    case is easy and involves a straightforward application of clear Supreme Court precedent does a
    disservice to the long list of judges from this and other courts who have wrestled to reconcile and
    correctly apply a complicated body of law.
    The fact-specific nature of the inquiry makes this case particularly ill-suited to en banc
    consideration at this juncture, because our review here is from the grant of a preliminary
    injunction. Especially where, as here, the constitutional questions are both difficult and novel,
    they are better-resolved, in more concrete terms, after a resolution on the merits. See Ashcroft v.
    Am. Civil Liberties Union, 
    542 U.S. 656
    , 664-65 (2004) (instructing that “[i]f the underlying
    constitutional question is close, . . . we should uphold the injunction and remand for trial on the
    merits.”). The dissent suggests that because the panel opinion fails explicitly to “remand for a
    trial on the merits,” the district court will simply allow the preliminary injunction to stand
    without further action. En banc dissent at [5:22 -6:14]. This is simply untrue. A preliminary
    injunction is just that – preliminary. See, e.g., University of Tex. v. Camenisch, 
    451 U.S. 390
    ,
    395 (1981) (“The purpose of a preliminary injunction is merely to preserve the relative positions
    of the parties until a trial on the merits can be held.”). The significant delays in prosecuting this
    case reflect nothing more than its complicated procedural history, including the defendants’
    4
    See, e.g., Velazquez 
    II, 531 U.S. at 546-47
    (striking down restriction on scope of legal
    aid attorneys’ advocacy as condition of funding because “with respect to the litigation services
    Congress has funded, there is no alternative channel for expression of the advocacy Congress
    seeks to restrict,” even though the regulations at issue permitted funding recipients to establish
    affiliate organizations to conduct litigation and other activities outside the scope of the LSC
    program).
    4
    decision mid-appeal to revise the guidelines at issue. See Alliance for Open Soc’y Int’l, Inc. v.
    U.S. Agency for Int’l Dev., 254 F. App’x 843, 845-46 (2d Cir. Nov. 8, 2007). Once the mandate
    issues, it is incumbent upon the district court to revive the litigation See 
    Alliance, 651 F.3d at 239
    (noting that “[b]ecause the Policy Requirement compels grantees to espouse the
    government’s position on a controversial issue, the district court did not abuse its discretion in
    preliminarily enjoining its enforcement pending a trial on the merits”) (emphasis added).
    Plainly, I think the panel opinion correctly concluded that heightened scrutiny applies,
    and that for the reasons set forth in the panel opinion, that the Policy Requirement will likely be
    found to violate the First Amendment. For these reasons, I concur in the denial of rehearing en
    banc.
    5