The Koala v. Pradeep Khosla ( 2019 )


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  •                  FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    THE KOALA, an unincorporated              No. 17-55380
    student association,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,      D.C. No.
    3:16-cv-01296-
    v.                        JM-BLM
    PRADEEP KHOSLA, in his official
    capacity as Chancellor of the               OPINION
    University of California, San Diego;
    DANIEL JUAREZ, in his official
    capacity as President of the
    Associated Students of the
    University of California, San Diego;
    JUSTIN PENNISH, in his official
    capacity as Financial Controller of
    the Associated Students of the
    University of California, San Diego,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of California
    Jeffrey T. Miller, District Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted June 8, 2018
    Pasadena, California
    Filed July 24, 2019
    2                     THE KOALA V. KHOSLA
    Before: Raymond C. Fisher and Morgan Christen, Circuit
    Judges, and Edward F. Shea,* District Judge.
    Opinion by Judge Christen;
    Concurrence by Judge Fisher
    SUMMARY**
    Civil Rights
    The panel reversed in part and vacated in part the district
    court’s dismissal of a complaint in an action brought by The
    Koala, a registered student organization at the University of
    California, San Diego, alleging that the student government’s
    passage of the Media Act, which eliminated registered
    student organization funding for all print media, violated The
    Koala’s First Amendment rights.
    The Koala alleged that the student government passed the
    Media Act two days after The Koala published an article in
    its newspaper satirizing the concept of “safe spaces” and
    “trigger warnings” on college campuses. The article
    generated numerous complaints from students and
    administrators and prompted the University to publicly
    denounce the article’s offensive language.
    *
    The Honorable Edward F. Shea, United States District Judge for the
    Eastern District of Washington, sitting by designation.
    **
    This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
    been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
    THE KOALA V. KHOSLA                         3
    In reversing the district court’s dismissal, the panel held
    that the Eleventh Amendment did not bar The Koala’s claims
    for prospective injunctive relief. The panel held that
    accepting the allegations in the Second Amended Complaint
    as true, the Complaint did not run afoul of the sovereign
    immunity doctrine because The Koala sought only a return of
    eligibility to apply for funding, not an order directing the state
    to fund it. Moreover, the panel noted that because the
    compulsory activity fees collected by the University are
    remitted to the associated student government for
    reallocation, the suit’s outcome would not increase or
    decrease the overall financial burden on the state; it would
    affect only which student organizations could apply for
    student activity fees and, potentially, how the total student
    activity fund was distributed.
    In vacating the district court’s dismissal of the Free Press
    Clause claim, the panel held that where a complaint alleges
    that the State singled out the press by withholding a subsidy
    in response to disfavored speech, the complaint alleges a
    viable Free Press Clause cause of action. The panel held that
    the Second Amended Complaint’s Free Press Clause claim
    was sufficient to survive defendants’ motion to dismiss
    because it alleged that the Media Act was passed for the
    express purpose of silencing a newspaper, and that
    defendants singled out The Koala for a disparate financial
    burden.
    The panel vacated the district court’s dismissal of The
    Koala’s freedom of speech claim, which alleged that
    defendants violated its First Amendment right to free speech
    by creating a limited public forum consisting of the student
    activity fund, and then closing a portion of the forum for the
    purpose of denying The Koala access to it. The district court
    4                  THE KOALA V. KHOSLA
    determined that the media funds category of the student
    activity fund was a limited public forum that the University
    was free to close. The panel held that the student activity
    fund was the relevant forum for purposes of assessing the
    permissibility of defendants’ actions and that the district court
    analyzed the sufficiency of The Koala’s complaint using an
    incorrect framework. The panel remanded for consideration
    of The Koala’s free speech claim in light of the panel’s forum
    definition.
    The panel held that the Second Amended Complaint
    sufficiently alleged a claim for First Amendment retaliation.
    The panel was unpersuaded by defendants’ argument that the
    government’s motive is irrelevant when it enacts a content-
    neutral rule of general applicability. First, the panel
    determined the Media Act discriminated based on the identity
    of the speaker because rather than applying to all registered
    student organizations, the Act applied only to media
    organizations and singled them out for disfavored access to
    student activity fee funding. Moreover, The Koala alleged
    that at least one other student organization continued to
    receive funding for its print media. Second, the panel held
    that it was bound by Ariz. Students’ Ass’n v. Ariz. Bd. of
    Regents, 
    824 F.3d 858
    , 864 (9th Cir. 2016), which
    emphasized that motive was a necessary element of a
    retaliation claim and which provided a framework for
    analyzing such a claim. Applying that framework, the panel
    held that The Koala’s article was clearly protected speech, the
    Media Act chilled The Koala’s speech and The Koala
    adequately alleged a nexus between its speech and the alleged
    retaliatory conduct.
    Concurring in the result and in all but part II of the
    opinion, Judge Fisher would hold that the complaint,
    THE KOALA V. KHOSLA                      5
    irrespective of censorial motive, adequately alleged a claim
    under the Free Press Clause on the theory that the defendants
    singled out the press for disparate treatment.
    COUNSEL
    John David Loy (argued), ACLU Foundation of San Diego &
    Imperial Counties, San Diego, California; Ryan T. Darby,
    The Law Office of Ryan T. Darby, San Diego, California; for
    Plaintiff-Appellant.
    William John Carroll (argued), Matthew W. Callahan, and
    Jean-Paul P. Cart, Schiff Hardin LLP, San Francisco,
    California, for Defendants-Appellees.
    Jean-Paul Jassy and Kevin L. Vick, Jassy Vick Carolan LLP,
    Los Angeles, California; Samantha Harris, Vice President of
    Policy Research, Foundation for Individual Rights in
    Education (FIRE), Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Ilya Shapiro,
    Cato Institute, Washington, D.C.; for Amici Curiae
    Foundation for Individual Rights in Education and Cato
    Institute.
    Judy Endejan and Garvey Schubert Barer, Seattle,
    Washington, for Amici Curiae the Student Press Law Center,
    American Society of News Editors, Associated Press Media
    Editors, Association of Alternative Newsmedia, College
    Media Association, First Amendment Coalition, Reporters
    Committee for Freedom of the Press, and Society of
    Professional Journalists.
    6                  THE KOALA V. KHOSLA
    OPINION
    CHRISTEN, Circuit Judge:
    Plaintiff-Appellant The Koala is an unincorporated
    registered student organization (“RSO”) at the University of
    California, San Diego (“UCSD”) that publishes a newspaper
    featuring art and satirical writing. In 2015, The Koala
    published an article satirizing the concept of “safe spaces” on
    campus, generating numerous complaints from students and
    administrators and prompting UCSD to publicly denounce the
    article’s offensive language. Two days later, the UCSD
    student government passed the Media Act, which eliminated
    RSO funding for all print media, including The Koala. In
    response, The Koala brought this action for declaratory and
    injunctive relief, alleging that the passage of the Media Act
    violated its First Amendment rights. Defendants moved to
    dismiss.
    The district court concluded that The Koala’s lawsuit was
    barred by the Eleventh Amendment. Alternatively, it
    concluded that the Media Act did not violate the Free Press
    Clause of the First Amendment because the Act was content
    neutral, viewpoint neutral, and applied uniformly to all RSOs.
    The district court also dismissed The Koala’s Free Speech
    Clause claims on the merits, concluding that the media funds
    category of RSO funding was a limited public forum that
    UCSD was free to close. Finally, the district court ruled that
    The Koala failed to state a First Amendment retaliation claim
    because the court concluded that a facially neutral legislative
    enactment cannot be the basis for a claim of retaliation. The
    Koala appeals.
    THE KOALA V. KHOSLA                        7
    We reverse the district court’s order, vacate its judgment,
    and remand for further proceedings consistent with this
    opinion.
    FACTUAL BACKGROUND
    The Associated Students is the student government
    organization at UCSD. Students at UCSD pay compulsory
    student fees, and the university remits a portion to the
    Associated Students for reallocation to RSOs, creating a
    source of funding for various student activities. UCSD
    allows the Associated Students to distribute student activity
    funds, but the university mandates that the allocation be
    consistent with its educational policy goals. UCSD’s Policy
    on Compulsory Campus-Based Student Fees states that “[t]he
    University’s educational purposes are served when
    reallocations by [the Associated Students] . . . to support
    [RSOs] and [RSO]-related programs and activities are made:
    (1) to provide opportunities for the educational benefits and
    personal and social enrichment that derive from participation
    in extracurricular programs and activities; and (2) to stimulate
    on-campus discussion and debate on a wide range of issues
    from a variety of viewpoints.”
    The Associated Students distributes a funding guide
    explaining how to apply for student activity funding. For the
    2015–16 academic year, the funding guide stated that the
    Associated Students’ distribution guidelines were intended to
    “promote the equitable allocation of student fees and
    sustainable growth of student organizations[.]” The funding
    guide also explained that RSOs could request funding from
    seven different categories: (1) programming funds;
    (2) operating funds; (3) tournament and competition funds;
    8                 THE KOALA V. KHOSLA
    (4) annual event funds; (5) media funds; (6) interest-free
    programming loans; and (7) Associated Students grants.
    The remaining sections of the 2015–16 funding guide
    were dedicated to explaining those categories. Under media
    funds, the guide stated that the Associated Students would
    allocate funding on a “content-neutral basis” and that neither
    the Associated Students nor UCSD would be “responsible for
    the content of student media publications.”
    According to the funding guide, RSOs like The Koala
    could receive up to $1,000 per quarter for media costs, and
    the Associated Students’ budget earmarked $25,000 for RSOs
    seeking print media funding during the 2015–16 academic
    year.
    In November 2015, The Koala published an article
    entitled “UCSD Unveils New Dangerous Space on Campus.”
    The article satirized the concepts of “trigger warnings” and
    “safe places” on college campuses, employing ethnic and
    sexist stereotypes and racial epithets.
    Following the article’s publication, the Associated
    Students received numerous comments and complaints about
    its offensive language. The article also prompted students to
    file “Bias Incident Report Forms” with UCSD, which the
    administration redirected to The Koala. A different RSO
    suggested that the administrator who approved the
    newspaper’s funding should resign, but a UCSD official
    explained that “[The] Koala gets no University funding[.]
    The Associated Students [funds] them. Pressure should [be]
    brought to that organization to end the madness.” A
    representative of that RSO replied “this is news to me, we
    will get on it asap.”
    THE KOALA V. KHOSLA                        9
    In the following days, UCSD released a statement by
    Chancellor Khosla that “strongly denounce[d] [T]he Koala
    publication and the offensive and hurtful language it cho[se]
    to publish.” The statement described The Koala as
    “profoundly repugnant, repulsive, attacking[,] and cruel,”
    notified readers that the UCSD administration did “not
    provide any financial support for [T]he Koala,” and “call[ed]
    on all students, faculty, staff[,] and community members to
    join [the administration] in condemning [The Koala’s]
    publication and other hurtful acts.”
    The Associated Students held a regularly scheduled
    meeting on the same day the Chancellor issued his statement.
    The Vice Chancellor of Student Affairs attended the meeting
    and read Chancellor Khosla’s statement, and a member of the
    Associated Students introduced the Media Act.
    Consideration of the Media Act was not listed on the
    Associated Students’ agenda prior to the day of the meeting,
    but after some discussion and debate, it was approved. The
    Media Act eliminated the media funds category from the
    student activity funding available to RSOs.
    The Koala lost $452.80 in campus activity fee funding
    when the Media Act was passed. The loss of funds prevented
    The Koala from publishing an issue planned for the 2015–16
    winter quarter and three of the six issues planned for the
    remainder of the academic year. The Koala alleges that the
    Associated Students continues to provide financial support
    for at least one student-run, student-initiated newspaper, The
    Collective Voice.
    The Koala continues to publish issues online, but it asserts
    several reasons why online publication is not a suitable
    alternative for publishing in print: (1) The Koala attracted
    10                THE KOALA V. KHOSLA
    student artists prior to the Media Act because it was the only
    newspaper on campus that dedicated its cover to student
    artwork; (2) The Koala contends that it is now unable to offer
    artists the same control in digital format because end users
    can change the display, color, and shading; and (3) The Koala
    more easily reached its intended audience when it published
    in print because it distributed each paper issue on campus, by
    hand. In sum, The Koala contends that publishing online
    hinders its ability to reach and engage with its intended
    audience.
    PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    The Koala’s initial complaint alleged that defendants are
    engaged in an ongoing violation of its First Amendment
    rights, and The Koala sought to enjoin them from
    “categorically refusing to provide campus activity fee funding
    for the publication of student print media[.]” The Koala
    moved for a preliminary injunction, and amended its
    complaint. Defendants moved to dismiss the amended
    complaint pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6). The district
    court denied the motion for a preliminary injunction and
    granted defendants’ motion to dismiss. In doing so, the court
    concluded that the Eleventh Amendment barred the amended
    complaint because a “request to provide/restore funding from
    the state” was “[a]t the heart” of The Koala’s claims. It
    acknowledged, however, that further amendment might
    correct this deficiency and granted The Koala leave to amend.
    The court also noted that although The Koala’s briefing
    argued a claim for retaliation under the First Amendment, the
    amended complaint did not actually include a retaliation
    claim.
    THE KOALA V. KHOSLA                             11
    The Koala’s second amended complaint (“SAC”) is the
    operative pleading in this case. It alleges that defendants are
    engaged in a continuing violation of the First Amendment’s
    Free Press Clause because the Media Act impermissibly
    singled out and financially burdened the The Koala. The
    Koala’s Free Speech Clause claim alleges that defendants
    created a limited public forum for the speech of all RSOs
    when they instituted a program allowing RSOs to apply for
    campus activity funding. Because the Media Act expelled
    The Koala from this forum in response to the “Dangerous
    Space” article, The Koala contends that the Media Act
    amounted to viewpoint discrimination. Finally, the SAC
    includes a First Amendment retaliation claim that the
    “Dangerous Space” article was a substantial motivating factor
    in the decision to defund print media.1
    The Koala requested an injunction preventing defendants’
    continued enforcement of the Media Act, a declaratory
    judgment that defendants violated The Koala’s First
    Amendment rights, and an award of attorneys’ fees and costs.
    Notably, in place of The Koala’s prior request for an order
    restoring activity funding, the SAC seeks only eligibility to
    apply for student activity funding.
    1
    Although neither party appears to explicitly raise or develop this
    issue, we note that as a matter of policy the Associated Students “are
    official units of the University exercising authorities concerning student
    affairs by delegations from The Regents, the President, and the
    Chancellors[.]” Thus, for the purposes of the present motion, the SAC
    pleads the requisite state action for each of The Koala’s First Amendment
    claims. See Gay & Lesbian Students Ass’n v. Gohn, 
    850 F.2d 361
    , 365
    (8th Cir. 1988) (finding state action where Student Senate was a
    “creation[] of the State” and university retained “final say over Senate
    funding decisions”).
    12                  THE KOALA V. KHOSLA
    Defendants renewed their motion to dismiss, and the
    district court granted the motion with prejudice. The Koala
    timely appealed. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C.
    § 1291, and we reverse the district court’s order granting
    defendants’ motion to dismiss and vacate the district court’s
    judgment.
    STANDARDS OF REVIEW
    We review de novo “a dismissal on the basis of sovereign
    immunity or for failure to state a claim upon which relief can
    be granted.” Ariz. Students’ Ass’n v. Ariz. Bd. of Regents,
    
    824 F.3d 858
    , 864 (9th Cir. 2016).
    When evaluating the sufficiency of a pleading under Fed.
    R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6), we review only the allegations in the
    complaint and any attachments or documents incorporated by
    reference. See United States v. Ritchie, 
    342 F.3d 903
    , 907–08
    (9th Cir. 2003). We “accept the complaint’s well-pleaded
    factual allegations as true, and construe all inferences in the
    plaintiff’s favor[.]” Ariz. 
    Students’, 824 F.3d at 864
    .
    Ultimately, we must determine if these materials present
    “sufficient factual matter . . . to state a claim to relief that is
    plausible on its face.” OSU Student All. v. Ray, 
    699 F.3d 1053
    , 1061 (9th Cir. 2012) (alteration in original) (internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    DISCUSSION
    I. The Eleventh Amendment does not bar The
    Koala’s claims.
    The Eleventh Amendment provides that the power of the
    federal judiciary “shall not be construed to extend to any suit
    THE KOALA V. KHOSLA                        13
    in law or equity, commenced or prosecuted against one of the
    United States by Citizens of another State, or by Citizens or
    Subjects of any Foreign State.” U.S. Const. amend. XI. The
    Supreme Court has explained that this provision “stand[s]”
    for the “presupposition” that “each State is a sovereign entity
    in our federal system” and “that ‘it is inherent in the nature of
    sovereignty not to be amenable to the suit of an individual
    without its consent.’” Seminole Tribe of Fl. v. Florida,
    
    517 U.S. 44
    , 54 (1996) (quoting Hans v. Louisiana, 
    134 U.S. 1
    , 13 (1890)) (one alteration omitted). Thus, the Eleventh
    Amendment generally prevents a state and state government
    actors from being sued in federal court without the state’s
    consent. See Cardenas v. Anzai, 
    311 F.3d 929
    , 934 (9th Cir.
    2002).
    Nevertheless, under the principle established in Ex parte
    Young, 
    209 U.S. 123
    (1908), private individuals may sue state
    officials in federal court for prospective relief from ongoing
    violations of federal law, as opposed to money damages,
    without running afoul of the doctrine of sovereign immunity.
    See Va. Office of Prot. & Advocacy v. Stewart, 
    563 U.S. 247
    ,
    254–55 (2011). “In determining whether the doctrine of Ex
    parte Young avoids an Eleventh Amendment bar to suit, a
    court need only conduct a ‘straightforward inquiry into
    whether [the] complaint alleges an ongoing violation of
    federal law and seeks relief properly characterized as
    prospective.’” Verizon Md. Inc. v. Pub. Serv. Comm’n of
    Md., 
    535 U.S. 635
    , 645 (2002) (alteration in original)
    (quoting Idaho v. Coeur d’Alene Tribe of 
    Id., 521 U.S.
    261,
    296 (1997)).
    We applied this principle in Arizona Students’, a case
    involving claims similar to The Koala’s, and concluded that
    a public university’s student government’s First Amendment
    14                 THE KOALA V. KHOSLA
    “claim for prospective injunctive relief and related
    declaratory relief [was] not barred by sovereign immunity,”
    even though the effect of the relief sought in that case would
    likely restore the student government’s 
    funding. 824 F.3d at 865
    .
    Here, the district court acknowledged the exception to
    sovereign immunity established by Ex parte Young and its
    progeny but observed that “Ex parte Young cannot be used to
    obtain an injunction requiring the payment of funds from the
    State’s treasury.” (quoting 
    Stewart, 563 U.S. at 256
    –57).
    Despite the fact that the SAC sought only restoration of The
    Koala’s eligibility to receive funds, the district court ruled
    that the Eleventh Amendment prohibited The Koala’s claims
    because it viewed the SAC as “an artful effort to avoid the
    Eleventh Amendment bar” and concluded that the SAC
    “seeks to directly tap the state treasury.” We disagree for two
    reasons.
    First, we are constrained to review only the allegations in
    the SAC and any documents attached to it or incorporated by
    reference, and we must accept all well-pleaded allegations as
    true. See N.M. State Inv. Council v. Ernst & Young LLP,
    
    641 F.3d 1089
    , 1094 (9th Cir. 2011). The implications of this
    rule lead to “the well-established doctrine that an amended
    pleading supersedes the original pleading.” Ferdik v.
    Bonzelet, 
    963 F.2d 1258
    , 1262 (9th Cir. 1992). Thus,
    whether The Koala originally sought an injunction directing
    the restoration of funding is of no moment at this stage in the
    proceedings. We must accept as true that The Koala seeks
    only a return of eligibility to apply for funding, not an order
    directing the state to fund it. Accordingly, the SAC does not
    run afoul of the sovereign immunity doctrine. The express
    THE KOALA V. KHOSLA                        15
    relief requested by the SAC requires that we reverse the
    district court’s order.
    Second, even if the The Koala’s desired remedy would
    result in the return of its student activity fee funding, the rule
    announced in Ex parte Young allows federal jurisdiction
    where prospective relief remedying an alleged violation of
    federal law may result in the expenditure of state funds. See
    
    Cardenas, 311 F.3d at 938
    ; see also K.W. ex rel. D.W. v.
    Armstrong, 
    789 F.3d 962
    , 974 (9th Cir. 2015) (holding that
    plaintiffs’ request for injunctive relief was not barred by the
    Eleventh Amendment even though relief would require the
    state to “reinstat[e] social assistance benefits prospectively”
    because “the injunction d[id] not compensate class members
    for any loss of services that occurred prior to the date it was
    entered”).
    Finally, we note that the doctrine of sovereign immunity
    asks whether a state “will be legally required to satisfy any
    monetary judgment[.]” Sato v. Orange Cty. Dep’t of Educ.,
    
    861 F.3d 923
    , 929 (9th Cir. 2017), cert. denied, 
    138 S. Ct. 459
    (2017). That concern is not presented by the facts of this
    case because UCSD’s existing policy requires that it collect
    a compulsory activity fee from each student and remit a
    percentage of the total to the Associated Students for
    reallocation to RSOs. The outcome of this lawsuit will not
    increase or decrease the overall financial burden on the state;
    it will affect only which RSOs may apply for student activity
    fees and, potentially, how the total student activity fund is
    distributed. We are satisfied that the relief The Koala seeks
    is consistent with the Ex parte Young doctrine and not barred
    by the Eleventh Amendment.
    16                  THE KOALA V. KHOSLA
    II.    Freedom of the Press
    The Koala argues that enforcement of the Media Act
    violates the First Amendment’s Free Press Clause because it
    targets the student press for a financial burden. More
    specifically, The Koala contends that any state action that
    “singles out” the press by imposing a financial burden or
    withdrawing a previously allocated revenue source is
    unconstitutional unless there is a compelling government
    interest justifying the action. The SAC also alleges that the
    Media Act was “substantially motivated by discrimination”
    against The Koala, that UCSD implemented the Media Act
    just two days after The Koala published its “Dangerous
    Space” article, that it did so “in order to deprive The Koala of
    eligibility to seek campus activity fee funding,” and that at
    least one other student-run newspaper continues to receive
    activity fee funding. Defendants counter that access to the
    student activity fund is more accurately characterized as a
    government subsidy than the imposition of a financial burden
    like a tax, and that the Media Act does not implicate the Free
    Press Clause because it is applied to all RSOs.
    The Supreme Court has made clear that “the States and
    the Federal Government can subject newspapers to generally
    applicable economic regulations without creating
    constitutional problems,” Minneapolis Star & Tribune Co. v.
    Minn. Comm’r of Revenue, 
    460 U.S. 575
    , 581 (1983), but
    “[a]bsent a compelling justification, the government may not
    exercise its taxing power to single out the press.” Leathers v.
    Medlock, 
    499 U.S. 439
    , 447 (1991). The rationale for this
    rule is not difficult to discern: “[a] power to tax differentially,
    as opposed to a power to tax generally, gives a government a
    powerful weapon against the taxpayer selected.” Ark.
    Writers’ Project, Inc. v. Ragland, 
    481 U.S. 221
    , 228 (1987)
    THE KOALA V. KHOSLA                        17
    (quoting Minneapolis 
    Star, 460 U.S. at 585
    ). Taxes that are
    “seen to be a deliberate and calculated device . . . to limit the
    circulation of information” or are enacted “with the plain
    purpose of penalizing the publishers” of newspapers are the
    most egregious example of this type of impermissible
    government censorship. Grosjean v. Am. Press Co., 
    297 U.S. 233
    , 250–51 (1936); see also 
    Leathers, 499 U.S. at 453
    . In
    Grosjean, the Supreme Court held that the Louisiana
    legislature unconstitutionally burdened the press by enacting
    a law “with the plain purpose of penalizing” newspapers that
    had criticized Senator Huey Long, thereby “curtailing the[ir]
    circulation.” Id.; see also Minneapolis 
    Star, 460 U.S. at 580
    .
    The Supreme Court reaffirmed Grosjean’s holding in
    Leathers, reiterating that a tax violates the Free Press Clause
    if it is “directed at . . . particular 
    ideas.” 499 U.S. at 453
    .
    Supreme Court case law establishes that it is sufficient to
    show the government acted with the intent to burden the press
    in order to plead a viable Free Press Clause claim, but it is not
    necessary to show invidious intent; where differential
    taxation of the press burdens the special interests protected by
    the First Amendment, it is presumptively unconstitutional.
    See Minneapolis 
    Star, 460 U.S. at 585
    . The government must
    offer a “compelling justification” for a taxation scheme that,
    on its face, treats the press differently. See 
    Leathers, 499 U.S. at 447
    . Indeed, in Minneapolis Star, the Court
    specifically disclaimed reliance on Grosjean because the
    record did not show that the government acted for the purpose
    of burdening the press. 
    See 460 U.S. at 580
    . Nevertheless,
    because the Minnesota legislature enacted a use-tax
    exemption for print newspapers that resulted in one
    newspaper paying two-thirds of the revenue raised statewide,
    the Court found a violation of the Free Press Clause. 
    Id. at 18
                      THE KOALA V. KHOSLA
    592 (“Illicit legislative intent is not the sine qua non of a
    violation of the First Amendment”).2
    In addition to Supreme Court cases addressing the
    imposition of taxes or the elimination of tax credits, the Third
    Circuit ruled more broadly that the government may violate
    the Free Press Clause if it imposes financial burdens on the
    press through other means. See Pitt News v. Pappert, 
    379 F.3d 96
    , 110 (3d Cir. 2004). In Pitt News, the state prohibited
    alcohol advertisements in media affiliated with universities,
    colleges, or other educational institutions, thereby depriving
    the student press of advertising income. 
    Id. at 101–02.
    Pennsylvania argued the law was permissible because it did
    not impose a tax, 
    id. at 111,
    but the Third Circuit disagreed.
    Building on Leathers, Arkansas Writers’, and Minneapolis
    Star, the Third Circuit concluded that the distinction between
    taxes and other financial burdens was immaterial because
    “[t]he threat to the First Amendment arises from the
    imposition of financial burdens that may have the effect of
    influencing or suppressing speech, and whether those burdens
    take the form of taxes or some other form is unimportant.”
    
    Id. at 111–12.
    Our concurring colleague suggests that we should end our
    legal inquiry here. Because the SAC alleges that defendants
    acted to single out The Koala for disfavored treatment, the
    concurrence concludes the SAC sufficiently alleges a Free
    2
    Black’s Law Dictionary defines “sine qua non” as follows: “without
    which not. An indispensable condition or thing; something on which
    something else necessarily depends.” (11th ed. 2019).
    THE KOALA V. KHOSLA                             19
    Press Clause violation.3         But as the concurrence
    acknowledges, the Supreme Court has never applied the
    Minneapolis Star line of disparate taxation cases to a factual
    situation in which the government singled out a newspaper by
    withdrawing a subsidy, as opposed to imposing a tax.
    Defendants argue that the Court’s Free Speech case law
    establishes a “fundamental distinction” between withholding
    government subsidies and the imposition of other financial
    burdens, like taxes. The concurrence contends that we
    analyze the implications of the tax-subsidy difference sua
    sponte, but at the 12(b)(6) stage, the question is whether the
    SAC states a claim for which relief may be granted, and the
    legal distinction between subsidies and other forms of
    financial burdens was a centerpiece of the defendants’
    argument on appeal. Specifically, they argue that the
    Minneapolis Star line of cases is inapplicable to The Koala’s
    Free Press Clause claim.
    First, we agree that the government generally enjoys
    broad discretion in granting or denying subsidies. The
    Supreme Court has said that “[a] legislature’s decision not to
    subsidize the exercise of a fundamental right does not
    infringe the right.” Rust v. Sullivan, 
    500 U.S. 173
    , 192–93
    (1991) (quoting Regan v. Taxation With Rep. of Wash.,
    
    461 U.S. 540
    , 549 (1983)) (upholding conditions on Title X
    healthcare funds prohibiting providers from discussing
    “abortion as a lawful option”); see also United States v. Am.
    Library Ass’n, Inc., 
    539 U.S. 194
    , 212 (2003) (rejecting Free
    3
    Though The Koala has not addressed it on appeal, the SAC alleges
    that the financial burden imposed upon The Koala was not limited to
    revocation of student activity funds. The SAC also alleges that defendants
    denied The Koala access to a crowd-funding platform sponsored by
    UCSD.
    20                THE KOALA V. KHOSLA
    Speech challenge to federal statute conditioning library
    funding on the installation of software that blocked
    pornographic websites, and observing “[a] refusal to fund
    protected activity, without more, cannot be equated with the
    imposition of a penalty on that activity.” (internal quotation
    marks omitted)).
    Though the Supreme Court has not addressed whether the
    withdrawal of a press subsidy violates the First Amendment,
    other Supreme Court case law teaches that the government
    can violate the First Amendment by withholding benefits for
    a censorious purpose, at least in the Free Speech Clause
    context. See 
    Regan, 461 U.S. at 548
    (finding no Free Speech
    Clause violation, but cautioning “[t]he case would be
    different if Congress were to discriminate invidiously in its
    subsidies in such a way as to ‘aim[] at the suppression of
    dangerous ideas.’”) (second alteration in original) (quoting
    Cammarano v. United States, 
    358 U.S. 498
    , 513 (1959)). In
    Cammarano, the Court found no constitutional violation
    where the denial of a tax deduction for “sums expended to
    promote or defeat legislation was plainly not ‘aimed at the
    suppression of dangerous 
    ideas.’” 358 U.S. at 515
    (quoting
    Speiser v. Randall, 
    357 U.S. 513
    , 518–19 (1958) (cautioning
    that withholding a tax exemption “to claimants who engage
    in certain forms of speech is in effect to penalize them for
    such speech.”). Likewise, in Perry v. Sindermann, the Court
    warned that “if the government could deny a benefit to a
    person because of his constitutionally protected speech . . .
    [it] would allow the government to ‘produce a result which
    [it] could not command directly.’” 
    408 U.S. 593
    , 597 (1972)
    (third alteration in original) (quoting 
    Speiser, 357 U.S. at 526
    ). Finally, though the Court found no First Amendment
    violation in National Endowment for the Arts v. Finley, the
    Court conspicuously continued to stake out the rule that the
    THE KOALA V. KHOSLA                               21
    government may not “leverage its power to award subsidies
    on the basis of subjective criteria into a penalty on disfavored
    viewpoints” that might “‘ai[m] at the suppression of
    dangerous ideas[.]’” 
    524 U.S. 569
    , 587 (1998) (quoting
    
    Regan, 461 U.S. at 550
    ) (first alteration in original). The
    Speiser-Perry-Regan-Finley line of cases reflects the
    Supreme Court’s continued cautionary admonition that the
    First Amendment will not tolerate the administration of
    subsidy programs with a censorious purpose.
    We see no reason why the rule articulated in the Free
    Speech cases cited above—that the government may not
    withhold benefits for a censorious purpose—should not apply
    when the state singles out and burdens the press by revoking
    a subsidy, particularly where, as here, the record includes
    unusually compelling allegations that the government acted
    with discriminatory intent.4
    The concurrence contends that the Minneapolis Star line
    of cases, standing on their own, are enough to resolve this
    4
    The Fourth Circuit explicitly found such a violation of the Free Press
    Clause in Joyner v. Whiting, 
    477 F.2d 456
    , 458 (4th Cir. 1973). Joyner
    considered whether the First Amendment precluded a college president
    from unilaterally revoking student activity fee funding earmarked for a
    student newspaper in response to a controversial editorial. 
    Id. at 459–60.
    The court reasoned from the principle that “[a] college, acting ‘as the
    instrumentality of the State, may not restrict speech . . . simply because it
    finds the views expressed by any group to be abhorrent.’” 
    Id. at 460
    (second alteration in original) (quoting Healy v. James, 
    408 U.S. 169
    , 180,
    187 (1972)). The Fourth Circuit ruled that, “if a college has a student
    newspaper, its publication cannot be suppressed because college officials
    dislike its editorial comment[,]” 
    id., and held
    that “the president’s
    irrevocable withdrawal of financial support from [the newspaper] . . .
    abridge[d] the freedom of the press in violation of the First Amendment.”
    
    Id. at 458.
    22                   THE KOALA V. KHOSLA
    case without any consideration of defendants’ censorious
    motivation—yet the concurrence acknowledges that this case
    presents “circumstances raising a strong suspicion as to the
    state’s censorial motives.” Concurrence at 46.5 Because the
    SAC so clearly alleges that defendants acted with a
    censorious purpose, we need not decide whether Minneapolis
    Star’s reasoning suffices. The Supreme Court’s subsidy
    cases provide a ready rule of decision: where a complaint
    alleges that the state singled out the press by withholding a
    subsidy in response to disfavored speech, the complaint
    alleges a viable Free Press Clause cause of action.
    The SAC’s Free Press Clause claim is sufficient to
    survive defendants’ motion to dismiss because it alleges that
    the Media Act was passed for the express purpose of
    silencing a newspaper, 
    Grosjean, 297 U.S. at 251
    , and that
    defendants singled out The Koala for a disparate financial
    burden, Minneapolis 
    Star, 460 U.S. at 585
    ; see also Pitt
    
    News, 379 F.3d at 110
    . Although student activity fee funding
    can be likened to a subsidy, we conclude that the SAC
    sufficiently alleges a violation of the Free Press Clause, and
    we reverse the district court’s order dismissing The Koala’s
    Free Press Clause claim.
    III.    Freedom of Speech
    The Koala also argues that defendants violated its First
    Amendment right to free speech by creating a limited public
    forum consisting of the student activity fund, and then closing
    5
    The concurrence argues that it would not compel the government to
    maintain subsidies once they are granted, but the only way the
    concurrence distinguishes this case is to point to strong evidence of
    censorious purpose. See Concurrence at 45.
    THE KOALA V. KHOSLA                        23
    a portion of the forum for the purpose of denying The Koala
    access to it. Defendants disagree about the scope of the
    limited public forum they created, and also argue that,
    however the forum’s contours are defined, they were free to
    close it. See Seattle Mideast Awareness Campaign v. King
    Cty., 
    781 F.3d 489
    , 496 (9th Cir. 2015) [hereinafter SeaMAC]
    (citing Perry Educ. Ass’n v. Perry Local Educators’ Ass’n,
    
    460 U.S. 37
    , 45–46 (1983)) (observing that the state may
    close a designated public forum “whenever it chooses”).
    “Nothing in the Constitution requires the Government
    freely to grant access to all who wish to exercise their right to
    free speech on every type of Government property without
    regard to the nature of the property or to the disruption that
    might be caused by the speaker’s activities.” Cornelius v.
    NAACP Legal Def. & Educ. Fund, Inc., 
    473 U.S. 788
    ,
    799–800 (1985); see Greer v. Spock, 
    424 U.S. 828
    , 836
    (1976) (“The guarantees of the First Amendment have never
    meant that people who want to propagandize protests or
    views have a constitutional right to do so whenever and
    however and wherever they please.”) (internal quotation
    marks omitted). The government, like any landowner, has the
    power to control access to its private property, 
    id., and courts
    will not entertain First Amendment challenges where there is
    no indication that the government intended to grant public
    access to a particular property. See Perry 
    Educ., 460 U.S. at 47
    (“If by policy or by practice the . . . School District ha[d]
    opened its mail system for indiscriminate use by the general
    public, then [plaintiff] could justifiably argue a public forum
    ha[d] been created . . . . [However,] there is no indication in
    the record that the school mailboxes and interschool delivery
    system are open for use by the general public.”).
    24                    THE KOALA V. KHOSLA
    In keeping with these black-letter principles, we use a
    forum analysis to evaluate government restrictions on purely
    private speech that occurs on government property. See
    Minn. Voters All. v. Mansky, 
    138 S. Ct. 1876
    , 1885 (2018).
    We are concerned with three types of fora: (1) the traditional
    forum; (2) the designated public forum; and (3) the limited
    forum.6 See 
    id. The government’s
    ability to restrict speech
    differs “depending on the character of the property at issue.”
    Perry 
    Educ., 460 U.S. at 44
    .
    Traditional public fora are defined as properties that by
    history and tradition have been open for public speech. See
    
    SeaMAC, 781 F.3d at 496
    . Traditional public fora include
    “parks, streets, sidewalks, and the like[.]” Minn. Voters 
    All., 138 S. Ct. at 1885
    . Designated public fora are properties that
    are not traditionally open for public speech, but the
    government has made them “‘generally available’ for
    ‘expressive use by the general public or by a particular class
    of speakers.’” 
    SeaMAC, 781 F.3d at 496
    (quoting Ark. Educ.
    Television Comm’n v. Forbes, 
    523 U.S. 666
    , 677–78 (1998)).
    Examples of designated public fora include university
    meeting facilities, school board meetings, and municipal
    theaters. See Perry 
    Educ., 460 U.S. at 45
    (collecting cases).
    In both of these types of fora, the government may impose
    reasonable time, place, and manner restrictions on speech, but
    content-based restrictions must be viewpoint neutral and
    satisfy strict scrutiny review. Minn. Voters 
    All., 138 S. Ct. at 1885
    .
    6
    In SeaMAC, we noted that fora in the third category have
    “sometimes been labeled ‘nonpublic’ forums” but concluded that “[t]he
    label doesn’t matter, because the same level of First Amendment scrutiny
    applies to all forums that aren’t traditional or designated public 
    forums.” 781 F.3d at 496
    n.2 (internal citations omitted).
    THE KOALA V. KHOSLA                               25
    Both parties agree that, whatever its scope, the forum at
    issue in this case is a limited public forum. The classic
    example of a limited public forum is a government property
    characterized by selective access based on the speaker or
    subject matter. See 
    SeaMAC, 781 F.3d at 497
    . In this type of
    forum, the government may regulate speech so long as the
    restriction is reasonable and viewpoint neutral. 
    Id. at 496.
    The government creates limited public fora, and we have said
    that it may close such limited fora “whenever it chooses.”
    See id.7
    The parties in this case disagree about what constitutes
    the limited public forum. The Koala contends that the
    relevant forum in this case is the total student activity fund
    available to RSOs. It argues that the media funds category is
    merely an administrative device established by the Associated
    Students to facilitate its allocation of the total student activity
    fund. The Koala reasons that the relevant forum should be
    defined by the policy pursuant to which the forum was
    created, and UCSD’s Policy on Compulsory Campus-Based
    Student Fees unambiguously created a single funding
    program for the speech of all RSOs. Defendants counter that
    the relevant forum is limited to the media funds category of
    the student activity fund, primarily because The Koala
    applied for that category of student activity fee funding.
    7
    Although our observation that the government may close a limited
    public forum “whenever it chooses” is perhaps a stronger statement of the
    law than those embraced by our sister Circuits, it is consistent with cases
    from other Circuits holding that, just because the government opens a
    limited forum, it is not required to retain or maintain it indefinitely. See,
    e.g., Archdiocese of Wash. v. Wash. Metro. Area Transit Auth., 
    897 F.3d 314
    , 323 (D.C. Cir. 2018); Verlo v. Martinez, 
    820 F.3d 1113
    , 1129 (10th
    Cir. 2016); Satawa v. Macomb Cty. R. Comm’n, 
    689 F.3d 506
    , 517 (6th
    Cir. 2012).
    26                 THE KOALA V. KHOSLA
    Alternatively, defendants maintain that even if the relevant
    forum is defined as the total pool of student activity fee
    funds, the Media Act was a reasonable restriction on speech.
    Cornelius v. NAACP Legal Defense and Educational
    Fund, 
    473 U.S. 788
    (1985), is key to our analysis because it
    illustrates how the Supreme Court identifies the boundaries
    of fora that are not physical spaces. In Cornelius, two legal
    defense funds were denied access to a federal workforce
    charitable fundraising campaign established by a series of
    executive orders. 
    Id. at 790–92.
    The campaign limited
    participation to charitable organizations that provided direct
    health and welfare services, and excluded those that
    participated in lobbying. 
    Id. at 792–95.
    Because of these
    limits, the defense funds were not allowed to be designated as
    beneficiaries of the charitable campaign, and they challenged
    this restriction as a denial of their First Amendment rights.
    
    Id. at 793.
    The government argued that the fundraising program was
    not a forum at all, because it was not a physical space. 
    Id. at 800.
    Looking to the rule that had emerged from the Court’s
    earlier case law, the defense funds argued that the forum
    should be defined by the space to which the speaker sought
    access. 
    Id. at 801.
    Because the defense funds did not seek
    access to a physical work space—the defense funds wanted
    to be deemed eligible to receive employee donations in the
    charitable campaign, not access to federal office space—they
    argued that the relevant forum was the fundraising campaign
    itself. 
    Id. The Supreme
    Court agreed with respondents that the
    forum need not be a physical space and declared the
    charitable campaign to be the relevant forum. 
    Id. But the
                       THE KOALA V. KHOSLA                      27
    defense funds had also argued that the charitable campaign
    should be open to all types of charitable organizations, and
    the Court disagreed with that part of the funds’ argument. 
    Id. at 804.
    The Court determined the contours of the charitable
    campaign forum by looking to what the government intended
    when it created the campaign:
    in defining the forum we have focused on the
    access sought by the speaker. When speakers
    seek general access to public property, the
    forum encompasses that property. In cases in
    which limited access is sought, our cases have
    taken a more tailored approach to ascertaining
    the perimeter of a forum within the confines
    of the government property.
    
    Cornelius, 473 U.S. at 801
    (citing 
    Greer, 424 U.S. at 836
    )
    (holding that Fort Dix, a military installation, was not a
    public forum)).
    After considering the executive orders that created the
    campaign, the Court rejected the legal defense funds’
    contention that the government “created a limited public
    forum for use by all charitable organizations to solicit funds
    from federal employees” because “neither its practice nor its
    policy [was] consistent with [that] intent.” 
    Id. at 804.
    Limited fora may be established through policy or
    practice, see 
    id. at 791–93
    (examining executive orders
    establishing charitable fund for federal workers); see also
    Widmar v. Vincent, 
    454 U.S. 263
    , 277 (1981) (concluding
    that a university created a limited public forum by adopting
    an express policy allowing its meeting facilities to be used by
    student groups), but the government does not create a limited
    28                    THE KOALA V. KHOSLA
    public forum by inaction. See 
    Cornelius, 473 U.S. at 802
    .
    Here, as in Cornelius, we address “a forum more in a
    metaphysical than in a spatial or geographic sense[.]”
    Rosenberger v. Rector & Visitors of Univ. of Va., 
    515 U.S. 819
    , 830 (1995) (noting that a university student activity fund
    is a metaphysical forum). To define its contours, we consider
    the policy by which the forum was created. See 
    Cornelius, 473 U.S. at 802
    . A limited public forum is a forum the
    government has intentionally opened to certain groups or
    topics, see 
    id., and where
    there is an express policy, it
    establishes the nature and purpose of the forum.8 
    SeaMAC, 781 F.3d at 497
    ; see Bd. of Regents of Univ. of Wis. Sys. v.
    Southworth, 
    529 U.S. 217
    , 223, 230 (2000) (observing the
    University of Wisconsin created a forum for a student activity
    fund, and that it did so to “enhance the educational
    experience of its students [in a manner] consistent with the
    University’s mission”).
    Because designated or limited public fora are by
    definition created by the state for particular purposes, see,
    e.g., Minn. Voters 
    All., 138 S. Ct. at 1886
    (concluding that a
    polling place is a limited public forum because it is
    “government-controlled property set aside for the sole
    purpose of voting”), it follows that where an express policy
    creates a metaphysical forum, the policy itself defines the
    forum’s scope.
    The allegations in the SAC, and in the documents
    incorporated by reference into the SAC, support the
    conclusion that defendants created a limited public forum
    8
    In a related context, we have held that “[w]e look first to the terms
    of any policy the government has adopted to govern access to the forum”
    when determining the type of forum at issue. 
    SeaMAC, 781 F.3d at 497
    .
    THE KOALA V. KHOSLA                       29
    encompassing all student activity funding, not one
    constrained to only media funds. Most saliently, UCSD’s
    policy goals for allocating student activity fees were: “(1) to
    provide opportunities for the educational benefits and
    personal and social enrichment that derive from participation
    in extracurricular programs and activities; and (2) to stimulate
    on-campus discussion and debate on a wide range of issues
    from a variety of viewpoints.” There is no UCSD policy
    statement that separately establishes the category of media
    funds, and although the Associated Students apportions the
    total available activity funds into seven categories, we are
    persuaded that these categories merely facilitate the grant
    approval process. The guidelines to the Associated Students’
    allocation process explain how RSOs may apply for funding;
    they do not contain a separate statement of purpose for each
    category of funding. In fact, UCSD mandates that the
    Associated Students’ process for reallocating student fees be
    consistent with UCSD’s overall educational policy goal of
    providing opportunities for the educational benefit of its
    students and stimulating on-campus discussion. Because a
    limited public forum is one that “the government
    intentionally has opened to certain groups or to certain
    topics,” DiLoreto v. Downey Unified Sch. Dist. Bd. of Educ.,
    
    196 F.3d 958
    , 965 (9th Cir. 1999), and UCSD established a
    policy addressing all of the funds available for allocation by
    the Associated Students, we conclude the relevant forum is
    the student activity fund in its entirety.
    This conclusion is consistent with the way the Supreme
    Court has defined fora in university settings. Rosenberger,
    for example, concerned the University of Virginia’s student
    activity fund, established “to support a broad range of
    extracurricular student activities that [were] related to the
    educational purpose of the 
    University.” 515 U.S. at 824
    30                 THE KOALA V. KHOSLA
    (internal quotation marks omitted). The Court defined the
    entire student activity fund as limited public forum. 
    Id. at 830.
    Similarly, in Christian Legal Society v. Martinez, the
    University of California, Hastings College of Law created a
    “Registered Student Organization” (RSO) program whereby
    RSOs were eligible to seek financial assistance from the law
    school, and the Court defined the relevant forum as Hastings’
    RSO program writ large. 
    561 U.S. 661
    , 669–70, 689 (2010).
    Defendants’ reliance on our ruling in Flint v. Dennison,
    
    488 F.3d 816
    (9th Cir. 2007), is misplaced. In Flint, the
    plaintiff twice exceeded the spending cap for a student
    government election and was removed from office. 
    Id. at 822.
    The plaintiff then brought a complaint against the
    university alleging the spending cap was an unconstitutional
    abridgment of free speech. 
    Id. We defined
    the relevant
    forum as the student election rather than the entire university
    campus after reviewing the student government’s
    Constitution and bylaws and determining that the student
    government bylaws specifically created a separate student
    election forum to provide “an educational experience for the
    student candidates and student voters.” 
    Id. at 833.
    Here,
    UCSD’s written policy memorializes its intent to broadly
    fund activities that serve its educational mission by
    facilitating participation in extracurricular programs and
    activities, and stimulating on-campus discussion and debate.
    Defendants argue that the Media Act amounts to a forum
    closure of the media funds category, and that they were free
    to close this limited forum. We agree that a government is
    not obligated to indefinitely maintain a limited public form,
    see 
    SeaMAC, 781 F.3d at 496
    , but we know of no case in
    which the government has been allowed to define a forum
    one way at its inception, then redefine it in response to speech
    THE KOALA V. KHOSLA                           31
    it deems offensive and close only the portion of the forum
    where that speech occurs. If the government could define the
    contours of a limited public forum one way at is inception,
    then redefine its scope in response to speech it disfavors, the
    government would be free to zero-in and selectively silence
    any voice or perspective.9 UCSD’s newly defined forum,
    proposed ex post during contentious litigation around
    sensitive cultural and political topics, runs the real risk of
    silencing divergent views by slicing off just enough of an
    existing forum (the student activity fund) to isolate offensive
    speech, then closing the redefined forum (the Media Funds
    category of the student activity fund) under the guise of
    content neutrality.
    Amici offer an analogy that illustrates this point:
    If the appropriate forum in this case is
    “Associated Students’ funding of student print
    publications,” then the appropriate forum
    when a college decides to stop funding
    religious student groups might be considered
    “Associated Students’ funding of religious
    9
    As the Second Circuit has observed:
    all the circuits that have considered the issue have
    determined that, at the very least, when a public
    university creates or subsidizes a student newspaper
    and imposes no ex ante restrictions on the content that
    the newspaper may contain, neither the school nor its
    officials may interfere with the viewpoints expressed in
    the publication without running afoul of the First
    Amendment.
    Husain v. Springer, 
    494 F.3d 108
    , 124 (2d Cir. 2007).
    32                    THE KOALA V. KHOSLA
    student groups.” If this is true, then the case
    of a de-funded religious group would be
    properly construed to be a forum closure
    case[.]
    Brief of Amicus Curiae The Student Press Law Center, et al.
    at 23. The Supreme Court’s decision in Rosenberger
    forecloses such a 
    result. 515 U.S. at 844
    .
    We conclude that the student activity fund is the relevant
    forum for purposes of assessing the permissibility of
    defendants’ actions. Because the district court came to a
    different conclusion, it analyzed the sufficiency of The
    Koala’s complaint using an incorrect framework. We
    therefore vacate its order granting defendants’ motion to
    dismiss and remand for consideration of The Koala’s Free
    Speech claims in light of our forum definition.10
    IV.      The complaint sufficiently alleged a claim for
    First Amendment Retaliation.
    In addition to its Free Press and Free Speech claims, the
    SAC includes a separate First Amendment claim arguing that
    defendants passed the Media Act in retaliation for, and with
    the intent to silence, The Koala’s satirical content.
    10
    Defendants’ separate argument, that the relevant forum must be
    defined as the media funds because The Koala cannot show it was denied
    access to any other category of funding other than media funds, boils
    down to a restatement of its view that the relevant forum must be defined
    as the space to which The Koala sought access. Defendants apply this test
    without regard to context. For the reasons explained, we are persuaded
    that The Koala sought access to a grant from the student activity fund, and
    that the media funds category was adopted as an administrative
    convenience, not as a separate forum.
    THE KOALA V. KHOSLA                      33
    Defendants argue that the government’s motive is irrelevant
    when it enacts a content-neutral rule of general applicability.
    We are not persuaded by defendants’ argument. First, the
    Media Act does not apply to all RSOs; it bans all media
    organizations from obtaining student activity fee funding.
    The Media Act discriminates based on the identity of the
    speaker—here media organizations—and singles them out for
    disfavored access to student activity fee funding. Further, the
    SAC alleges that at least one other student organization
    continues to receive funding for its print media.
    Second, we are bound by our prior decision in Arizona
    
    Students’. 824 F.3d at 862
    . There, we addressed a retaliation
    claim from an organization representing students at each of
    Arizona’s three public universities. 
    Id. The students
    alleged
    that the Arizona Board of Regents had withdrawn their
    student activity fee funding in retaliation for the students’
    support of a controversial statewide ballot measure. 
    Id. at 863.
    The Regents initially voted to cease collecting student
    activity fees on behalf of the student government
    organizations and not to disburse those it had already
    collected. 
    Id. Later, the
    Regents changed the mandatory
    student activity fee to an opt-in fee and required the student
    associations to reimburse the administration for the costs of
    collection. 
    Id. The student
    associations brought suit, alleging
    that they lost their only source of income as a result of the
    retaliatory action. See Ariz. 
    Students’, 824 F.3d at 863
    .
    The district court dismissed the students’ retaliation
    claim, but we reversed. 
    Id. at 862.
    We began by recognizing
    the elements of a First Amendment retaliation claim: a
    plaintiff must show “(1) it engaged in constitutionally
    protected activity; (2) the defendant’s actions would chill a
    34                  THE KOALA V. KHOSLA
    person of ordinary firmness from continuing to engage in the
    protected activity; and (3) the protected activity was a
    substantial motivating factor in the defendant’s conduct—i.e.,
    that there was a nexus between the defendant’s actions and an
    intent to chill speech.” Ariz. 
    Students’, 824 F.3d at 867
    (internal quotation marks omitted). At the pleading stage, the
    complaint must simply allege “plausible circumstances
    connecting the defendant’s retaliatory intent to the
    suppressive conduct[,]” and motive may be shown with direct
    or circumstantial evidence. 
    Id. at 870.
    After laying out this basic framework, we emphasized
    that “motive [is] a necessary element” of a retaliation claim,
    
    id. at 866,
    and held that “[o]therwise lawful government
    action may nonetheless be unlawful if motivated by
    retaliation for having engaged in activity protected under the
    First Amendment.” 
    Id. at 869
    (quoting O’Brien v. Welty,
    
    818 F.3d 920
    , 932 (9th Cir. 2016)).
    Neither party disputes that The Koala’s “Dangerous
    Space” article satisfies the first element of a retaliation claim,
    because it was clearly protected speech. Second, The Koala
    alleges that the Media Act eliminated its ability to seek
    funding for printing and distributing its student newspaper,
    which caused The Koala to stop publishing in print entirely.
    The Koala thus adequately alleges that the Media Act would
    chill a person of ordinary firmness from continuing to engage
    in the protected activity and also that the Media Act did, in
    fact, chill The Koala’s speech in this instance. That The
    Koala continues to publish its newspaper online does not
    change this outcome. A “plaintiff is not required to
    demonstrate that its speech was actually suppressed or
    inhibited.” Ariz. 
    Students’, 824 F.3d at 867
    . Moreover, for
    the reasons explained, The Koala sufficiently alleged that the
    THE KOALA V. KHOSLA                       35
    Media Act burdened its speech because it considers the paper
    version of its publication to be a more effective means of
    communicating with its audience.
    Finally, The Koala alleges its publication of the
    “Dangerous Space” article was the motivating factor that
    prompted the Associated Students to pass the Media Act,
    thereby adequately alleging a nexus between The Koala’s
    speech and the Associated Students’ allegedly retaliatory
    conduct. The SAC alleges close temporal proximity between
    the “Dangerous Space” article and UCSD’s release of a
    statement from the Chancellor that “strongly denounce[d]
    [T]he Koala publication and the offensive and hurtful
    language it cho[se] to publish.” The Chancellor allegedly
    described The Koala as “profoundly repugnant, repulsive,
    attacking[,] and cruel[,]” the SAC alleges that a UCSD
    administrator encouraged an RSO to “pressure” the
    Associated Students to defund The Koala, and the Executive
    Vice Chancellor of Academic Affairs allegedly made a
    statement that strongly suggested The Koala was indeed
    being singled out for special treatment: “Let’s not ditch the
    good ones worthy of this funding and work actively on
    finding ways to encourage and help them financially.” At
    this early stage of the litigation, we take these allegations as
    true and construe them in the light most favorable to The
    Koala.
    The district court cited the Seventh Circuit’s decision in
    Grossbaum v. Indianapolis-Marion County Building
    Authority, which held that “content-neutral speech regulations
    in nonpublic fora pass constitutional muster regardless of
    motive[.]” 
    100 F.3d 1287
    , 1299 (7th Cir. 1996). Grossbaum
    is neither controlling nor analogous. In Grossbaum, the
    Seventh Circuit upheld a government building authority’s
    36                 THE KOALA V. KHOSLA
    decision to “prohibit[] all private displays, religious or
    otherwise[,]” because the building authority entirely closed
    the subject forum. 
    Id. at 1289–91.
    Because the Seventh
    Circuit approved the closure of an entire forum, it declined to
    consider the government’s motivation. But as we have
    explained, the Media Act only closed part of the broader
    limited public forum created by the student activity fund. On
    these facts, the SAC plausibly alleges the elements necessary
    to plead a First Amendment retaliation claim.
    We are sensitive to the challenges facing educational
    institutions seeking to steer a difficult course between free
    expression and civil discourse. Nevertheless, we are equally
    mindful of that fact that, in the university setting, “the State
    acts against a backdrop and tradition of thought and
    experiment that is at the center of our intellectual and
    philosophic tradition.” 
    Rosenberger, 515 U.S. at 835
    . We
    conclude that the Eleventh Amendment does not bar
    plaintiffs’ suit. Because we further conclude that The Koala’s
    complaint adequately states claims for violations of the Free
    Press Clause, the Free Speech Clause, and First Amendment
    retaliation, we vacate the district court’s order granting the
    second motion to dismiss and remand for further proceedings
    consistent with this opinion.
    REVERSED, VACATED, AND REMANDED.
    THE KOALA V. KHOSLA                            37
    FISHER, Circuit Judge, concurring:
    I concur in the result and in all but part II of the opinion.
    Regarding the Koala’s Free Press Clause claim, I agree with
    the majority’s conclusion that the complaint states a claim,
    but my analysis differs from the majority’s in two ways.
    First, the majority concludes the second amended complaint
    states a claim under the Free Press Clause on a theory –
    improper censorial purpose – that the complaint does not
    advance, the Koala does not rely on and the parties have not
    briefed. Op. at 20–22. Although I agree with the majority
    that a censorial purpose theory would be viable here if raised,
    I would prefer not resolve the Free Press Clause issue on a
    theory that it has not been pled, relied on or briefed. 1
    Second, the opinion declines to decide whether the
    complaint states a Free Press Clause claim on the theory that
    the Koala does advance – its theory that the Media Act
    violates the Free Press Clause because, irrespective of
    censorial purpose, it singles out the press for a disparate
    financial burden. Op. at 21–22. I recognize that this presents
    a novel issue. Nevertheless, because the issue is fairly
    presented, I would resolve the parties’ disagreement about
    whether the discriminatory administration of a subsidy
    program can be challenged on a “singling out” theory under
    the Free Press Clause – a theory that does not require proof of
    censorial purpose. Accordingly, I write separately to explain
    1
    As the majority opinion points out, the complaint does allege that
    the defendants acted with a censorial purpose. Op. at 16. The complaint,
    however, relies on these allegations in connection with the Koala’s Free
    Speech Clause claim, not with respect to its Free Press Clause claim. The
    Koala’s Free Press Clause claim relies on a singling out theory, not
    censorial purpose.
    38                     THE KOALA V. KHOSLA
    why, in my view, the Koala has adequately stated a Free
    Press Clause claim on a singling out theory.2
    I
    The Supreme Court has not had occasion to address when
    discrimination against the press in connection with a subsidy
    program violates the Free Press Clause. That clause states
    that “Congress shall make no law . . . abridging the freedom
    of . . . the press.” U.S. Const. amend. I.
    The Court has, however, addressed discrimination against
    the press in connection with the imposition of taxes,
    identifying at least four circumstances in which taxation of
    the press is constitutionally suspect: (1) when a tax has “an
    improper censorial motive,” Arkansas Writers’ Project, Inc.
    v. Ragland, 
    481 U.S. 221
    , 228 (1987); see Leathers v.
    Medlock, 
    499 U.S. 439
    , 444–45 (1991); Grosjean v.
    American Press Co., 
    297 U.S. 233
    , 250 (1936); (2) when a
    tax “singles out the press as a whole” for special treatment,
    Arkansas Writers’ 
    Project, 481 U.S. at 229
    ; see 
    Leathers, 499 U.S. at 445
    –46; (3) when a tax “targets a small number
    of speakers,” 
    Leathers, 499 U.S. at 447
    , or “individual
    members of the press,” Arkansas Writers’ 
    Project, 481 U.S. at 228
    ; and (4) when a tax “discriminates on the basis of the
    2
    I do not, as the majority opinion suggests, fault the majority for
    “analyz[ing] the implications of the tax-subsidy difference.” Op. at 19.
    In my view, the majority quite properly focuses on that issue. My concern
    is simply that the majority opinion resolves the adequacy of the Free Press
    Clause allegations on a legal theory that the complaint does not allege and
    upon which the Koala does not rely – censorial purpose – while
    simultaneously failing to address the theory upon which the complaint and
    the Koala do rely – the theory that the defendants, irrespective of censorial
    purpose, impermissibly singled out of the press for disparate treatment.
    THE KOALA V. KHOSLA                             39
    content of taxpayer speech,” 
    Leathers, 499 U.S. at 447
    . As
    relevant here, the second and third of these types of
    discrimination do not require proof of censorial purpose. As
    the Court explained in Leathers, “direct evidence of improper
    censorial motive is [not] required in order to invalidate a
    differential tax on First Amendment grounds: ‘Illicit
    legislative intent is not the sine qua non of a violation of the
    First Amendment.’” 
    Id. at 445
    (quoting Minneapolis Star &
    Tribune Co. v. Minn. Comm’r of Revenue, 
    460 U.S. 575
    , 592
    (1983)).3
    The Third Circuit, moreover, has held that the second and
    third of these types of discrimination – singling out the press
    as a whole or targeting a small number of speakers – apply
    not only to “disparate taxation” but also to “laws that impose
    other types of disparate financial burdens.” Pitt News v.
    Pappert, 
    379 F.3d 96
    , 111 (3d Cir. 2004). The court reasoned
    that “[t]he threat to the First Amendment arises from the
    imposition of financial burdens that may have the effect of
    influencing or suppressing speech, and whether those burdens
    take the form of taxes or some other form is unimportant.”
    
    Id. at 111–12.
    The court therefore applied these principles to
    a state law preventing college newspapers from collecting
    revenue from the advertisement of alcoholic beverages.
    Here, both sides rely on Pitt News. Thus, for purposes of
    my analysis, I assume that the Court’s cases regarding
    singling out the press as a whole or targeting individual
    3
    Although the Court has said that “the institutional press” enjoys no
    “constitutional privilege beyond that of other speakers,” Citizens United
    v. FEC, 
    558 U.S. 310
    , 352 (2010) (quoting Austin v. Michigan Chamber
    of Commerce, 
    494 U.S. 652
    , 691 (1990) (Scalia, J., dissenting)), it has
    long treated discrimination against the press as constitutionally suspect.
    40                     THE KOALA V. KHOSLA
    members of the press apply not only to disparate taxation but
    also to “laws that impose other types of disparate financial
    burdens.” 
    Id. at 111.4
    II
    Where the parties disagree, however, is over whether
    these principles extend from the imposition of taxes and other
    financial burdens to disparate treatment under a subsidy
    program. The defendants point out that the government is
    under no obligation to subsidize the exercise of constitutional
    rights. See, e.g., Ysursa v. Pocatello Educ. Ass’n, 
    555 U.S. 353
    , 355 (2009) (although “[t]he First Amendment prohibits
    government from ‘abridging the freedom of speech,’” it does
    not require the government to “promote that speech”); Rust
    v. Sullivan, 
    500 U.S. 173
    , 193 (1991); 
    Leathers, 499 U.S. at 450
    (“[A] legislature is not required to subsidize First
    Amendment rights through a tax exemption or tax
    deduction.”); Regan v. Taxation With Representation of
    Washington, 
    461 U.S. 540
    , 549 (1983) (“[A] legislature’s
    decision not to subsidize the exercise of a fundamental right
    does not infringe the right.”); Harris v. McRae, 
    448 U.S. 297
    ,
    317 n.19 (1980) (“A refusal to fund protected activity,
    without more, cannot be equated with the imposition of a
    ‘penalty’ on that activity.”). They argue, moreover, that the
    rationale behind the singling out theory – the recognition that
    selective taxation can be used to coerce or destroy the press
    – does not extend to the denial or withdrawal of a government
    subsidy:
    4
    “In order to justify such differential taxation, the State must show
    that its regulation is necessary to serve a compelling state interest and is
    narrowly drawn to achieve that end.” Arkansas Writers’ 
    Project, 481 U.S. at 231
    .
    THE KOALA V. KHOSLA                      41
    The rationale running through the Free Press
    Clause cases repeatedly refers to the coercive
    power to tax, and the legitimate role played by
    the Free Press Clause in shielding the press
    from the discriminatory exercise of the
    potentially destructive power to tax. . . .
    Similar concerns arise where the government
    “unjustifiably imposes a financial burden on
    a particular segment of the media,” Pitt News
    v. Pappert, 
    379 F.3d 96
    , 109 (3d Cir. 2004),
    or where it singles out the press with costly
    and burdensome regulations, penalties, or
    fines. . . . The potential threats posed by such
    taxes, penalties, regulations, and fines do not
    exist with regard to the administration of
    government subsidies such as the campus
    activity funds at issue here. . . . Nothing in
    the Free Press Clause jurisprudence suggests
    that it was intended to promote, guarantee, or
    protect affirmative government assistance to
    the press. . . . Simply put, the power to
    subsidize is not the power to destroy.
    Answering Brief at 21–23. The defendants emphasize that
    “no court has construed the Free Press Clause to create a
    ‘protected classification’ for the press, guaranteeing ‘the
    press’ access to every subsidy program the government
    makes available to any person or entity who might also
    engage in expressive activity.” 
    Id. at 23.
    Nor, the defendants
    argue, can the Koala “contend that the Free Press Clause
    compels the government to maintain subsidies, once they are
    granted, and to continue to maintain them, apparently
    indefinitely.” 
    Id. at 25.
    42                 THE KOALA V. KHOSLA
    The defendants’ arguments are not persuasive. First, it
    does not follow from the fact that the government has no duty
    to subsidize the press that the government may discriminate
    against the press in administering subsidies. The Court has
    held, for instance, that a state may not “discriminate
    invidiously in its subsidies in such a way as to ‘aim[ ] at the
    suppression of dangerous ideas.’” 
    Regan, 461 U.S. at 548
    (alteration in original) (quoting Cammarano v. United States,
    
    358 U.S. 498
    , 513 (1959)); cf. Perry v. Sindermann, 
    408 U.S. 593
    , 597 (1972). The right not to subsidize does not include
    the unfettered right to discriminate.
    Second, the defendants overstate matters when they argue
    that the rationale underlying the Court’s tax cases does not
    extend to the denial or withdrawal of a subsidy. To be sure,
    in some instances the denial or withdrawal of a subsidy may
    be less coercive than the imposition of a tax. In Regan, the
    Court noted that, “although government may not place
    obstacles in the path of a person’s exercise of freedom of
    speech, it need not remove those not of its own 
    creation.” 461 U.S. at 549
    –50 (alterations omitted) (quoting 
    Harris, 448 U.S. at 316
    ). The Court observed that “[c]onstitutional
    concerns are greatest when the State attempts to impose its
    will by force of law.” 
    Id. at 550
    (alteration in original)
    (quoting Maher v. Roe, 
    432 U.S. 464
    , 476 (1977)). The
    government’s “power to encourage . . . is necessarily far
    broader.” 
    Id. (quoting Maher,
    432 U.S. at 476).
    In my view, however, this is a difference in degree, not a
    difference in kind. The tax-subsidy distinction goes only so
    far. See, e.g., 
    Leathers, 499 U.S. at 450
    n.3 (describing tax
    exemptions and deductions as “a form of subsidy”
    administered through the tax system (quoting 
    Regan, 461 U.S. at 544
    )). At least in some circumstances, “[t]he
    THE KOALA V. KHOSLA                               43
    selective administration of government subsidies presents as
    much potential for abuse as selective imposition of taxes,
    regulations, penalties, or fines.” Reply Brief at 8. This may
    be “especially true for the student press.” 
    Id. Thus, the
    defendants’ contention that the government enjoys carte
    blanche to single out the press for differential treatment under
    a subsidy program, so long as it neither manifests a censorial
    purpose nor facially discriminates based on content, is
    unpersuasive.
    III
    Here, the complaint adequately alleges a Free Press
    Clause claim on a singling out theory. First, the complaint
    plausibly alleges that the Media Act singled out the press
    from a generally available funding program.5 It alleges that
    “[t]he Student Government . . . disqualified student
    organizations that publish print newspapers from eligibility
    to seek funding designed to support the speech of student
    organizations while continuing to treat other student
    organizations as eligible to seek such funding.” SAC ¶ 2.
    5
    The majority opinion appears to misstate the theory upon which the
    Koala relies. As I read it, the complaint alleges that the defendants
    violated the Free Press Clause by singling out the student press as a
    whole, not by singling out “The Koala [alone] for disfavored treatment.”
    Op. at 18. See SAC ¶ 109 (“Defendants violated and are continuing to
    violate the Free Press Clause of the First Amendment by adopting and
    enforcing the Media Disqualification and thus excluding The Koala and
    other student print publications from eligibility to seek campus activity fee
    funding for the publication of student print newspapers, while continuing
    to treat other student organizations as eligible to seek campus activity fee
    funding . . . .”); Opening Brief at 28 (“As pleaded in the SAC, the Media
    Disqualification violates the Free Press Clause on its face because it
    imposes a financial burden on the student press by selectively
    disqualifying it from an otherwise available source of revenue.”).
    44                 THE KOALA V. KHOSLA
    Significantly, the complaint does not allege that the
    defendants excluded the student press from a narrow, targeted
    subsidy program, but rather that they excluded the student
    press, and solely the student press, from a widespread funding
    program upon which student organizations broadly rely.
    According to the complaint, the Student Government
    collected $3,704,964 in campus activity fees during the
    2015–16 school year and allocated $432,236 to fund student
    organizations, including $25,000 earmarked for print media
    organizations. SAC ¶ 34. The defendants then excluded the
    press alone from this broad-based funding program.
    Second, the complaint plausibly alleges that this funding
    program plays an outsized role in the financial lives of
    student organizations. It alleges, for example, that the Media
    Act “materially hindered The Koala’s ability to publish,
    preventing it from publishing a planned issue during the
    winter quarter of the 2015–16 academic year and limiting it
    to three issues instead of the planned six during the
    [subsequent] academic year.” SAC ¶ 101. It alleges that the
    university also precluded the Koala from participating in “a
    crowdfunding platform for student and campus projects.”
    SAC ¶ 103.
    Under these circumstances, the withdrawal of a subsidy
    raises many of the same concerns as the imposition of a tax.
    As the Third Circuit explained in Pitt News, schemes singling
    out the press, or individual members of the press, “are suspect
    because they can easily be used as a way of controlling or
    suppressing 
    speech.” 379 F.3d at 112
    . “Government can
    attempt to cow the media in general by singling it out for
    special financial burdens,” or it can “seek to control, weaken,
    or destroy a disfavored segment of the media by targeting that
    segment.” 
    Id. at 110.
    As the Court recognized in Leathers,
    THE KOALA V. KHOSLA                       45
    even the threat of disparate financial treatment can operate
    “as effectively as a censor” in suppressing disfavored
    
    expression. 499 U.S. at 446
    (quoting Minneapolis 
    Star, 460 U.S. at 585
    ). These concerns apply here as well. The
    defendants’ actions materially weakened the Koala, and it
    requires little imagination to suppose that the funding
    decision challenged here had a profound chilling effect on the
    expressive activities of other organizations that depend on
    student activity fee funding.
    Third, the principle that taxes singling out the press are
    constitutionally suspect responds to the practical concern that
    a censorial purpose may be difficult to prove. Under a
    singling out theory, a tax is suspect when, although evidence
    of censorial motive is lacking, it “is structured so as to raise
    suspicion that it was intended” as “a purposeful attempt to
    interfere with [an entity’s] First Amendment activities.”
    
    Leathers, 499 U.S. at 448
    . Here, the complaint plainly raises
    these concerns. It alleges that, although the Media Act “was
    in form directed at eligibility to seek funding for any student
    print media,” it was “in fact substantially motivated by
    discrimination or retaliation against The Koala because of the
    viewpoint of its speech.” SAC ¶ 88. The timing of the Media
    Act, as well as contemporary statements by student and
    university leaders, strongly suggest a hidden censorial
    motive.
    For these reasons, I would hold that the complaint,
    irrespective of censorial motive, adequately alleges a claim
    under the Free Press Clause on the theory that the defendants
    singled out the press for disparate treatment. This conclusion
    does not, as the defendants contend, broadly interfere with a
    government’s discretion to administer subsidy programs. I
    would not “prevent the government from ever eliminating, or
    46                 THE KOALA V. KHOSLA
    even reducing, subsidies to a media recipient, unless it can
    demonstrate a compelling government interest.” Answering
    Brief at 21. I would not read the Free Press Clause as
    creating “a ‘protected classification’ for the press,
    guaranteeing ‘the press’ access to every subsidy program the
    government makes available to any person or entity who
    might also engage in expressive activity,” or as requiring
    “affirmative government assistance to the press.” 
    Id. at 23–24.
    Nor would I read the Free Press Clause as compelling
    “the government to maintain subsidies, once they are granted,
    and to continue to maintain them, apparently indefinitely.”
    
    Id. at 25.
    We have in this case the selective withdrawal of the
    student press, and solely the student press, from a broad-
    based funding program, under circumstances raising a strong
    suspicion as to the state’s censorial motives. Under these
    circumstances, I would hold that the complaint adequately
    states a claim under the Free Press Clause.