Michigan State AFL-CIO, et al v. William Schuette, et al
Filing
OPINION and JUDGMENT filed : The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED in part REVERSED in part. Decision for publication. Richard F. Suhrheinrich, Jeffrey S. Sutton (AUTHORING), and David W. McKeague, Circuit Judges.
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RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b)
File Name: 17a0028p.06
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
MICHIGAN STATE AFL-CIO; UTILITY WORKERS UNION
OF AMERICA, LOCAL 223; GEORGE HORUCZI;
INTERNATIONAL BROTHERHOOD OF ELECTRICAL
WORKERS, AFL-CIO, LOCAL 58; MICHIGAN STATE
UTILITY WORKERS COUNCIL; WILLIAM D. CHADWICK,
JR.,
Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
WILLIAM SCHUETTE; RUTH JOHNSON,
Defendants-Appellants.
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No. 16-2100
Appeal from the United States District Court for
the Eastern District of Michigan at Flint.
No. 4:16-cv-11454—Linda V. Parker, District Judge.
Argued: February 2, 2017
Decided and Filed: February 9, 2017
Before: SUHRHEINRICH, SUTTON, and McKEAGUE, Circuit Judges.
_________________
COUNSEL
ARGUED: Erik A. Grill, OFFICE OF THE MICHIGAN ATTORNEY GENERAL, Lansing,
Michigan, for Appellants. Andrew A. Nickelhoff, SACHS WALDMAN, P.C., Detroit,
Michigan, for Appellees. ON BRIEF: Erik A. Grill, Denise C. Barton, Adam Fracassi, Joseph
Y. Ho, OFFICE OF THE MICHIGAN ATTORNEY GENERAL, Lansing, Michigan, for
Appellants. Andrew A. Nickelhoff, SACHS WALDMAN, P.C., Detroit, Michigan, John R.
Canzano, MCKNIGHT CANZANO SMITH RADTKE & BRAULT P.C., Royal Oak, Michigan,
Robert D. Fetter, MILLER COHEN PLC, Detroit, Michigan, for Appellees. Robert L. Avers,
DICKINSON WRIGHT PLLC, Ann Arbor, Michigan, for Amicus Curiae.
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Mich. State AFL-CIO, et al. v. Schuette, et al.
_________________
OPINION
_________________
SUTTON, Circuit Judge.
The Michigan Campaign Finance Act generally bars
corporations and labor unions from contributing to political candidates and organizations. As an
exception to this prohibition, it permits corporations and unions to form and contribute to
political action committees, which in turn may make political contributions.
A recent
amendment to the Act defines a prohibited expenditure by corporations and unions to include the
administrative expenses of operating a payroll deduction program unless the deductions go to
(1) the corporation’s or union’s own political action committee or (2) a political action
committee established by a nonprofit corporation of which the union or corporation is a member.
Several unions and some of their members challenge this component of the Act on the grounds
that it violates (1) their Contracts Clause rights by upsetting existing collective bargaining
agreements that already permit payroll deductions to other entities and (2) their First Amendment
rights by preventing many union members from donating to their union’s political action
committee via automatic payroll deductions.
The district court preliminarily enjoined
enforcement of the law on both grounds. We affirm the district court’s Contracts Clause ruling
and reverse its First Amendment ruling.
I.
The
Michigan
Campaign
Finance
Act
prohibits
corporations
from
making
“contributions” to, or “expenditures” on behalf of, state political candidates except through a
“separate segregated fund,” more commonly known as a political action committee, still more
commonly known as a PAC. See Mich. Comp. Laws §§ 169.254–.255; 1979–80 Mich. Op.
Att’y Gen. 391 (1978). The statute defines “contribution” and “expenditure” to cover a transfer
of “anything of ascertainable monetary value” if “made for the purpose of influencing the
nomination or election of a candidate, for the qualification, passage, or defeat of a ballot
question, or for the qualification of a new political party.” Mich. Comp. Laws §§ 169.204, .206.
The statute permits corporations and unions to “make [] expenditure[s] for the establishment or
administration of, and solicitation, collection, or transfer of contributions to, a separate
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Mich. State AFL-CIO, et al. v. Schuette, et al.
segregated fund to be used for political purposes.”
Id. § 169.255(1).
But it prohibits
expenditures for “establishing and administering a payroll deduction plan to collect and deliver a
contribution to a [political action] committee,” unless “made by the person that established the”
fund, or, after the 2015 amendments, “by a person who is a member of a nonprofit corporation
that established” the fund. R. 7-7 at 4–5.
The upshot is this: Michigan law allows corporations and unions to solicit contributions
to their PACs from employees and organizational members. Mich. Comp. Laws § 169.255. If
an approved employee or member agrees to contribute, the corporation or union may deduct that
contribution directly from the individual’s payroll through a process known as “PAC check-off.”
To permit this arrangement, the statute carves out from the expenditure ban any expenses
associated with administering a political action committee if “made by the person that
established the” fund. Id. § 169.204 (amended 2015).
Unions do not employ the bulk of their authorized donor base.
To obtain payroll
deductions in the past, unions secured agreements from employers to deduct PAC contributions
from union members’ wages. PAC check-off agreements became a frequent component of
collectively bargained contracts with employers. To ensure that the § 169.204 exception covered
the payroll deduction expenses in union-employer agreements, unions would reimburse the costs
that employers bore in administering the check-offs for union members. An administrative
interpretation sanctioned this approach. And so the system operated—until December 2015.
At that time, Michigan amended the Campaign Finance Act.
Under the 2015
amendments, any contributions or expenditures made by a corporation “to provide for the
collection and transfer of contributions to” another corporate or union political action committee
would “constitute[] an in-kind contribution . . . prohibited under” the statute. R. 7-7 at 44–45;
Mich. Comp. Laws § 169.254(3). In addition, “[a]dvanced payment or reimbursement” could no
longer “cure a use of corporate resources otherwise prohibited.” Id. A violation of the provision
came with criminal and civil penalties. R. 7-7 at 45; Mich. Comp. Laws § 169.254(5).
At the same time that Michigan prohibited corporations and unions from administering
payroll deductions for others, it allowed them to administer payroll deductions for donations to
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nonprofit organizations so long as the corporation or union was a member of the nonprofit. The
legislature also lifted the annual consent requirement for individual contributions, making it
easier to secure continuous payroll deductions from employees.
In response to these changes, four labor unions and two union members (altogether, the
unions) sued Michigan’s Secretary of State Ruth Johnson and Attorney General William
Schuette in their official capacities (altogether, the State), alleging violations of the First
Amendment and the Contracts Clause. The district court granted the unions a preliminary
injunction on the ground that they were likely to prevail on their Contracts Clause and First
Amendment claims. The State appealed.
II.
District courts gauge requests for a preliminary injunction based on four factors: (1) the
plaintiffs’ likelihood of success on the merits; (2) irreparable harm to plaintiffs absent injunctive
relief; (3) substantial harm to others resulting from an injunction; and (4) the broader public
interest. Washington v. Reno, 35 F.3d 1093, 1099 (6th Cir. 1994). Courts of appeals gauge
requests to reverse a preliminary injunction based on two inquiries: (1) Did the district court rely
on clearly erroneous facts in assessing these considerations? Or (2) did the court rely on an
incorrect legal standard or misapply the governing standard in assessing these considerations?
Hunter v. Hamilton Cty. Bd. of Elections, 635 F.3d 219, 233–34 (6th Cir. 2011) (quotation
omitted). This case turns on the law. The district court correctly applied the Contracts Clause
and misapplied the First Amendment, and that’s all we need to know to affirm in part and reverse
in part. Hamilton’s Bogarts, Inc. v. Michigan, 501 F.3d 644, 649 (6th Cir. 2007).
Contracts Clause. The Constitution provides that “[n]o State shall . . . pass any . . . Law
impairing the Obligation of Contracts.” U.S. Const. art. I, § 10. The Contracts Clause has had
good days, see Trs. of Dartmouth Coll. v. Woodward, 17 U.S. 518 (1819), and bad ones, see
Home Bldg. & Loan Ass’n v. Blaisdell, 290 U.S. 398 (1934), with some cases honoring its
language more assiduously than others. At one bookend is Dartmouth College, in which the
Court, through an opinion by Chief Justice Marshall, held that the Contracts Clause protects
contracts “which respect property, or some object of value,” including, in that case, the charter of
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a private educational institution. 17 U.S. at 629, 643–46. At the other bookend is Blaisdell, in
which the Court rejected a Contracts Clause challenge to a Minnesota law that banned
enforcement of mortgage foreclosures that the loan agreements expressly authorized. 290 U.S. at
430, 434–35. According to Blaisdell, “[t]he policy of protecting contracts against impairment
presupposes” “the reservation of essential attributes of sovereign power [that can be] read into
[private] contracts.” Id. at 435. Today’s test for assessing a Contracts Clause violation lies
somewhere between the two cases. It prohibits a State from imposing “a substantial impairment”
on a “contractual relationship,” Allied Structural Steel Co. v. Spannaus, 438 U.S. 234, 244–45
(1978), unless that impairment amounts to a “reasonable” and “appropriate” means of achieving
“a significant and legitimate public purpose,” Energy Reserves Grp., Inc. v. Kan. Power & Light
Co., 459 U.S. 400, 411–12 (1983).
We need not start from scratch in applying that standard. Almost twenty years ago,
Toledo Area AFL-CIO Council v. Pizza addressed a similar Contracts Clause challenge to an
Ohio law that barred public employers from administering automatic payroll deductions for
political purposes and that applied the ban to existing collective bargaining agreements.
154 F.3d 307, 311 (6th Cir. 1998).
Pizza held that the law “operate[d] as a substantial
impairment of the [] contractual relationship” because it “obliterate[d] the affected workers’
contractual expectation that the state w[ould] allow them to use this highly effective method of
political fundraising for the [agreed upon] term.” Id. at 323. Pizza also did not think much of
the State’s justifications for abrogating this contractual commitment:
warding off political
corruption and preventing employees from being coerced into making contributions. Id. at 326–
27.
It found this “severe impairment of pre-existing” agreements neither “necessary [n]or
reasonable.” Id. at 326.
As with the Ohio law in Pizza, so too with the Michigan law in this case. The Michigan
law prohibits the administration of payroll deduction programs for union political action
committees. Just so in Pizza. The unions have contracts that provide for payroll deductions.
Just so in Pizza. The Michigan law prohibits adherence to these agreements. Just so in Pizza.
Michigan offers no interests distinct from those considered in Pizza to justify removing the PAC
check-off obligations from the union contracts. Until now, Michigan, like Ohio, has “been
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willing to tolerate or been unaware of the evils it now claims are associated” with PAC checkoffs. Id. Here too, then, the State may “tolerate them a bit longer until [the] contractual
obligations expire.” Id. Pizza establishes a substantial likelihood, indeed an overwhelming
probability, that the unions will succeed on their Contracts Clause claim.
Not so quick, responds the State. It says that there is no reason to worry about Pizza
because the unions have not shown that their collective bargaining agreements contain
reimbursement clauses, and without these clauses the contracts cannot be enforced. The unions,
it is true, have placed short excerpts from only two contracts into the record, and neither excerpt
contains a reimbursement provision. But this argument does not supply a basis for denying the
unions’ request for a preliminary injunction. A contract need not state that it will operate in
accordance with governing law to be valid. And if the unions wish to enforce the PAC check-off
provisions during the rest of the collective bargaining agreement, they of course will have to
reimburse the employers for those costs. The unions conceded as much during oral argument. In
the aftermath of that concession, the State could not identify any fiscal prejudice it would suffer
if these contracts operate in compliance with the reimbursement requirement through the end of
the collective bargaining agreement.
Even so, Michigan adds that we can avoid the Contracts Claim altogether by construing
the 2015 amendment to apply only to future collective bargaining agreements. But the law offers
no basis for this limitation. And we will not invent one.
None of the other preliminary injunction considerations have any role to play here. The
debate is a legal one, and the unions are on the right side of it. The Contracts Clause, then,
provides relief to the unions in part, prohibiting the State from enforcing the contested provision
against regulated entities with pre-existing PAC check-off obligations through the end of the
relevant collective bargaining agreements. But the unions seek relief in full, which brings us to
the First Amendment claim.
First Amendment. “Congress shall make no law . . . abridging the freedom of speech.”
U.S. Const. amend. I. The guarantee extends to speech by incorporated entities, including for-
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profit corporations, nonprofit corporations, and unions. Citizens United v. FEC, 558 U.S. 310,
342 (2010).
The essence of the unions’ claim is that the 2015 amendment amounts to a viewpoint
restriction on speech. The problem with this claim is that it has been thrice rejected—once by
the United States Supreme Court and twice by our court. All three cases have held that the
elimination of a PAC check-off opportunity does not amount to a restriction on speech and thus
does not abridge the speech rights of unions hoping to receive check-off donations. See Ysursa
v. Pocatello Educ. Ass’n, 555 U.S. 353, 359 (2009); Bailey v. Callaghan, 715 F.3d 956, 958 (6th
Cir. 2013); Pizza, 154 F.3d at 319.
In Ysursa, Pizza, and Bailey, state laws prohibited government employers from
administering payroll deductions for donations to union political funds. Ysursa, 555 U.S. at 356;
Pizza, 154 F.3d at 311; Bailey, 715 F.3d at 958. All three cases held that the laws did not restrict
union speech. In Ysursa, the Court stated that while payroll deduction could “enhance the
unions’ exercise of First Amendment rights,” a refusal to permit public payroll deduction was
“not an abridgment of the unions’ speech” because they were still “free to engage in such speech
as they s[aw] fit.” 555 U.S. at 359 (quotation omitted). This court had reached a similar
conclusion two decades earlier.
Pizza held that the “wage checkoff ban simply [did] not
impinge, in a constitutionally significant manner, on any First Amendment rights.” 154 F.3d at
319. Ysursa cited, and relied on, Pizza for this point. 555 U.S. at 359. Bailey recently removed
any lingering doubt. Elimination of PAC check-off, we said, did “not restrict the unions’ speech
at all: they remain[ed] free to speak about whatever they wish[ed].” Bailey, 715 F.3d at 958.
What was true then about opportunities to speak with one’s pocketbook is even more true
today. Gone are the days when hard copy checks amounted to the primary, almost only,
currency of—legal—political fundraising. The ever-growing modern options form a colorful
array—from the once new and now traditional (monthly credit card or automatic bank
withdrawals) to the now avant-garde and soon to be traditional (PayPal or Venmo). As a
practical matter, unions retain a number of effective options for soliciting political donations and
union members have a number of ways for making them—say a monthly bank account
withdrawal, which is little different from a monthly paycheck withdrawal through a PAC check-
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off. Even if PAC check-off offers efficiencies that other methods of fundraising do not, modern
methods of seeking and making contributions have minimized the relative significance of them.
That the employers in Ysursa, Pizza, and Bailey were public rather than private entities
does not change things. In particular, the distinction fails to explain why the unions would be in
any different position now. If the elimination of PAC check-off does not restrict union speech,
as these cases hold, it never restricts union speech—regardless of who operates the check-off
program. As in these cases, the unions remain free to collect donations and to use those
donations for political purposes. Just as unions do not have a constitutional right to governmentsubsidized speech, e.g., Ysursa, 555 U.S. at 359, they do not have a constitutional right to
corporate-subsidized speech.
All of this explains why Citizens United provides no traction for the unions. There, a
nonprofit corporation successfully challenged a law that prevented corporations from using
general treasury funds for political contributions or “electioneering” expenditures. 558 U.S. at
321–22. The Act imposed a direct restraint on the plaintiff’s speech. Indeed, it sidelined all
corporations from certain forms of political speech. Michigan’s law, by contrast, prevents one
distinct entity from subsidizing another entity’s speech. It does not limit the amount of money
unions can raise or spend. And it does not specify the subjects or organizations to which they
can donate or on which they can spend. That makes all the difference.
Wait, the unions urge:
What of the following language from Pizza?
The First
Amendment, Pizza said, protects “negative rights to be free from government action” but does
“not create positive rights—requirements that the government act.” 154 F.3d at 319 (internal
quotation marks omitted). As the unions read this language, it explains why there was no First
Amendment burden in Ysursa, Pizza, or Bailey, where the government was a regulator and
employer, and why there is a burden here where the government has erected a “negative”
obstacle to the unions’ ability to raise political funds. But this slice of Pizza does not tell the
whole story. The opinion still says that unions do not have an independent constitutional right to
“compel their employer to assist them in exercising their First Amendment rights.” Id. at 320.
Absent a burden on a constitutionally cognizable right, the government may regulate what is at
best a speech-facilitating mechanism.
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Our circuit does not stand alone in reaching this conclusion. The Seventh Circuit also
refused to limit these free-speech principles to the public employment context. At issue in
Sweeney v. Pence was the validity of Indiana’s Right to Work Act, which prevented private
employers from imposing mandatory dues or union membership on their employees. 767 F.3d
654 (7th Cir. 2014). Relying on Ysursa, the court held that the law did not infringe the unions’
First Amendment rights merely because it made it more difficult for them to collect funds. Id. at
669. The court’s assessment of the claim applies with equal force here: The State’s “decision
not to subsidize the exercise of a fundamental right” did not itself infringe that right. Id.
For these reasons, we affirm in part and reverse in part.
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