The Centers amicus brief argues that requiring ranchers
and farmers to pay for generic advertising for beef violates their
First Amendment rights...
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Center
Files Brief Urging Supreme Court to End Beef Checkoff
The
cows have come home. After years of numerous lawsuits in the lower
courts, the U.S. Supreme Court will decide this term whether farmers
and ranchers can be forced to pay for generic advertising under
so-called checkoff programs. The case, Veneman v. Livestock Marketing
Association, is on appeal from the U.S. Court of Appeals for
the Eighth Circuit and challenges the beef checkoff program, which
pays for the "Beef: Its Whats for Dinner"
campaign. In July 2003, a panel of the Eighth Circuit agreed with
U.S. District Judge Charles Kornmann that the beef checkoff violated
the First Amendment rights of cattle producers by compelling them
to subsidize speech with which they disagree. The government appealed
the decision to the U.S. Supreme Court.
This
week, the Center for Individual Freedom joined with other leading
attorneys and constitutional law experts to file an amicus
brief on behalf of various farmers and ranchers asking the High
Court to declare such checkoff programs unconstitutional. For several
years, the Center has represented cattle ranchers Steve and Jeanne
Charter in another case challenging the beef checkoff; that case
is currently pending before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth
Circuit.
The
Centers amicus brief argues that requiring ranchers
and farmers to pay for generic advertising for beef violates their
First Amendment rights because compelled support for government
speech is no less an offense than compelled support for third-party
speech. In other words, the governments attempt to immunize
its speech from constitutional scrutiny does nothing short of turn
the First Amendment on its head.
"The
failure of all members of an industry to support particular viewpoints
espoused by others is not a market failure and is not free riding,
it is dissent," the brief explains. "To respond
to such dissent by forcing the dissenters to support competing speech
anyway is nothing short of a First Amendment abomination ... The
governments authority to act in a manner contrary to
the views of a minority does not immunize compelled support for
government speech from the First Amendment because speech is
different and subject to greater constitutional protection."
The
Supreme Courts decision will undoubtedly impact the final
outcome of the Charters case, which is being held by the Ninth
Circuit until the Supreme Court issues its decision. Like other
cattle ranchers, the Charters must pay one dollar on each head of
cattle they sell to pay for beef promotional campaigns touting the
meat. But because the Charters have strongly held views regarding
ranching, nutrition, food safety, and marketing that are considerably
different and often diametrically opposed to the views
expressed by the generic advertising funded by the checkoff, the
Charters are being forced to speak against their will and in violation
of the First Amendment.
Oral
arguments before the U.S. Supreme Court in the beef checkoff case
are scheduled for December 8, and the High Court is likely to rule
next year.
To
download a copy of the Centers amicus brief, click
here.
To
read more about the constitutional challenges to the checkoff programs,
click
here.
[Posted
October 21, 2004]
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