 {"id":1951,"date":"2020-03-15T01:49:21","date_gmt":"2020-03-15T01:49:21","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/live-cornell-law-review.pantheonsite.io\/?p=1951"},"modified":"2020-03-15T01:49:21","modified_gmt":"2020-03-15T01:49:21","slug":"a-democratic-political-economy-for-the-first-amendment","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/publications.lawschool.cornell.edu\/lawreview\/2020\/03\/15\/a-democratic-political-economy-for-the-first-amendment\/","title":{"rendered":"A Democratic Political Economy For the First Amendment"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p> Today, the relationship between the First Amendment and distributive justice is fraught. Judges and other constitutional actors have been interpreting freedoms of speech and religion in a manner that unwinds government programs designed to ameliorate disparities of wealth, income, and other primary goods. And the regressive impact of actions grounded in these constitutional freedoms is particularly noticeable against the backdrop of historic levels of economic inequality<sup class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_1');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_1');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_1\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">1<\/sup><\/a><cite class=\"footnote_tooltip\"><span class=\"footnote-inner\">1. See THOMAS PIKETTY, CAPITAL IN THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY 15, 23 (2014) (arguing that income inequality has increased since the 1970s so that in 2000\u20132010 it matched and even exceeded the level in&nbsp;&#x2026; <span class=\"footnote_tooltip_continue\"  onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_1');\">Continue reading<\/span><\/span><\/cite><\/sup><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_1').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_1951_1_1', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top center', relative: true, offset: [-7, 0], });<\/script><sup> <\/sup>Paradoxically, these constitutional rights, which are commonly associated with democracy, are working to undermine the material conditions for a cooperative society. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Two particular developments illustrate the problem. One is the diagnosis of \u201cFirst Amendment Lochnerism.\u201d That trope compares the Supreme Court\u2019s contemporary speech and religion jurisprudence to its decision-making during the <em>Lochner <\/em>era. The comparison has a critical valence, of course, because <em>Lochner <\/em>is conventionally regretted. And it has been deployed by some prominent jurists, including Justice Elena Kagan<sup class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_2');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_2');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_2\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">2<\/sup><\/a><cite class=\"footnote_tooltip\"><span class=\"footnote-inner\">2. See Janus v. AFSCME, 138 S. Ct. 2448, 2501 (2018) (Kagan, J., dissenting) (warning that the Court had \u201cweaponize[ed]\u201d the First Amendment \u201cin a way that unleashes judges . . . to intervene in&nbsp;&#x2026; <span class=\"footnote_tooltip_continue\"  onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_2');\">Continue reading<\/span><\/span><\/cite><\/sup><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_2').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_1951_1_2', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top center', relative: true, offset: [-7, 0], });<\/script><sup> <\/sup>and Justice Stephen Breyer.<sup class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_3');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_3');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_3\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">3<\/sup><\/a><cite class=\"footnote_tooltip\"><span class=\"footnote-inner\">3. See Nat\u2019l. Inst. of Family &amp; Life Advocates v. Becerra, 138 S. Ct. 2361, 2381\u201383 (2018) (Breyer, J., dissenting) (recognizing that the Court\u2019s approach \u201cinvites courts around the Nation&nbsp;&#x2026; <span class=\"footnote_tooltip_continue\"  onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_3');\">Continue reading<\/span><\/span><\/cite><\/sup><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_3').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_1951_1_3', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top center', relative: true, offset: [-7, 0], });<\/script><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>A related development is destabilization of the midcentury settlement.<sup class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_4');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_4');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_4\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">4<\/sup><\/a><cite class=\"footnote_tooltip\"><span class=\"footnote-inner\">4. This has also been referred to as the \u201cNew Deal settlement,\u201d the \u201cliberal compromise,\u201d the \u201ccivil liberties compromise,\u201d and the \u201ccivil liberties settlement.\u201d See, e.g., LAURA&nbsp;&#x2026; <span class=\"footnote_tooltip_continue\"  onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_4');\">Continue reading<\/span><\/span><\/cite><\/sup><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_4').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_1951_1_4', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top center', relative: true, offset: [-7, 0], });<\/script><sup> <\/sup>After the Supreme Court abandoned Lochnerism and ceased invalidating New Deal programs, it established a new arrangement: economic justice would be deconstitutionalized and dejudicialized, while \u201csocial\u201d and \u201cpolitical\u201d rights would continue to be enforced using judicial review.<sup class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_5');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_5');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_5\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">5<\/sup><\/a><cite class=\"footnote_tooltip\"><span class=\"footnote-inner\">5. See, e.g., Becerra, 138 S. Ct. at 2381 (Breyer, J., dissenting) (\u201cHistorically, the Court has been wary of claims that regulation of business activity, particularly health-related activity,&nbsp;&#x2026; <span class=\"footnote_tooltip_continue\"  onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_5');\">Continue reading<\/span><\/span><\/cite><\/sup><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_5').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_1951_1_5', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top center', relative: true, offset: [-7, 0], });<\/script> The settlement has served as a defining feature of American constitutionalism in the intervening years. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Now, however, judges have unsettled that bargain by invalidating economic regulation using freedoms of speech and religion, which are paradigmatic examples of rights that fall on the noneconomic side. Lawyers on the left have been caught flat footed because they are accustomed to operating without any articulated political economy at all.<sup class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_6');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_6');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_6\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">6<\/sup><\/a><cite class=\"footnote_tooltip\"><span class=\"footnote-inner\">6. See Jeremy K. Kessler, The Political Economy of \u201cConstitutional Political Economy,\u201d 94 TEX. L. REV. 1527, 1528\u201329 (2016) (noting that \u201cconstitutional political economy became something of a&nbsp;&#x2026; <span class=\"footnote_tooltip_continue\"  onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_6');\">Continue reading<\/span><\/span><\/cite><\/sup><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_6').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_1951_1_6', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top center', relative: true, offset: [-7, 0], });<\/script><sup> <\/sup>For many of them, the lesson of <em>Lochner <\/em>is just that constitutional law is prohibited from embracing judgments on matters of economic justice. They assume that any such judgments must be subordinated to constitutional rights, including freedoms of speech and religion.<sup class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_7');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_7');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_7\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">7<\/sup><\/a><cite class=\"footnote_tooltip\"><span class=\"footnote-inner\">7. For one call to rethink the First Amendment\u2019s economic valence, see Jedediah Purdy, Beyond the Bosses\u2019 Constitution: The First Amendment and Class Entrenchment, 118 COLUM. L. REV. 2161, 2163&nbsp;&#x2026; <span class=\"footnote_tooltip_continue\"  onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_7');\">Continue reading<\/span><\/span><\/cite><\/sup><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_7').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_1951_1_7', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top center', relative: true, offset: [-7, 0], });<\/script> But what if the problem was not that the <em>Lochner <\/em>Court was operating with a substantive understanding of the relationship between law, politics, and the economy, but just that its understanding was undemocratic? <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In this Article, I begin building an interpretation of the First Amendment that promotes the practical conditions for a vital democracy. I argue that considerations of distributive justice do properly affect interpretation of free speech and religious liberty. This is true even assuming that those provisions have priority over ordinary law, including economic regulation.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The argument is divided into two parts, following this Introduction. Part I outlines a democratic interpretation of the First Amendment that harmonizes rights protection with concern for political, social, and economic belonging. It specifies how distributive justice properly affects jurisprudence in a manner that the conventional prioritization (and judicialization) of individual rights has seemed to foreclose. Speech and religion doctrines are integrated in a coherent account, which is keyed to a conception of democracy.<sup class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_8');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_8');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_8\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">8<\/sup><\/a><cite class=\"footnote_tooltip\"><span class=\"footnote-inner\">8. <em>See <\/em>NELSON TEBBE, RELIGIOUS FREEDOM IN AN EGALITARIAN AGE 25\u201336 (2017) (describing the coherence method).<\/span><\/cite><\/sup><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_8').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_1951_1_8', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top center', relative: true, offset: [-7, 0], });<\/script> In brief, people who are suffering from certain forms of deprivation and disadvantage will find it impossible to exercise their basic rights to participate in the project of cooperative government. Basic  liberties are thwarted by insufficiency of primary goods, while membership status may be degraded by structural inequality of economic wherewithal. To illustrate the approach, I evaluate concrete conflicts occurring both inside courts and outside them. For example, a democratic political economy has implications for campaign finance regulation, labor law, regulation of prescription drugs, the requirement of \u201cnet neutrality\u201d for internet service providers, and the obligation of employers to provide health insurance coverage for female contraception.<sup class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_9');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_9');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_9\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">9<\/sup><\/a><cite class=\"footnote_tooltip\"><span class=\"footnote-inner\">9. <em>See infra <\/em>Part I.<\/span><\/cite><\/sup><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_9').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_1951_1_9', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top center', relative: true, offset: [-7, 0], });<\/script><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Part II uses the approach to understand the current moment in constitutional law. First, it sets up a historical comparison to <em>Lochner <\/em>that is deliberately presentist and designed to highlight undemocratic conceptions of the relationship between First Amendment law and distributive justice. To that end, I isolate two aspects of Lochnerism, both of which are drawn from the democratic theory outlined in Part I. One aspect is that constitutional actors are using a conception of rights that could be called \u201canticlassificatory.\u201d<sup class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_10');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_10');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_10\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">10<\/sup><\/a><cite class=\"footnote_tooltip\"><span class=\"footnote-inner\">10. See, e.g., Genevieve Lakier, Reed v. Town of Gilbert, Arizona, and the Rise of the Anticlassificatory First Amendment, 2016 SUP. CT. REV. 233. The term anticlassificatory, which I owe to Genevieve&nbsp;&#x2026; <span class=\"footnote_tooltip_continue\"  onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_10');\">Continue reading<\/span><\/span><\/cite><\/sup><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_10').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_1951_1_10', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top center', relative: true, offset: [-7, 0], });<\/script> Doing so allows them to downplay the effects of power disparities and other social circumstances on the exercise of basic liberties, even though these interpreters often do attend to the values of free speech and how those values are served on the ground (and in this sense they have assimilated the lessons of legal realism). A second aspect is that they deem the existing distribution of primary goods to be neutral and natural, rather than politically constructed, and they use that baseline to identify government departures as burdensome or biased. Understanding Lochnerism this way opens up one critical approach to cases like <em>Citizens United<\/em>, <em>Sorrell<\/em>, and <em>Hobby Lobby<\/em>.<sup class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_11');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_11');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_11\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">11<\/sup><\/a><cite class=\"footnote_tooltip\"><span class=\"footnote-inner\">11. <em>See infra <\/em>sections II.A.3\u20134.<\/span><\/cite><\/sup><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_11').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_1951_1_11', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top center', relative: true, offset: [-7, 0], });<\/script><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Notably, this way of interpreting the First Amendment applies beyond courts. It has purchase wherever constitutional arguments occur: in legislatures, administrative agencies, nonprofit organizations, media outlets, and political mobilizations. This interpretation highlights the way the <em>Lochner <\/em>Court deployed a political economy that frustrated democratic principles. And it suggests that such a proclivity can be shared by legislative and executive actors. Part II therefore features current examples from outside the judiciary. And it draws not only from speech law, which has dominated the literature so far,<sup class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_12');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_12');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_12\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">12<\/sup><\/a><cite class=\"footnote_tooltip\"><span class=\"footnote-inner\">12. <em>But see <\/em>Elizabeth Sepper, <em>Free Exercise Lochnerism<\/em>, 115 COLUM. L. REV. 1453, 1455\u201356 (2015) (comparing Lochnerism and modern freedom of religion jurisprudence).<\/span><\/cite><\/sup><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_12').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_1951_1_12', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top center', relative: true, offset: [-7, 0], });<\/script><sup> <\/sup>but also from the law of religious freedom.<sup class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_13');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_13');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_13\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">13<\/sup><\/a><cite class=\"footnote_tooltip\"><span class=\"footnote-inner\">13. <em>See infra <\/em>section II.A.4 (free exercise).<\/span><\/cite><\/sup><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_13').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_1951_1_13', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top center', relative: true, offset: [-7, 0], });<\/script><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Part II ends with a particular account of the breakdown of the midcentury settlement. Although this point is closely related to the diagnosis of Lochnerism, the two are distinct. While the comparison to <em>Lochner <\/em>is designed to identify pathologies, the observation that the settlement is being reworked has no necessary negative valence. That arrangement may have been unprincipled from the start. Understanding it from the perspective of democratic theory suggests that the problem is not that the Court has begun to operate with an account of the relationship between law, politics, and the economy\u2014that is inevitable\u2014but instead that it is choosing an account that undermines collective self-determination.<sup class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_14');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_14');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_14\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">14<\/sup><\/a><cite class=\"footnote_tooltip\"><span class=\"footnote-inner\">14. <em>See infra <\/em>subpart II.B.<\/span><\/cite><\/sup><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_14').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_1951_1_14', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top center', relative: true, offset: [-7, 0], });<\/script> Rather than rehabilitate the settlement, then, constitutional actors might respond by improving their understanding of how First Amendment rights interact with economic justice. Questions of institutional design\u2014e.g., how to allocate authority to interpret and enforce the Constitution among branches of government\u2014could then be answered from that perspective. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>A few caveats. Nothing here should be read to suggest that constitutional law is especially important for combatting contemporary forms of unfreedom or inequality. To the degree that First Amendment decisions are contributing to the difficulty, however, it is necessary to construct alternatives. A related caution is that courts are unlikely to lead the effort to reimagine free speech and religious liberty. Constitutional arguments are likely to have greater impact outside the judiciary.<sup class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_15');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_15');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_15\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">15<\/sup><\/a><cite class=\"footnote_tooltip\"><span class=\"footnote-inner\">15. For examples, see <em>infra <\/em>subpart I.A, sections II.A.3\u20134. For a leading theory of institutional design in constitutional decision-making, see LAWRENCE G. SAGER, JUSTICE IN PLAINCLOTHES 1\u201311 (2004).<\/span><\/cite><\/sup><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_15').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_1951_1_15', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top center', relative: true, offset: [-7, 0], });<\/script><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Third, I bracket the matter of whether economic rights to contract and property should be constitutionalized,<sup class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_16');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_16');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_16\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">16<\/sup><\/a><cite class=\"footnote_tooltip\"><span class=\"footnote-inner\">16. Compare JOHN TOMASI, FREE MARKET FAIRNESS 89\u201392 (2012) (giving civil, political, and economic liberties the status of rights that the government can limit only for compelling reasons), with Alan&nbsp;&#x2026; <span class=\"footnote_tooltip_continue\"  onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_16');\">Continue reading<\/span><\/span><\/cite><\/sup><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_16').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_1951_1_16', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top center', relative: true, offset: [-7, 0], });<\/script><sup> <\/sup>and I stop short of proposing socioeconomic rights to housing, education, basic income, health care, and the like.<sup class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_17');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_17');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_17\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">17<\/sup><\/a><cite class=\"footnote_tooltip\"><span class=\"footnote-inner\">17. Cf. Joseph Fishkin &amp; William E. Forbath, The Anti-Oligarchy Constitution, 94 B.U. L. REV. 671, 692\u201395 (2014) (advocating for a return to the \u201cAnti-Oligarchy Constitution\u201d); William E.&nbsp;&#x2026; <span class=\"footnote_tooltip_continue\"  onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_17');\">Continue reading<\/span><\/span><\/cite><\/sup><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_17').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_1951_1_17', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top center', relative: true, offset: [-7, 0], });<\/script> Although those kinds of guarantees may well be attractive, I first want to explore the more proximate and difficult argument that distributive imperatives affect our interpretation of negative rights. <sup class=\"footnote_referrer\"><a role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_18');\" onkeypress=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_18');\" ><sup id=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_18\" class=\"footnote_plugin_tooltip_text\">18<\/sup><\/a><cite class=\"footnote_tooltip\"><span class=\"footnote-inner\">18. See, e.g., Lea Ypi, The Politics of Reticent Socialism, 2 CATALYST 157, 157\u201376 (2018), https:\/\/catalyst-journal.com\/vol2\/no3\/the-politics-of-reticent-socialism [https:\/\/perma.cc\/AG5M-GUN7]&nbsp;&#x2026; <span class=\"footnote_tooltip_continue\"  onclick=\"footnote_moveToReference_1951_1('footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_18');\">Continue reading<\/span><\/span><\/cite><\/sup><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_18').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_1951_1_18', tipClass: 'footnote_tooltip', effect: 'fade', predelay: 0, fadeInSpeed: 200, delay: 400, fadeOutSpeed: 200, position: 'top center', relative: true, offset: [-7, 0], });<\/script><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Nor should my argument be taken to suggest that the First Amendment requires a particular distribution of primary goods. Rather, legal interpretation should be guided by a democratic commitment to ensuring the conditions for cooperative governance and the exercise of individual rights. For now, I have little to say about the demands of distributive justice that are independent of those conditions.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I understand that some critical theorists have given up on rights discourse altogether. Even for them, however, the argument here should hold some interest, if only as part of a transitional strategy that negotiates longstanding features of existing constitutional discourse.<sup>18 <\/sup>An ambition of this Article is to bring together the critical literature\u2019s powerful diagnosis of existing First Amendment practice with a constructive effort to imagine an alternative.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Finally, it must be accepted that a turnabout in First Amendment interpretation is not likely anytime soon, given judicial and political realities. Nevertheless, academics can productively strive to develop a constitutional vision that is fully worked out, both in case conditions change and in order to promote that change with grounded arguments. Academics occupy an institutional position outside the government, advocacy groups, and business organizations, and they therefore have a distinct opportunity to undertake that work. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>To read more, click here: <a rel=\"noreferrer noopener\" href=\"https:\/\/live-cornell-law-review.pantheonsite.io\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/08\/Tebbe-final.pdf\" target=\"_blank\">A Democractic Political Economy For the First Amendment<\/a><\/em>.<\/p>\n<div class=\"speaker-mute footnotes_reference_container\"> <div class=\"footnote_container_prepare\"><p><span role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_reference_container_label pointer\" onclick=\"footnote_expand_collapse_reference_container_1951_1();\">References<\/span><span role=\"button\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"footnote_reference_container_collapse_button\" style=\"display: none;\" onclick=\"footnote_expand_collapse_reference_container_1951_1();\">[<a id=\"footnote_reference_container_collapse_button_1951_1\">+<\/a>]<\/span><\/p><\/div> <div id=\"footnote_references_container_1951_1\" style=\"\"><table class=\"footnotes_table footnote-reference-container\"><caption class=\"accessibility\">References<\/caption> <tbody> \r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index_combi pointer\"  onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_1951_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_1');\"><a id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_1\" class=\"footnote_backlink\"><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>1<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\"><em>See <\/em>THOMAS PIKETTY, CAPITAL IN THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY 15, 23 (2014) (arguing that income inequality has increased since the 1970s so that in 2000\u20132010 it matched and even exceeded the level in 1910\u20131920).<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index_combi pointer\"  onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_1951_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_2');\"><a id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_2\" class=\"footnote_backlink\"><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>2<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\"><em>See <\/em>Janus v. AFSCME, 138 S. Ct. 2448, 2501 (2018) (Kagan, J., dissenting) (warning that the Court had \u201cweaponize[ed]\u201d the First Amendment \u201cin a way that unleashes judges . . . to intervene in economic and regulatory policy\u201d).<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index_combi pointer\"  onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_1951_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_3');\"><a id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_3\" class=\"footnote_backlink\"><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>3<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\"><em>See <\/em>Nat\u2019l. Inst. of Family &amp; Life Advocates v. Becerra, 138 S. Ct. 2361, 2381\u201383 (2018) (Breyer, J., dissenting) (recognizing that the Court\u2019s approach \u201cinvites courts around the Nation to apply an unpredictable First Amendment to ordinary social and economic regulation\u201d and citing <em>Lochner v. New York, <\/em>198 U.S. 45 (1905) ); <em>see also <\/em>Sorrell v. IMS Health Inc., 564 U.S. 552, 602\u201303 (2011) (Breyer, J., dissenting) (\u201cAt worst, [the majority decision] reawakens <em>Lochner<\/em>\u2019s pre-New Deal threat of substituting judicial for democratic decisionmaking where ordinary economic regulation is at issue.\u201d).<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index_combi pointer\"  onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_1951_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_4');\"><a id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_4\" class=\"footnote_backlink\"><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>4<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">This has also been referred to as the \u201cNew Deal settlement,\u201d the \u201cliberal compromise,\u201d the \u201ccivil liberties compromise,\u201d and the \u201ccivil liberties settlement.\u201d <em>See, e.g.<\/em>, LAURA WEINRIB, THE TAMING OF FREE SPEECH: AMERICA\u2019S CIVIL LIBERTIES COMPROMISE 9 (2016) (\u201ccivil liberties compromise\u201d and \u201ccivil liberties settlement\u201d); Jeremy K. Kessler &amp; David E. Pozen, <em>The Search for an Egalitarian First Amendment<\/em>, 118 COLUM. L. REV. 1953, 1967 (2018) (\u201cliberal compromise\u201d); Larry D. Kramer, <em>The Supreme Court 2000 Term: Foreword: We the Court<\/em>, 115 HARV. L. REV. 5, 14 (2001) (\u201cNew Deal settlement\u201d).<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index_combi pointer\"  onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_1951_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_5');\"><a id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_5\" class=\"footnote_backlink\"><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>5<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\"><em>See, e.g<\/em>., <em>Becerra<\/em>, 138 S. Ct. at 2381 (Breyer, J., dissenting) (\u201cHistorically, the Court has been wary of claims that regulation of business activity, particularly health-related activity, violates the Constitution. Ever since this Court departed from the approach it set forth in <em>Lochner v. New York<\/em>, ordinary economic and social legislation has been thought to raise little constitutional concern.\u201d (citations omitted) ). The legal source of the settlement is generally thought to be <em>United States v. Carolene Prods. Co.<\/em>, 304 U.S. 144, 152 n.4 (1938). <em>See, e.g<\/em>., Suzanna Sherry, <em>Property Is the New Privacy: The Coming Constitutional Revolution<\/em>, 128 HARV. L. REV. 1452, 1469 (2015) (\u201c[T]he <em>Carolene Products <\/em>footnote created bifurcated review.\u201d). While these categories of rights\u2014political, social, and economic\u2014cannot be neatly maintained, practitioners commonly use them in this context.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index_combi pointer\"  onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_1951_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_6');\"><a id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_6\" class=\"footnote_backlink\"><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>6<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\"><em>See <\/em>Jeremy K. Kessler, <em>The Political Economy of \u201cConstitutional Political Economy<\/em>,<em>\u201d <\/em>94 TEX. L. REV. 1527, 1528\u201329 (2016) (noting that \u201cconstitutional political economy became something of a dead language\u201d after the New Deal) (citing JOSEPH FISHKIN &amp; WILLIAM E. FORBATH, THE ANTI-OLIGARCHY CONSTITUTION (forthcoming 2020) (manuscript at 65\u201366) ).<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index_combi pointer\"  onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_1951_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_7');\"><a id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_7\" class=\"footnote_backlink\"><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>7<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">For one call to rethink the First Amendment\u2019s economic valence, see Jedediah Purdy, <em>Beyond the Bosses\u2019 Constitution: The First Amendment and Class Entrenchment<\/em>, 118 COLUM. L. REV. 2161, 2163 (2018).<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index_combi pointer\"  onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_1951_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_8');\"><a id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_8\" class=\"footnote_backlink\"><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>8<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\"><em>See <\/em>NELSON TEBBE, RELIGIOUS FREEDOM IN AN EGALITARIAN AGE 25\u201336 (2017) (describing the coherence method).<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index_combi pointer\"  onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_1951_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_9');\"><a id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_9\" class=\"footnote_backlink\"><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>9<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\"><em>See infra <\/em>Part I.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index_combi pointer\"  onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_1951_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_10');\"><a id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_10\" class=\"footnote_backlink\"><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>10<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\"><em>See, e.g.<\/em>, Genevieve Lakier, Reed v. Town of Gilbert, Arizona<em>, and the Rise of the Anticlassificatory First Amendment<\/em>, 2016 SUP. CT. REV. 233. The term anticlassificatory, which I owe to Genevieve Lakier, does not capture all aspects of the conception of rights that I wish to describe, but it indicates some central features. <em>See infra <\/em>subpart II.B.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index_combi pointer\"  onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_1951_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_11');\"><a id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_11\" class=\"footnote_backlink\"><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>11<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\"><em>See infra <\/em>sections II.A.3\u20134.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index_combi pointer\"  onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_1951_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_12');\"><a id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_12\" class=\"footnote_backlink\"><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>12<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\"><em>But see <\/em>Elizabeth Sepper, <em>Free Exercise Lochnerism<\/em>, 115 COLUM. L. REV. 1453, 1455\u201356 (2015) (comparing Lochnerism and modern freedom of religion jurisprudence).<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index_combi pointer\"  onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_1951_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_13');\"><a id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_13\" class=\"footnote_backlink\"><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>13<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\"><em>See infra <\/em>section II.A.4 (free exercise).<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index_combi pointer\"  onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_1951_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_14');\"><a id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_14\" class=\"footnote_backlink\"><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>14<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\"><em>See infra <\/em>subpart II.B.<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index_combi pointer\"  onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_1951_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_15');\"><a id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_15\" class=\"footnote_backlink\"><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>15<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\">For examples, see <em>infra <\/em>subpart I.A, sections II.A.3\u20134. For a leading theory of institutional design in constitutional decision-making, see LAWRENCE G. SAGER, JUSTICE IN PLAINCLOTHES 1\u201311 (2004).<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index_combi pointer\"  onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_1951_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_16');\"><a id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_16\" class=\"footnote_backlink\"><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>16<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\"><em>Compare <\/em>JOHN TOMASI, FREE MARKET FAIRNESS 89\u201392 (2012) (giving civil, political, and economic liberties the status of rights that the government can limit only for compelling reasons), <em>with <\/em>Alan Patten, <em>Are the Economic Liberties Basic?<\/em>, 26 CRITICAL REV. 362, 363 (2014) (arguing that economic liberties should not enjoy priority but defining economic liberties somewhat broadly and understanding priority in a particular way), <em>and with <\/em>Anna Stilz, <em>Is the Free Market Fair?<\/em>, 26 CRITICAL REV. 423, 423 (2014) (offering \u201cdoubts about whether \u2018thick\u2019 economic freedom is a condition of democratic legitimacy\u201d).<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index_combi pointer\"  onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_1951_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_17');\"><a id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_17\" class=\"footnote_backlink\"><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>17<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\"><em>Cf<\/em>. Joseph Fishkin &amp; William E. Forbath, <em>The Anti-Oligarchy Constitution<\/em>, 94 B.U. L. REV. 671, 692\u201395 (2014) (advocating for a return to the \u201cAnti-Oligarchy Constitution\u201d); William E. Forbath, <em>Caste, Class, and Equal Citizenship<\/em>, 98 MICH. L. REV. 1, 14 (1999) (tracing the founding history of the idea that citizens had \u201ca <em>right <\/em>to sufficient property upon which to work to support themselves and their families\u201d); Frank I. Michelman, <em>In Pursuit of Constitutional Welfare Rights: One View of Rawls\u2019 Theory of Justice<\/em>, 121 U. PA. L. REV. 962, 962 (1973) (discussing Rawls\u2019s <em>A Theory of Justice <\/em>as it relates to \u201caffirmative rights . . . to education, shelter, subsistence, health care, and the like\u201d).<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n<tr class=\"footnotes_plugin_reference_row\"> <th scope=\"row\" class=\"footnote_plugin_index_combi pointer\"  onclick=\"footnote_moveToAnchor_1951_1('footnote_plugin_tooltip_1951_1_18');\"><a id=\"footnote_plugin_reference_1951_1_18\" class=\"footnote_backlink\"><span class=\"footnote_index_arrow\">&#8593;<\/span>18<\/a><\/th> <td class=\"footnote_plugin_text\"><em>See, e.g.<\/em>, Lea Ypi, <em>The Politics of Reticent Socialism<\/em>, 2 CATALYST 157, 157\u201376 (2018), <span class=\"footnote_url_wrap\">https:\/\/catalyst-journal.com\/vol2\/no3\/the-politics-of-reticent-socialism<\/span> [<span class=\"footnote_url_wrap\">https:\/\/perma.cc\/AG5M-GUN7]<\/span> (reviewing WILLIAM A. EDMUNDSON, JOHN RAWLS: RETICENT SOCIALIST (2017) ) (exploring such a transitional strategy).<\/td><\/tr>\r\n\r\n <\/tbody> <\/table> <\/div><\/div><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> function footnote_expand_reference_container_1951_1() { jQuery('#footnote_references_container_1951_1').show(); jQuery('#footnote_reference_container_collapse_button_1951_1').text('\u2212'); } function footnote_collapse_reference_container_1951_1() { jQuery('#footnote_references_container_1951_1').hide(); jQuery('#footnote_reference_container_collapse_button_1951_1').text('+'); } function footnote_expand_collapse_reference_container_1951_1() { if (jQuery('#footnote_references_container_1951_1').is(':hidden')) { footnote_expand_reference_container_1951_1(); } else { footnote_collapse_reference_container_1951_1(); } } function footnote_moveToReference_1951_1(p_str_TargetID) { footnote_expand_reference_container_1951_1(); var l_obj_Target = jQuery('#' + p_str_TargetID); if (l_obj_Target.length) { jQuery( 'html, body' ).delay( 0 ); jQuery('html, body').animate({ scrollTop: l_obj_Target.offset().top - window.innerHeight * 0.2 }, 380); } } function footnote_moveToAnchor_1951_1(p_str_TargetID) { footnote_expand_reference_container_1951_1(); var l_obj_Target = jQuery('#' + p_str_TargetID); if (l_obj_Target.length) { jQuery( 'html, body' ).delay( 0 ); jQuery('html, body').animate({ scrollTop: l_obj_Target.offset().top - window.innerHeight * 0.2 }, 380); } }<\/script>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Today, the relationship between the First Amendment and distributive justice is fraught. Judges and other constitutional actors have been interpreting freedoms of speech and religion in a manner that unwinds government programs designed to ameliorate disparities of wealth, income, and other primary goods. And the regressive impact of actions grounded in these constitutional freedoms is&#8230;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"_monsterinsights_skip_tracking":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_active":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_note":"","_monsterinsights_sitenote_category":0,"footnotes":""},"categories":[13,14,76,51],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-1951","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-archives","category-articles","category-issue-3-print-volume-105-archives","category-print-volume-105-archives"],"acf":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/publications.lawschool.cornell.edu\/lawreview\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1951","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/publications.lawschool.cornell.edu\/lawreview\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/publications.lawschool.cornell.edu\/lawreview\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/publications.lawschool.cornell.edu\/lawreview\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/publications.lawschool.cornell.edu\/lawreview\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=1951"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/publications.lawschool.cornell.edu\/lawreview\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1951\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/publications.lawschool.cornell.edu\/lawreview\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=1951"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/publications.lawschool.cornell.edu\/lawreview\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=1951"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/publications.lawschool.cornell.edu\/lawreview\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=1951"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}