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- SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
-
- Nos. 88-1872 AND 88-2074
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- CYNTHIA RUTAN, ET AL., PETITIONERS
- v.
- -
- 88-1872
-
- REPUBLICAN PARTY OF ILLINOIS ET AL.
-
-
-
- MARK FRECH, ET AL., PETITIONERS
- v.
- -
- 88-2074
-
- CYNTHIA RUTAN ET AL.
-
- ON WRITS OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR
- THE SEVENTH CIRCUIT
-
- [June 21, 1990]
-
-
- JUSTICE BRENNAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
-
- To the victor belong only those spoils that may be constitution-
- ally obtained. Elrod v. Burns, 427 U. S. 347 (1976), and Branti
- ----- ----- ------
- v. Finkel, 445 U. S. 507 (1980), decided that the First Amendment
- ------
- forbids government officials to discharge or threaten to
- discharge public employees solely for not being supporters of the
- political party in power, unless party affiliation is an ap-
- propriate requirement for the position involved. Today we are
- asked to decide the constitutionality of several related politi-
- cal patronage practices--whether promotion, transfer, recall, and
- hiring decisions involving low-level public employees may be con-
- stitutionally based on party affiliation and support. We hold
- that they may not.
-
- I
- The petition and cross-petition before us arise from a lawsuit
- protesting certain employment policies and practices instituted
- by Governor James Thompson of Illinois.
- On November 12, 1980, the Governor issued an executive order pro-
- claiming a hiring freeze for every agency, bureau, board, or com-
- mission subject to his control. The order prohibits state offi-
- cials from hiring any employee, filling any vacancy, creating any
- new position, or taking any similar action. It affects approxi-
- mately 60,000 state positions. More than 5,000 of these become
- available each year as a result of resignations, retirements,
- deaths, expansion, and reorganizations. The order proclaims that
- ``no exceptions'' are permitted without the Governor's ``express
- --
- permission after submission of appropriate requests to [his] of-
- fice.'' Governor's Executive Order No. 5 (Nov. 12, 1980), Brief
- for Petitioners 11 (emphasis added).
-
-
- Requests for the Governor's ``express permission'' have alleged-
- ly become routine. Permission has been granted or withheld
- through an agency expressly created for this purpose, the
- Governor's Office of Personnel (Governor's Office). Agencies
- have been screening applicants under Illinois' civil service sys-
- tem, making their personnel choices, and submitting them as re-
- quests to be approved or disapproved by the Governor's Office.
- Among the employment decisions for which approvals have been re-
- quired are new hires, promotions, transfers, and recalls after
- layoffs.
-
-
- By means of the freeze, according to petitioners, the Governor
- has been using the Governor's Office to operate a political pa-
- tronage system to limit state employment and beneficial
- employment-related decisions to those who are supported by the
- Republican Party. In reviewing an agency's request that a par-
- ticular applicant be approved for a particular position, the
- Governor's Office has looked at whether the applicant voted in
- Republican primaries in past election years, whether the appli-
- cant has provided financial or other support to the Republican
- Party and its candidates, whether the applicant has promised to
- join and work for the Republican Party in the future, and whether
- the applicant has the support of Republican Party officials at
- state or local levels.
- Five people (including the three petitioners) brought suit
- against various Illinois and Republican Party officials in the
- United States District Court for the Central District of Illi-
- nois.
- They alleged that they had suffered discrimination with respect
- to state employment because they had not been supporters of the
- State's Republican Party and that this discrimination violates
- the First Amendment. Cynthia B. Rutan has been working for the
- State since 1974 as a rehabilitation counselor. She claims that
- since 1981 she has been repeatedly denied promotions to super-
- visory positions for which she was qualified because she had not
- worked for or supported the Republican Party. Franklin Taylor,
- who operates road equipment for the Illinois Department of Tran-
- sportation, claims that he was denied a promotion in 1983 because
- he did not have the support of the local Republican Party. Tay-
- lor also maintains that he was denied a transfer to an office
- nearer to his home because of opposition from the Republican Par-
- ty chairmen in the counties in which he worked and to which he
- requested a transfer. James W. Moore claims that he has been
- repeatedly denied state employment as a prison guard because he
- did not have the support of Republican Party officials.
-
-
- The two other plaintiffs, before the Court as cross-respondents,
- allege that they were not recalled after layoffs because they
- lacked Republican credentials. Ricky Standefer was a state
- garage worker who claims that he was not recalled, although his
- fellow employees were, because he had voted in a Democratic pri-
- mary and did not have the support of the Republican Party. Dan
- O'Brien, formerly a dietary manager with the mental health
- department, contends that he was not recalled after a layoff be-
- cause of his party affiliation and that he later obtained a lower
- paying position with the corrections department only after re-
- ceiving support from the chairman of the local Republican Party.
-
- The District Court dismissed the complaint with prejudice, under
- Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6), for failure to state a
- claim upon which relief could be granted. 641 F. Supp. 249 (CD
- Ill. 1986). The United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh
- Circuit initially issued a panel opinion, 848 F. 2d 1396 (1988),
- but then reheard the appeal en banc. The court affirmed the Dis-
- trict Court's decision in part and reversed in part. 868 F. 2d
- 943 (1989). Noting that this Court had previously determined
- that the patronage practice of discharging public employees on
- the basis of their political affiliation violates the First
- Amendment, the Court of Appeals held that other patronage prac-
- tices violate the First Amendment only when they are the ``sub-
- stantial equivalent of a dismissal.'' Id., at 954. The court ex-
- --
- plained that an employment decision is equivalent to a dismissal
- when it is one that would lead a reasonable person to resign.
- Id., at 955. The court affirmed the dismissal of Moore's claim
- --
- because it found that basing hiring decisions on political affil-
- iation does not violate the First Amendment, but remanded the
- remaining claims for further proceedings.
-
- Rutan, Taylor, and Moore petitioned this Court to review the
- constitutional standard set forth by the Seventh Circuit and the
- dismissal of Moore's claim. Respondents cross-petitioned this
- Court, contending that the Seventh Circuit's remand of four of
- the five claims was improper because the employment decisions al-
- leged here do not, as a matter of law, violate the First Amend-
- ment. We granted certiorari, 493 U. S. ---- (1989), to decide
- the important question whether the First Amendment's proscription
- of patronage dismissals recognized in Elrod, 427 U. S. 347
- -----
- (1976), and Branti, 445 U. S. 507 (1980), extends to promotion,
- ------
- transfer, recall, or hiring decisions involving public employment
- positions for which party affiliation is not an appropriate re-
- quirement.
-
- II
-
- A
- In Elrod, supra, we decided that a newly elected Democratic
- ----- -----
- sheriff could not constitutionally engage in the patronage prac-
- tice of replacing certain office staff with members of his own
- party ``when the existing employees lack or fail to obtain re-
- quisite support from, or fail to affiliate with, that party.''
- Id., at 351, and 373 (plurality opinion) and 375 (Stewart, J.,
- --
- with BLACKMUN, J., concurring in judgment). The plurality ex-
- plained that conditioning public employment on the provision of
- support for the favored political party ``unquestionably inhibits
- protected belief and association.'' Id., at 359. It reasoned
- --
- that conditioning employment on political activity pressures em-
- ployees to pledge political allegiance to a party with which they
- prefer not to associate, to work for the election of political
- candidates they do not support, and to contribute money to be
- used to further policies with which they do not agree. The
- latter, the plurality noted, had been recognized by this Court as
- ``tantamount to coerced belief.'' Id., at 355 (citing Buckley v.
- -- -------
- Valeo, 424 U. S. 1, 19 (1976)). At the same time, employees are
- -----
- constrained from joining, working for or contributing to the pol-
- itical party and candidates of their own choice. Elrod, supra,
- ----- -----
- at 355-356. ``[P]olitical belief and association constitute the
- core of those activities protected by the First Amendment,'' the
- plurality emphasized. 427 U. S., at 356. Both the plurality and
- the concurrence drew support from Perry v. Sindermann, 408 U. S.
- ----- ----------
- 593 (1972), in which this Court held that the State's refusal to
- renew a teacher's contract because he had been publicly critical
- of its policies imposed an unconstitutional condition on the re-
- ceipt of a public benefit. See Elrod, supra, at 359 (plurality
- ----- -----
- opinion) and 375 (Stewart, J., concurring in judgment); see also
- Branti, supra, at 514-516.
- ------ -----
-
-
- The Court then decided that the government interests generally
- asserted in support of patronage fail to justify this burden on
- First Amendment rights because patronage dismissals are not the
- least restrictive means for fostering those interests. See El-
- ---
- rod, supra, at 372-373 (plurality opinion) and 375 (Stewart, J.,
- --- -----
- concurring in judgment). The plurality acknowledged that a
- government has a significant interest in ensuring that it has ef-
- fective and efficient employees. It expressed doubt, however,
- that ``mere difference of political persuasion motivates poor
- performance'' and concluded that, in any case, the government can
- ensure employee effectiveness and efficiency through the less
- drastic means of discharging staff members whose work is inade-
- quate. 427 U. S., at 365-366. The plurality also found that a
- government can meet its need for politically loyal employees to
- implement its policies by the less intrusive measure of dismiss-
- ing, on political grounds, only those employees in policymaking
- positions. Id., at 367. Finally, although the plurality recog-
- --
- nized that preservation of the democratic process ``may in some
- instances justify limitations on First Amendment freedoms,'' it
- concluded that the ``process functions as well without the prac-
- tice, perhaps even better.'' Patronage, it explained, ``can
- result in the entrenchment of one or a few parties to the exclu-
- sion of others'' and ``is a very effective impediment to the as-
- sociational and speech freedoms which are essential to a meaning-
- ful system of democratic government.'' Id., at 368-370.
- --
- Four years later, in Branti, supra, we decided that the First
- ------ -----
- Amendment prohibited a newly appointed public defender, who was a
- Democrat, from discharging assistant public defenders because
- they did not have the support of the Democratic Party. The Court
- rejected an attempt to distinguish the case from Elrod, deciding
- -----
- that it was immaterial whether the public defender had attempted
- to coerce employees to change political parties or had only
- dismissed them on the basis of their private political beliefs.
- We explained that conditioning continued public employment on an
- employee's having obtained support from a particular political
- party violates the First Amendment because of ``the coercion of
- belief that necessarily flows from the knowledge that one must
- have a sponsor in the dominant party in order to retain one's
- job.'' 445 U. S., at 516. ``In sum,'' we said, ``there is no re-
- quirement that dismissed employees prove that they, or other em-
- ployees, have been coerced into changing, either actually or os-
- tensibly, their political allegiance.'' Id., at 517. To prevail,
- --
- we concluded, public employees need show only that they were
- discharged because they were not affiliated with or sponsored by
- the Democratic Party. Ibid.
- ----
- employees. In Elrod, we suggested that policymaking and confi-
- -----
- dential employees probably could be dismissed on the basis of
- their political views. Elrod, supra, at 367 (plurality), and 375
- ----- -----
- (Stewart, J., concurring in judgment). In Branti, we said that a
- ------
- State demonstrates a compelling interest in infringing First
- Amendment rights only when it can show that ``party affiliation
- is an appropriate requirement for the effective performance of
- the public office involved.'' Branti, supra, at 518. The scope
- ------ -----
- of this exception does not concern us here as respondents concede
- that the five employees who brought this suit are not within it.
-
- B
- We first address the claims of the four current or former em-
- ployees. Respondents urge us to view Elrod and Branti as inap-
- ----- ------
- plicable because the patronage dismissals at issue in those cases
- are different in kind from failure to promote, failure to
- transfer, and failure to recall after layoff. Respondents ini-
- tially contend that the employee petitioners' First Amendment
- rights have not been infringed because they have no entitlement
- to promotion, transfer, or rehire. We rejected just such an ar-
- gument in Elrod, 427 U. S., at 359-360 (plurality opinion) and
- -----
- 375 (Stewart, J., concurring in judgment), and Branti, 445 U. S.,
- ------
- at 514-515, as both cases involved state workers who were employ-
- ees at will with no legal entitlement to continued employment.
- In Perry, 408 U. S., at 596-598, we held explicitly that the
- -----
- plaintiff teacher's lack of a contractual or tenure right to re-
- employment was immaterial to his First Amendment claim. We ex-
- plained the viability of his First Amendment claim as follows:
-
- ``For at least a quarter-century, this Court has made clear
- that even though a person has no `right' to a valuable govern-
- mental benefit and even though the government may deny him the
- benefit for any number of reasons, there are some reasons upon
- ----- --- ---- ------- ----
- which the government may not rely. It may not deny a benefit
- ----- --- ---------- --- --- ---- -- --- --- ---- - -------
- to a person on a basis that infringes his constitutionally pro-
- -- - ------ -- - ----- ---- --------- --- ---------------- ----
- tected interests--especially, his interest in freedom of
- ------ --------- ---------- --- -------- -- ------- --
- speech. For if the government could deny a benefit to a person
- ------
- because of his constitutionally protected speech or associa-
- tions, his exercise of those freedoms would in effect be penal-
- ized and inhibited. This would allow the government to `pro-
- duce a result which [it] could not command directly.' Speiser
- -------
- v. Randall, 357 U. S. 513, 526 [1958]. Such interference with
- -------
- constitutional rights is impermissible.'' Perry, id., at 597
- ----- --
- (emphasis added).
-
-
- Likewise, we find the assertion here that the employee petition-
- ers had no legal entitlement to promotion, transfer, or recall
- beside the point.
-
-
- Respondents next argue that the employment decisions at issue
- here do not violate the First Amendment because the decisions are
- not punitive, do not in any way adversely affect the terms of em-
- ployment, and therefore do not chill the exercise of protected
- belief and association by public employees.
- This is not credible. Employees who find themselves in dead-end
- positions due to their political backgrounds are adversely af-
- ---
- fected. They will feel a significant obligation to support pol-
- itical positions held by their superiors, and to refrain from
- acting on the political views they actually hold, in order to
- progress up the career ladder. Employees denied transfers to
- workplaces reasonably close to their homes until they join and
- work for the Republican Party will feel a daily pressure from
- their long commutes to do so. And employees who have been laid
- off may well feel compelled to engage in whatever political ac-
- tivity is necessary to regain regular paychecks and positions
- corresponding to their skill and experience.
-
- The same First Amendment concerns that underlay our decisions in
- Elrod, supra, and Branti, supra, are implicated here. Employees
- ----- ----- ------ -----
- who do not compromise their beliefs stand to lose the consider-
- able increases in pay and job satisfaction attendant to promo-
- tions, the hours and maintenance expenses that are consumed by
- long daily commutes, and even their jobs if they are not rehired
- after a ``temporary'' layoff. These are significant penalties
- and are imposed for the exercise of rights guaranteed by the
- First Amendment. Unless these patronage practices are narrowly
- tailored to further vital government interests, we must conclude
- that they impermissibly encroach on First Amendment freedoms.
- See Elrod, supra, at 362-363 (plurality opinion) and 375
- ----- -----
- (Stewart, J., concurring in judgment); Branti, supra, at 515-516.
- ------ -----
- We find, however, that our conclusions in Elrod, supra, and
- ----- -----
- Branti, supra, are equally applicable to the patronage practices
- ------ -----
- at issue here. A government's interest in securing effective em-
- ployees can be met by discharging, demoting or transferring
- staffmembers whose work is deficient. A government's interest in
- securing employees who will loyally implement its policies can be
- adequately served by choosing or dismissing certain high-level
- employees on the basis of their political views. See Elrod,
- -----
- supra, at 365-368; Branti, supra, at 518, and 520, n. 14. Like-
- ----- ------ -----
- wise, the ``preservation of the democratic process'' is no more
- furthered by the patronage promotions, transfers, and rehires at
- issue here than it is by patronage dismissals. First, ``politi-
- cal parties are nurtured by other, less intrusive and equally ef-
- fective methods.'' Elrod, supra, at 372-373. Political parties
- ----- -----
- have already survived the substantial decline in patronage em-
- ployment practices in this century. See Elrod, 427 U. S., at
- -----
- 369, and n. 23; see also L. Sabato, Goodbye to Good-time Charlie
- 67 (2d ed. 1983) (``The number of patronage positions has signi-
- ficantly decreased in virtually every state''); Congressional
- Quarterly Inc., State Government, CQ's Guide to Current Issues
- and Activities 134 (T. Beyle ed. 1989-1990) (``Linkage[s] between
- political parties and government office-holding . . . have died
- out under the pressures of varying forces [including] the declin-
- ing influence of election workers when compared to media and
- money-intensive campaigning, such as the distribution of form
- letters and advertising''); Sorauf, Patronage and Party, 3
- Midwest J. Pol. Sci. 115, 118-120 (1959) (many state and local
- parties have thrived without a patronage system). Second, pa-
- tronage decidedly impairs the elective process by discouraging
- free political expression by public employees. See Elrod, 427
- -----
- U. S., at 372 (explaining that the proper functioning of a demo-
- cratic system ``is indispensably dependent on the unfettered
- judgment of each citizen on matters of political concern'').
- Respondents, who include the Governor of Illinois and other state
- officials, do not suggest any other overriding government in-
- terest in favoring Republican Party supporters for promotion,
- transfer, and rehire.
-
-
- We therefore determine that promotions, transfers, and recalls
- after layoffs based on political affiliation or support are an
- impermissible infringement on the First Amendment rights of pub-
- lic employees. In doing so, we reject the Seventh Circuit's view
- of the appropriate constitutional standard by which to measure
- alleged patronage practices in government employment. The
- Seventh Circuit proposed that only those employment decisions
- that are the ``substantial equivalent of a dismissal'' violate a
- public employee's rights under the First Amendment. 868 F. 2d,
- at 954-957. We find this test unduly restrictive because it
- fails to recognize that there are deprivations less harsh than
- dismissal that nevertheless press state employees and applicants
- to conform their beliefs and associations to some state-selected
- orthodoxy. See Elrod, supra, at 356-357 (plurality opinion);
- ----- -----
- West Virgina Bd. of Education v. Barnette, 319 U. S. 624, 642
- ---- ------- -- -- --------- --------
- (1943).
- The First Amendment is not a tenure provision, protecting public
- employees from actual or constructive discharge. The First
- Amendment prevents the government, except in the most compelling
- circumstances, from wielding its power to interfere with its em-
- ployees' freedom to believe and associate, or to not believe and
- not associate.
-
-
- Whether the four employees were in fact denied promotions,
- transfers, or rehire for failure to affiliate with and support
- the Republican Party is for the District Court to decide in the
- first instance. What we decide today is that such denials are
- irreconcilable with the Constitution and that the allegations of
- the four employees state claims under 42 U. S. C. 1983 (1982
- ed.) for violations of the First and Fourteenth Amendments.
- Therefore, although we affirm the Seventh Circuit's judgment to
- reverse the District Court's dismissal of these claims and remand
- them for further proceedings, we do not adopt the Seventh
- Circuit's reasoning.
-
- C
- Petitioner James W. Moore presents the closely related question
- whether patronage hiring violates the First Amendment. Patronage
- hiring places burdens on free speech and association similar to
- those imposed by the patronage practices discussed above. A
- state job is valuable. Like most employment, it provides regular
- paychecks, health insurance, and other benefits. In addition,
- there may be openings with the State when business in the private
- sector is slow. There are also occupations for which the govern-
- ment is a major (or the only) source of employment, such as so-
- cial workers, elementary school teachers, and prison guards.
- Thus, denial of a state job is a serious privation.
-
-
- Nonetheless, respondents contend that the burden imposed is not
- of constitutional magnitude.
- Decades of decisions by this Court belie such a claim. We prem-
- ised Torcaso v. Watkins, 367 U. S. 488 (1961), on our understand-
- ------- -------
- ing that loss of a job opportunity for failure to compromise
- one's convictions states a constitutional claim. We held that
- Maryland could not refuse an appointee a commission for the posi-
- tion of notary public on the ground that he refused to declare
- his belief in God, because the required oath ``unconstitutionally
- invades the appellant's freedom of belief and religion.'' Id., at
- --
- 496. In Keyishian v. Board of Regents of Univ. of New York, 385
- --------- ----- -- ------- -- ---- -- --- ----
- U. S. 589, 609-610 (1967), we held a law affecting appointment
- and retention of teachers invalid because it premised employment
- on an unconstitutional restriction of political belief and asso-
- ciation. In Elfbrandt v. Russell, 384 U. S. 11, 19 (1966), we
- --------- -------
- struck down a loyalty oath which was a prerequisite for public
- employment.
-
-
- Almost half a century ago, this Court made clear that the
- government ``may not enact a regulation providing that no Repub-
- lican . . . shall be appointed to federal office.'' Public Work-
- ------ -----
- ers v. Mitchell, 330 U. S. 75, 100 (1947). What the First Amend-
- --- --------
- ment precludes the government from commanding directly, it also
- precludes the government from accomplishing indirectly. See Per-
- ----
- ry, 408 U. S., at 597 (citing Speiser v. Randall, 357 U. S. 513,
- -- ------- -------
- 526 (1958)); see supra, at ----. Under our sustained precedent,
- -----
- conditioning hiring decisions on political belief and association
- plainly constitutes an unconstitutional condition, unless the
- government has a vital interest in doing so. See Elrod, 427
- -----
- U. S., at 362-363 (plurality opinion), and 375 (Stewart, J., con-
- curring in judgment); Branti, 445 U. S., at 515-516; see also
- ------
- Sherbert v. Verner, 374 U. S. 398 (1963) (unemployment bene-
- -------- ------
- fits); Speiser v. Randall, supra (tax exemption). We find no
- ------- ------- -----
- such government interest here, for the same reasons that we found
- the government lacks justification for patronage promotions,
- transfers or recalls. See supra, at ----.
- -----
-
-
- The court below, having decided that the appropriate inquiry in
- patronage cases is whether the employment decision at issue is
- the substantial equivalent of a dismissal, affirmed the trial
- court's dismissal of Moore's claim. See 868 F. 2d, at 954. The
- Court of Appeals reasoned that ``rejecting an employment applica-
- tion does not impose a hardship upon an employee comparable to
- the loss of [a] job.'' Ibid., citing Wygant v. Jackson Bd. of
- ---- ------ ------- -- --
- Education, 476 U. S. 267 (1986) (plurality opinion). Just as we
- ---------
- reject the Seventh Circuit's proffered test, see supra at ----,
- -----
- we find the Seventh Circuit's reliance on Wygant to distinguish
- ------
- hiring from dismissal unavailing. The court cited a passage from
- the plurality opinion in Wygant explaining that school boards at-
- ------
- tempting to redress past discrimination must choose methods that
- broadly distribute the disadvantages imposed by affirmative ac-
- tion plans among innocent parties. The plurality said that
- race-based layoffs placed too great a burden on individual
- members of the nonminority race, but suggested that discriminato-
- ry hiring was permissible, under certain circumstances, even
- though it burdened white applicants because the burden was less
- intrusive than the loss of an existing job. Id., at 282-284.
- --
- See also id., at 294-295 (WHITE, J., concurring in judgment).
- --
-
-
- Wygant has no application to the question at issue here. The
- ------
- plurality's concern in that case was identifying the least harsh
- means of remedying past wrongs. It did not question that some
- ----
- remedy was permissible when there was sufficient evidence of past
- discrimination. In contrast, the Governor of Illinois has not
- instituted a remedial undertaking. It is unnecessary here to
- consider whether not being hired is less burdensome than being
- discharged because the government is not pressed to do either on
- ------
- the basis of political affiliation. The question in the pa-
- tronage context is not which penalty is more acute but whether
- the government, without sufficient justification, is pressuring
- employees to discontinue the free exercise of their First Amend-
- ment rights.
-
-
- If Moore's employment application was set aside because he chose
- not to support the Republican Party, as he asserts, then Moore's
- First Amendment rights have been violated. Therefore, we find
- that Moore's complaint was improperly dismissed.
-
- III
- We hold that the rule of Elrod and Branti extends to promotion,
- ----- ------
- transfer, recall, and hiring decisions based on party affiliation
- and support and that all of the petitioners and cross-respondents
- have stated claims upon which relief may be granted. We affirm
- the Seventh Circuit insofar as it remanded Rutan's, Taylor's,
- Standefer's, and O'Brien's claims. However, we reverse the Cir-
- cuit Court's decision to uphold the dismissal of Moore's claim.
- All five claims are remanded for proceedings consistent with this
- opinion.
-
- It is so ordered.
- -- -- -- -------
- JUSTICE STEVENS, concurring.
-
-
- While I join the Court's opinion, these additional comments are
- prompted by three propositions advanced by JUSTICE SCALIA in his
- dissent. First, he implies that prohibiting imposition of an un-
- constitutional condition upon eligibility for government employ-
- ment amounts to adoption of a civil service system. Second, he
- makes the startling assertion that a long history of open and
- widespread use of patronage practices immunizes them from consti-
- tutional scrutiny. Third, he assumes that the decisions in Elrod
- -----
- v. Burns, 427 U. S. 347 (1976), and Branti v. Finkle, 445 U. S.
- ----- ------ ------
- 507 (1980), represented dramatic departures from prior precedent.
-
-
- Several years before either Elrod or Branti was decided, I had
- ----- ------
- occasion as a judge on the Court of Appeals for the Seventh Cir-
- cuit to evaluate each of these propositions. Illinois State Em-
- -------- ----- ---
- ployees Union, Council 34, Am. Fed. of State, County, and Munici-
- ------- ----- ------- -- -- --- -- ----- ------ --- -------
- pal Emp., AFL-CIO v. Lewis, 473 F. 2d 561 (1972), cert. denied,
- --- --- --- --- -----
- 410 U. S. 928 (1973). With respect to the first, I wrote:
-
- ``Neither this court nor any other may impose a civil service
- system upon the State of Illinois. The General Assembly has
- provided an elaborate system regulating the appointment to
- specified positions solely on the basis of merit and fitness,
- the grounds for termination of such employment, and the pro-
- cedures which must be followed in connection with hiring, fir-
- ing, promotion, and retirement. A federal court has no power
- to establish any such employment code.
-
- ``However, recognition of plaintiffs' claims will not give
- every public employee civil service tenure and will not require
- the state to follow any set procedure or to assume the burden
- of explaining or proving the grounds for every termination. It
- is the former employee who has the burden of proving that his
- discharge was motivated by an impermissible consideration. It
- is true, of course, that a prima facie case may impose a burden
- of explanation on the State. But the burden of proof will
- remain with the plaintiff employee and we must assume that the
- trier of fact will be able to differentiate between those
- discharges which are politically motivated and those which are
- not. There is a clear distinction between the grant of tenure
- to an employee--a right which cannot be conferred by judicial
- fiat--and the prohibition of a discharge for a particular im-
- permissible reason. The Supreme Court has plainly identified
- that distinction on many occasions, most recently in Perry v.
- Sindermann, 408 U. S. 593 (1972).
-
- ``Unlike a civil service system, the Fourteenth Amendment to
- the Constitution does not provide job security, as such, to
- public employees. If, however, a discharge is motivated by
- considerations of race, religion, or punishment of constitu-
- tionally protected conduct, it is well settled that the State's
- action is subject to federal judicial review. There is no mer-
- it to the argument that recognition of plaintiffs' constitu-
- tional claim would be tantamount to foisting a civil service
- code upon the State.'' Id., at 567-568 (footnotes omitted).
- --
-
- Denying the Governor of Illinois the power to require every
- state employee, and every applicant for state employment, to
- pledge allegiance and service to the political party in power is
- a far cry from a civil service code. The question in this case
- is simply whether a Governor may adopt a rule that would be
- plainly unconstitutional if enacted by the General Assembly of
- Illinois.
- Second, JUSTICE SCALIA asserts that ``when a practice not ex-
- pressly prohibited by the text of the Bill of Rights bears the
- endorsement of a long tradition of open, widespread, and unchal-
- lenged use that dates back to the beginning of the Republic, we
- have no proper basis for striking it down.'' Post, at 4; post, at
- ---- ----
- 11 (a ``clear and continuing tradition of our people'' deserves
- ``dispositive effect''). The argument that traditional practices
- -----------
- are immune from constitutional scrutiny is advanced in two plu-
- rality opinions that JUSTICE SCALIA has authored, but not by any
- opinion joined by a majority of the Members of the Court.
- In the Lewis case, I noted the obvious response to this posi-
- -----
- tion: ``if the age of a pernicious practice were a sufficient
- reason for its continued acceptance, the constitutional attack on
- racial discrimination would, of course, have been doomed to
- failure.'' 473 F. 2d, at 568, n. 14. See, e. g., Brown v. Board
- - - ----- -----
- of Education, 347 U. S. 483 (1954).
- -- ---------
- I then added this comment on the specific application of that ar-
- gument to patronage practices:
-
- --
-
- ``Finally, our answer to the constitutional question is not
- foreclosed by the fact that the `spoils system has been en-
- trenched in American history for almost two hundred years.'
- Alomar v. Dwyer, 447 F. 2d 482, 483 (2d Cir. 1971). For most
- of that period it was assumed, without serious question or de-
- bate, that since a public employee has no constitutional right
- to his job, there can be no valid constitutional objection to
- his summary removal. See Bailey v. Richardson, 86 U. S. App.
- D. C. 248, 182 F. 2d 46, 59 (1950), affirmed per curiam by an
- equally divided Court, 341 U. S. 918; Adler v. Board of Educa-
- tion, 342 U. S. 485 [(1952)]. But as Mr. Justice Marshall so
- forcefully stated in 1965 when he was a circuit judge, `the
- theory that public employment which may be denied altogether
- may be subjected to any conditions, regardless of how unreason-
- able, has been uniformly rejected.' Keyishian v. Board of Re-
- gents, 345 F. 2d 236, 239 (2d Cir. 1965). The development of
- constitutional law subsequent to the Supreme Court's unequivo-
- cal repudiation of the line of cases ending with Bailey v.
- Richardson and Adler v. Board of Education is more relevant
- than the preceding doctrine which is now `universally reject-
- ed.' '' Lewis, 473 F. 2d, at 568 (footnotes and citations omit-
- -----
- ted).
-
-
- With respect to JUSTICE SCALIA's view that until Elrod v. Burns
- ----- -----
- was decided in 1976, it was unthinkable that patronage could be
- unconstitutional, see post, at 5, it seems appropriate to point
- ----
- out again not only that my views in Lewis antedated Elrod by
- ----- -----
- several years, but, more importantly, that they were firmly
- grounded in several decades of decisions of this Court. As ex-
- plained in Lewis:
- -----
-
- ``[In 1947] a closely divided Supreme Court upheld a statute
- prohibiting federal civil service employees from taking an ac-
- tive part in partisan political activities. United Public
- Workers v. Mitchell, 330 U. S. 75. The dissenting Justices
- felt that such an abridgment of First Amendment rights could
- not be justified. The majority, however, concluded that the
- government's interests in not compromising the quality of pub-
- lic service and in not permitting individual employees to use
- their public offices to advance partisan causes were sufficient
- to justify the limitation on their freedom.
-
- ``There was no dispute within the Court over the proposition
- that the employees' interests in political action were protect-
- ed by the First Amendment. The Justices' different conclusions
- stemmed from their different appraisals of the sufficiency of
- the justification for the restriction. That justification--the
- desirability of political neutrality in the public service and
- the avoidance of the use of the power and prestige of govern-
- ment to favor one party or the other--would condemn rather than
- support the alleged conduct of defendant in this case. Thus,
- in dicta, the Court unequivocally stated that the Legislature
- could not require allegiance to a particular political faith as
- a condition of public employment:
-
-
- `Appellants urge that federal employees are protected by the
- Bill of Rights and that Congress may not `enact a regulation pro-
- viding that no Republican, Jew or Negro shall be appointed to
- federal office, or that no federal employee shall attend Mass or
- take any active part in missionary work.' None would deny such
- limitations on Congressional power but, because there are some
- limitations it does not follow that a prohibition against acting
- as ward leader or worker at the polls is invalid.' 330 U. S. 75,
- 100.
-
- ``In 1952 the Court quoted that dicta in support of its hold-
- ing that the State of Oklahoma could not require its employees
- to profess their loyalty by denying past association with Com-
- munists. Wieman v. Updegraff, 344 U. S. 183, 191-192. That
- decision did not recognize any special right to public employ-
- ment; rather, it rested on the impact of the requirement on the
-
- citizen's First Amendment rights. We think it unlikely that
- the Supreme Court would consider these plaintiffs' interest in
- freely associating with members of the Democratic Party less
- worthy of protection than the Oklahoma employees' interest in
- associating with Communists or former Communists.
-
- ``In 1961 the Court held that a civilian cook could be sum-
- marily excluded from a naval gun factory. Cafeteria and Res-
- taurant Workers Union, Local 473, AFL- CIO v. McElroy, 367
- U. S. 886. The government's interest in maintaining the secu-
- rity of the military installation outweighed the cook's in-
- terest in working at a particular location. Again, however,
- the Court explicitly assumed that the sovereign could not deny
- employment for the reason that the citizen was a member of a
- particular political party or religious faith--`that she could
- not have been kept out because she was a Democrat or a Metho-
- dist.' 367 U. S. at 898.
-
- ``In 1968 the Court held that `a teacher's exercise of his
- right to speak on issues of public importance may not furnish
- the basis for his dismissal from public employment.' Pickering
- v. Board of Education, 391 U. S. 563, 574. The Court noted
- that although criminal sanctions `have a somewhat different im-
- pact on the exercise of the right to freedom of speech from
- dismissal from employment, it is apparent that the threat of
- dismissal from public employment is nonetheless a potent means
- of inhibiting speech.' Ibid. The holding in Pickering was a
- ---- ---------
- natural sequel to Mr. Justice Frankfurter's comment in dissent
- in Shelton v. Tucker that a scheme to terminate the employment
- of teachers solely because of their membership in unpopular or-
- ganizations would run afoul of the Fourteenth Amendment. 364
- U. S. 479, 496 [(1960)].
-
-
- ``In 1972 the Court reaffirmed the proposition that a non-
- tenured public servant has no constitutional right to public
- employment, but nevertheless may not be dismissed for exercis-
- ing his First Amendment rights. Perry v. Sindermann, 408 U. S.
- 593. The Court's explanation of its holding is pertinent here:
-
- `For at least a quarter century, this Court has made clear that
- even though a person has no `right' to a valuable governmental
- benefit and even though the government may deny him the benefit
- for any number of reasons, there are some reasons upon which the
- government may not act. It may not deny a benefit to a person on
- a basis that infringes his constitutionally protected
- interests--especially, his interest in freedom of speech. For if
- the government could deny a benefit to a person because of his
- constitutionally protected speech or associations, his exercise
- of those freedoms would in effect be penalized and inhibited.
- This would allow the government to `produce a result which [it]
- could not command directly.' Speiser v. Randall, 357 U. S. 513,
- 526. Such interference with constitutional rights is impermissi-
- ble.
-
-
- `We have applied this general principle to denials of tax exemp-
- tions, Speiser v. Randall, supra, unemployment benefits, Sherbert
- -----
- v. Verner, 374 U. S. 398, 404-405 [(1963)], and welfare pay-
- ments, Shapiro v. Thompson, 394 U. S. 618, 627 n. 6 [(1969)];
- Graham v. Richardson, 403 U. S. 365, 374 [(1971)]. But, most
- often, we have applied the principle to denials of public employ-
- ment. United Public Workers v. Mitchell, 330 U. S. 75, 100
- [(1947)]; Wieman v. Updegraff, 344 U. S. 183, 192; Shelton v.
- Tucker, 364 U. S. 479, 485-486; Torasco v. Watkins, 367 U. S.
- 488, 495-496; Cafeteria and Restaurant Workers, etc. v. McElroy,
- 367 U. S. 886, 894 [(1961)]; Cramp v. Board of Public Instruc-
- tion, 368 U. S. 278, 288 [(1961)]; Baggett v. Bullitt, 377 U. S.
- 360 [(1964)]; Elfbrandt v. Russell, 384 U. S. [11,] 17 [(1966)];
- Keyishian v. Board of Regents, 385 U. S. 589, 605-606 [(1967)];
- Whitehill v. Elkins, 389 U. S. 54 [(1967)]; United States v.
- Robel, 389 U. S. 258 [(1967)]; Pickering v. Board of Education,
- 391 U. S. 563, 568 [(1968)]. We have applied the principle re-
- gardless of the public employee's contractual or other claim to a
- job. Compare Pickering v. Board of Education, supra, with Shel-
- -----
- ton v. Tucker, supra.
- -----
-
- `Thus the respondent's lack of a contractual or tenure `right'
- to reemployment for the 1969-1970 academic year is immaterial to
- his free speech claim. 408 U. S. at 597.
-
- ``This circuit has given full effect to this principle.'' 473
- F. 2d, at 569-572 (footnotes and citations omitted).
-
- See also American Federation of State County and Municipal Em-
- -------- ---------- -- ----- ------ --- --------- ---
- ployees, AFL-CIO v. Shapp, 443 Pa. 527, 537-545, 280 A. 2d 375,
- ------- --- --- -----
- 379-383 (1971) (Barbieri, J., dissenting).
-
-
- To avoid the force of the line of authority described in the
- foregoing passage, JUSTICE SCALIA would weigh the supposed gen-
- eral state interest in patronage hiring against the aggregated
- interests of the many employees affected by the practice. This
- defense of patronage obfuscates the critical distinction between
- partisan interest and the public interest.
-
- precinct] for the other side''); Johnson, Successful Reform Liti-
- gation: The Shakman Patronage Case, 64 Chi.-Kent L. Rev. 479, 481
- -------
- (1988) (the ``massive Democratic patronage employment system''
- maintained a ``noncompetitive political system'' in Cook County
- in the 1960's).
-
- Without repeating the Court's studied rejection of the policy
- arguments for patronage practices in Elrod, 427 U. S., at
- -----
- 364-373, I note only that many commentators agree more with JUS-
- TICE SCALIA's admissions of the systemic costs of patronage
- practices--the ``financial corruption, such as salary kickbacks
- and partisan political activity on government-paid time,'' the
- reduced efficiency of government, and the undeniable constraint
- upon the expression of views by employees, post, at 17-18--than
- ----
- with his belief that patronage is necessary to political stabili-
- ty and integration of powerless groups. See, e. g., G. Pomper,
- - -
- Voters, Elections, and Parties 282- 304 (1988) (multiple causes
- of party decline); D. Price, Bringing Back the Parties 22-25
- (1984) (same); Comment, 41 U. Chi. L. Rev. 297, 319-328 (1974)
- (same); Wolfinger, Why Political Machines Have Not Withered Away
- and Other Revisionist Thoughts, 34 J. Pol. 365, 398 (1972) (ab-
- sence of machine politics in California); J. James, American Pol-
- itical Parties in Transition 85 (1974) (inefficient and antiparty
- effects of patronage); Johnston, Patrons and Clients, Jobs and
- Machines: A Case Study of the Uses of Patronage, 73 Am. Pol. Sci.
- Rev. 385 (1979) (same); Grimshaw, The Political Economy of
- Machine Politics, 4 Corruption and Reform 15 (1989) (same); Com-
- ment, 49 U. Chi. L. Rev. 181, 197-200 (1982) (same); Freedman,
- Doing Battle with the Patronage Army: Politics, Courts and Per-
- sonnel Administration in Chicago, 48 Pub. Admin. Rev. 847 (1988)
- (race and machine politics).
-
-
- Incidentally, although some might suggest that Jacob Arvey was
- ``best known as the promoter of Adlai Stevenson,'' post, at 13,
- ----
- that connection is of interest only because of Mr. Arvey's
- creative and firm leadership of the powerful political organiza-
- tion that was subsequently led by Richard J. Daley. M. Tolchin
- & S. Tolchin, To the Victor 36 (1971).
-
- It assumes that governmental power and public resources--in this
- case employment opportunities--may appropriately be used to sub-
- sidize partisan activities even when the political affiliation of
- the employee or the job applicant is entirely unrelated to his or
- her public service.
- The premise on which this position rests would justify the use of
- public funds to compensate party members for their campaign work,
- or conversely, a legislative enactment denying public employment
- to nonmembers of the majority party. If such legislation is
- unconstitutional--as it clearly would be--an equally pernicious
- rule promulgated by the Executive must also be invalid.
-
- JUSTICE SCALIA argues that distinguishing ``inducement and com-
- pulsion'' reveals that a patronage system's impairment of the
- speech and associational rights of employees and would-be employ-
- ees is insignificant. Post, at 18. This analysis contradicts
- ----
- the harsh reality of party discipline that is the linchpin of his
- theory of patronage. Post, at 13-14 (emphasizing the ``link
- ----
- between patronage and party discipline, and between that and par-
- ty success'').
-
- ducements'' and ``influences'' is apparent from his own descrip-
- tions of the essential features of a patronage system. See,
- e. g., post, at 18 (the worker may ``urge within the organization
- - - ---- ------ --- ------------
- the adoption of any political position; but if that position is
- rejected he must vote and work for the party nonetheless'');
- post, at 13 (quoting M. Tolchin & S. Tolchin, To the Victor, at
- ----
- 123 (reporting that Montclair, New Jersey Democrats provide fewer
- services than Cook County, Illinois Democrats, while ``the rate
- of issue participation is much higher among Montclair Democrats
- who are not bound by the fear displayed by the Cook County com-
- mitteemen'')); post, at 13 (citing W. Grimshaw, The Political
- ----