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18 Duke J. Const. L. & Pub. Pol'y Sidebar 1 (2022-2023)

handle is hein.journals/dukjppsid18 and id is 1 raw text is: 










    THE SHURTLEFF CONUNDRUM:

    RESOLVING THE CONFLICT IN

      GOVERNMENT-SPEECH AND

        PUBLIC FORUM ANALYSIS

                      JAMES  WALRAVEN*


                         INTRODUCTION
   Shurtleff v. Boston is the Supreme Court's latest opportunity to
clarify the murky line between the government-speech doctrine and
public forum analysis. Although the public forum doctrine provides
varying degrees  of protection from  government  censorship,' the
government-speech  doctrine provides the State with near-complete
immunity  from Free Speech  Clause scrutiny when the government
speaks for itself.2 In Shurtleff, the Court will decide whether the City of
Boston's refusal to fly a private organization's Christian flag on
Boston's City Hall flagpole merely constitutes the government's right
to speak for itself' or was unlawful regulation of private speech. The
Court  should add an  additional, dispositive prong to the test for
government-speech-requiring     sufficient evidence   that   the
government  intends to speak  for itself-before it may claim the
government-speech  defense. Doing so  would add  guidance to the
doctrine by  resolving the conundrum   of distinguishing between
government-speech  and public forum analysis in close cases. Creating
an additional requirement would also narrow the circumstances under
which the government may  claim the defense, and thereby protect the


*Copyright 2022 @ James Walraven
      J.D. Candidate, Duke University School of Law, 2023. B.A., University of California,
Irvine, 2020. Special thanks to the highly dedicated editors of the Duke Journal of Constitutional
Law & Public Policy. With gratitude for Dad and Bryan Westerfeld.
    1. See generally Part II-A, infra (explaining judicial Free Speech Clause scrutiny in the
three types of public forums).
    2. Infra, note 61.
    3. See Pleasant Grove City v. Summum, 555 U.S. 460, 467 (2009) (explaining that the Free
Speech Clause has no application when the government speaks for itself).

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