Constitutionality of Closing the Palestine Information Office, an Affiliate of the Palestine Liberation Organization

CourtDepartment of Justice Office of Legal Counsel
DecidedAugust 14, 1987
StatusPublished

This text of Constitutionality of Closing the Palestine Information Office, an Affiliate of the Palestine Liberation Organization (Constitutionality of Closing the Palestine Information Office, an Affiliate of the Palestine Liberation Organization) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Department of Justice Office of Legal Counsel primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Constitutionality of Closing the Palestine Information Office, an Affiliate of the Palestine Liberation Organization, (olc 1987).

Opinion

Constitutionality of Closing the Palestine Information Office, an Affiliate of the Palestine Liberation Organization

The federal governm ent may, w ithout violating the First Amendment or the Bill o f Attainder C lause o f the Constitution, order the Palestine Inform ation Office in W ashington to close. The political branches have broad authority to control the flow o f funds into the United States, and m ay prevent all commerce betw een foreign and dom estic entities, or cut off the supply of all noninform ational material from a foreign country to a dom estic entity.

Furtherm ore, neither foreign political entities, nor dom estic organizations and individuals to the extent they profess an identity w ith such entities, have constitutional rights under the First Am endm ent. The First Amendment also perm its restrictions on the speech and association rights o f dom estic organizations and individuals when they act pursuant to the direction and control o f a foreign entity. The same restrictions on the expressive activities o f domestic organizations and individuals are not perm itted, however, outside the scope o f such a relation- . ship.

August 14, 1987

M em orandum O p in io n for t h e D epu ty A ttorn ey G en era l

We have been asked to assess the constitutionality of various restrictions on the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) and groups associated with it. Specifically, we have been asked whether the State Department’s exercise of its statutory authority under the Foreign Missions Act, 22 U.S.C. §§ 3401 et seq., to “close” the Palestine Information Office (PIO) in Washington, D.C., would be constitutionally permissible. For the reasons discussed below, we believe that such action by the Secretary of State under the broad authority accorded him by the Foreign Missions Act over foreign missions would be a constitutionally permissible exercise of the political branches’ authority over foreign relations. We first explore the authority of the political branches to act against foreign political entities and their agents. Next, we apply that analysis to the specific case of the PIO. We then discuss the constitutionality of H.R. 2548 and S. 1203, the recently-introduced bills which would prohibit the expenditure of funds provided by the PLO, or the maintenance of an office “at the behest or direction of, or with funds provided by” the PLO. These restrictions would also apply to monies or direction provided by any of the PLO’s “constituent groups,” its “successors,” and its “agents.” In sum, we believe that restrictions on the speech of foreign political entities are permissible, as such entities do not have constitutional rights. Similarly, 104 restrictions on the speech of domestic organizations and individuals professing an identity with such foreign entities are permissible, as they assume the constitutional non-status of the foreign entity with which they profess an identity. Difficulties arise with respect to those organizations or entities which do not profess an identity with a foreign political entity, but which nonetheless serve its interests. We believe that restrictions on the speech of such organiza­ tions and on American citizens are permissible if the latter are acting pursuant to the direction and control of the foreign entity. Furthermore, restrictions on the ability of domestic organizations and citizens to form such a relationship or which tend to inhibit the formation of a relationship with a foreign entity are constitutional. We believe, however, that restrictions on the expressive activi­ ties of American citizens outside the scope of such a relationship with a foreign entity are impermissible under the First Amendment.

I. General Principles

The fundamental focus of First Amendment analysis in this context must be on who is asserting the right of speech or of political association. As we understand the facts, the PIO professes an identity with the PLO, maintaining that it is the “voice” of the PLO in the United States. The PIO, we also understand, is staffed by foreign nationals and American citizens. Accordingly, there are three different juridical entities whose First Amendment rights are potentially affected by the proposed action. First, there is the PLO itself. Second, there is the PIO, an organization that professes an identity with, and perhaps derives its legal status from, the PLO. Finally, there are the American citizens and foreign nationals who staff the PIO. Thus, before assessing the speech or associational rights at issue, we must inquire whether and to what extent these entities possess First Amendment rights. With respect to foreign sovereigns and states, it is clear that they exist outside the constitutional compact and have no rights or responsibilities under it. Rather, their legal rights and duties are exclusively governed by treaties, international law, and other agreements binding coequal sovereigns in the international arena. Because the PLO purports to be an independent sovereign entity, we have little difficulty concluding that it falls into this category. Real or juridical “persons” not United States citizens possess some constitu­ tional rights while on American soil. Nevertheless, they may constitutionally be expelled from the United States for exercising these rights, including the rights of political association or speech, at least if the expulsion is pursuant to a legitimate foreign policy objective. Accordingly, even if the PIO is viewed as having a juridical identity distinct from the PLO — or if the PLO is viewed as a foreign entity without sovereign status — it may nonetheless be banned from American soil for any bona fide foreign policy reason. The same is true of a foreign national. American citizens obviously have the full protection of the First Amendment and may neither be denied the right to political expression nor expelled because 105 they have engaged in such expression. However, a citizen’s First Amendment rights must be examined in light of his interaction with a foreign government. Specifically, it must be determined, in view of this relationship, whose speech is actually at issue: that of the citizen or of the foreign entity. For the reasons discussed more fully below, we believe that because the political branches may deny foreign governments all First Amendment rights, they may restrict the expressive activities of citizens speaking pursuant to the direction and control of — that is, as agents o f— the PLO and/or foreclose ties indicative of such an agency relationship. So long as the scope of the prohibi­ tion on speech does not exceed the contours of the speaker’s relationship with the foreign government — thereby infringing on the citizen’s independent right to espouse beliefs in support of foreign powers — we believe it would survive constitutional scrutiny. Although such restrictions would implicate the citizen’s ability to gather information and associate with foreign governments, we believe this limitation would be justified as an incidental effect of the United States’s necessary and inherent power to preclude foreign encroachment. Fi­ nally, we conclude that the United States political branches may prevent all commerce between foreign and domestic entities, and may cut off the supply of all noninformational material from a foreign entity to a domestic entity. We will examine each of these questions in turn and then apply them to the specific issues before us.

A. Foreign States

As noted, the starting point of our analysis is that the PLO itself, as a foreign political entity, has no constitutional rights. This conclusion flows inexorably from the nature of foreign sovereigns and their interaction with the United States as a foreign, co-equal sovereign.

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