President-elect Biden
Certified
To give some perspective on the controversies we’ve witnessed in
this election, remember that four years ago this week Obama, Biden and
Comey were talking about spying on and targeting Donald Trump and his team
for prosecution.
In my view, the election results in the various battleground states were
compromised by unlawful rule changes that led to votes being counted that
shouldn't have been counted. State legislatures, the courts – in
particular the Supreme Court – and Congress failed to seriously grapple
with these and other problems. It is shameful. And the inexcusable and
deadly violence at the U.S. Capitol is being used by the Left to suppress
all its conservative and other principled opposition. The Leftists at Big
Tech are banning conservatives for even talking about election fraud!
The Left is even talking about impeachment again! They don’t, as they
claim, want to remove our president because he incited violence. He didn't
– and they don't care much about violence as they endorse and use it
regularly. No, they want to abuse impeachment again to undermine someone
who is likely to be an effective opposition voice.
So, as we look ahead, you won’t be able to rely on the corrupt media or
Congress to hold the government to account. Judicial Watch will be only
game in town, more or less, when it comes to investigating and litigating
over government corruption in the new Biden administration.
Over 4,700 Georgia Absentee Votes Tied to Non-Residential
Addresses
You can trust Judicial Watch to investigate and expose the conduct of the
2020 elections. Our efforts are well underway with dozens of open records
requests and other investigations.
For example, we just collected voter data showing that more than 4,700
absentee voters in the presidential election listed non-residential
addresses as their places of residence. Georgia
law requires citizens registering to vote to reside “in that place in
which such person’s habitation is fixed …”
We shared our data with the Georgia Secretary of State and requested an
investigation.
A total of 9,989 Georgia voters seem to be registered at non-residential
addresses: 1,882 at commercial addresses, 1,336 registered at county and
state governmental buildings, and 6,735 at either hotels or motels.
Additionally, 215 new registrations (between November 4-December 14) for
the special election are linked to non-residential addresses.
We previously alerted the Georgia Secretary of Office to the voter
registration address issue in April 2020.
This issue must be immediately investigated. We are concerned about the
impact on Georgia’s elections in November and earlier this week.
This is part of our years-long effort to clean up voter rolls.
In September 2020, we released a study
revealing that 353 U.S. counties had 1.8 million more registered voters
than eligible voting-age citizens. In other words, the registration rates
of those counties exceeded 100% of eligible voters.
In Georgia: Bryan County (118%); Forsyth County (114%); Dawson County
(113%); Oconee County (111%); Fayette County (111%); Fulton County (109%);
Cherokee County (109%); Jackson County (107%); Henry County (106%); Lee
County (106%); Morgan County (105%); Clayton County (105%); DeKalb County
(105%); Gwinnett County (104%); Greene County (104%); Cobb County (104%);
Effingham County (103%); Walton County (102%); Rockdale County (102%);
Barrow County (101%); Douglas County (101%); Newton County (100%); Hall
County (100%)
You can learn more about our election efforts here.
Inactive Registrations Stayed on Kentucky Rolls Despite Consent
Decree
Even when Judicial Watch succeeds in court to ensure better election
integrity, we face continued battles from government officials who try to
undermine our success.
The U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky has agreed
that Kentucky’s former Democrat Secretary of State Alison Lundergan
Grimes breached
the terms of a National Voter Registration Act (NVRA) Consent
Judgment with us.
She delayed sending out voter notices, which allowed the names of people
who have died or moved away to remain on the Commonwealth’s voter
rolls.
As a result of the breach, District Court Judge Gregory F. Van Tatenhove
extended the judgment beyond its termination date from October 31, 2023, to
March 31, 2025, which allows it to encompass one additional federal
election. Kentucky is set to remove over 250,000 names from the voter rolls
under the terms of the consent judgment.
By breaching the court’s decree and delaying sending out voter notices
before a critical deadline, Kentucky allowed outdated registrations to
remain on the rolls through the 2022 midterm federal elections, two years
longer than Kentucky agreed to in the original judgment.
This latest court ruling comes in our 2017
lawsuit under the NVRA ( Judicial
Watch, Inc. and the United States of America v. Alison Lundergan Grimes, et
al. (No. 3:17-cv-00094)). (The original defendant has since been
replaced by Michael Adams, the new secretary of state elected in November
2019.) In June 2018, with our agreement, the Justice Department moved to
intervene in the lawsuit against Kentucky.
The court agreed with us that “the initial Defendants breached
the Consent Judgment” by failing to send address notices in time:
Since [the secretary of state’s office] failed to follow up with the
[lawfully required] notices … registrations belonging to those with a
change of address cannot be cancelled after the November 2020 election.…
Therefore, this inaction delayed Kentucky’s progress toward “ensuring
an accurate and current voter registration” list, one of the main
purposes of the NVRA and Consent Judgment.
For years prior to entering into the Consent Judgment, Kentucky had
been in violation of the NVRA’s requirement to keep its voter rolls up to
date, which forced us to sue to bring the Bluegrass State into compliance
with the law. Our lawsuit against Kentucky alleged that 48 counties had
more registered voters than citizens over the age of 18. The suit noted
that Kentucky was then one of only three states in which the statewide
active registration rate was greater than 100% of the age-eligible citizen
population.
In signing the Consent
Judgment, Kentucky acknowledged:
[T]he practices currently in place in Kentucky do not comply with the
NVRA’s requirement that states conduct a general voter registration list
maintenance program that makes a reasonable effort to remove ineligible
persons from the voter rolls due to a change in residence outside of the
jurisdiction …
Why would a leftist secretary of state purposefully allow ineligible names
to remain on Kentucky’s voter rolls in violation of a federal court’s
consent decree? We know, don’t we? Dirty voting rolls make it easier to
steal elections. That’s why our litigation to clean up rolls across
America is urgent.
Judicial Watch Exposes a $1 Billion Mask Deal Between California
and Chinese Company
Judicial Watch could spend all our time on the accountability and
corruption issues tied the coronavirus issue.
We received 848
pages of documents revealing the details of a $1 billion contract for
face masks between the California Office of Emergency Services and the
Chinese Communist Party linked BYD.
BYD is controversial:
[T]he first company the FDA approved has been prohibited
by law from bidding for some federal contracts in the United States.
Although the company, BYD, is a major global player in the electric vehicle
and lithium battery markets, it also has glaring red flags on its record,
experts warn, including a history of supplying allegedly faulty products to
the U.S., ties to the Chinese military and Communist Party, and possible
links to forced labor. BYD also has no history of making personal
protective equipment …
Moreover, the documents reveal that the Office of Emergency Services
Assistant Chief Counsel admits that they deviated from their normal
procurement process for this contract. Additionally, in the contract
between Office of Emergency Services and BYD, BYD uses a different name,
Global Healthcare Product Solutions, LLC., and BYD provides no liability or
warranty for the masks if they are faulty.
The records were produced in response to our California Public Records
request sent to the California Governor’s Office of Emergency Services
for all records and communications related to the state’s contract for
masks with BYD.
The records include an April 7, 2020, email
from the Office of Emergency Services Assistant Chief Counsel Jennifer
Bollinger to Oscar Su, Senior Director of BYD America, in which Bollinger
states, “Our normal procurement process has been deviated from given the
exigency of the situation.”
In an April 6, 2020, email
Stella Lu, the president of BYD Motors (the guarantor of the masks) tells
Mark Ghilarducci, the director of the Office of Emergency Services that
they should, “open champagne tomorrow morning at our conference call,”
where they will finalize the purchase by California of $1 billion worth of
BYD masks.
On April 7, John Zhuang, counsel for BYD and BYD’s lead negotiator, sent
the finalized contracts to Bollinger, who led the negotiations for the
Office of Emergency Services. Bollinger replied, “This is very
exciting!!! We will circle back today with the signature as soon as we
can.”
In an
amendment to the master agreement, BYD had to refund $247 million to
California of the $495 million down payment they had received apparently
because they weren’t able to meet the deadline of receiving National
Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) certification for
their N95 masks. The certification deadline was extended from April 30,
2020, to May 31, 2020.
On March 28, 2020, Brian Stansbury, a member of the board of the San
Francisco Employees’ Retirement System, emailed
Grady Joseph of the CA Office of Emergency Services and Paul Teng of
Himalaya Capital in order to introduce Joseph to Teng, saying, “Grady as
we discussed the pension system for the City of San Francisco – the San
Francisco Employees’ Retirement System (SFERS) – reached out to our
investment partners to see how they can help in the fight against
COVID-19.
Teng responded, offering to assist with the procurement of N95 masks:
“Paul I would like to introduce Grady Joseph Assistant Director of
Recovery Operations for Cal OES from the Governor’s Office of Emergency
Services. We know Grady is in good hands and want to thank you for your
partnership.”
Teng later responds,
“Hi Grady, nice to meet you through email though I wish it was under
better circumstances. We have a deep relationship with BYD which is now the
largest mask maker in the world capable of producing 10MM masks a day. I
have just facilitated an order between BYD [redacted] to procure 4 MM in
N95 masks and 3 MM surgical masks that will be delivered over the next
three weeks or so in batches. Happy to make the same connection as well. My
number is below if you need to reach me.”
Brian Stansbury, a member of the board of San Francisco Employees
Retirement System (SFERS), introduced
Paul Teng of Himalaya Capital (with whom SFERS reportedly had invested
$200 million and which Stansbury calls their “investment
partners”), to Grady Joseph, Office of Emergency Services Asst. Director
Of Recovery Operations to help in the procurement of face masks. Teng tells
Joseph that Himalaya has a “deep relationship” with BYD, which he
claims, “is now the largest mask maker in the world.” Oscar Su, a BYD
executive introduced by Teng to Joseph and another Office of Emergency
Services official, responds, “Thanks Paul for the introduction.”
According to the “Equipment Master Supply Purchase Order Agreement”
effective April 7, 2020, BYD lists the “Seller” to the State of
California as a Wilmington, DE-based company called Global Healthcare
Product Solutions, LLC. The contract
states that the “Buyer will support the Seller’s efforts to obtain the
National Institute for Occupation Safety and Health (“NIOSH”)
certification for the N95 masks purchased under this Agreement.” A
provision of the contract calls for BYD Motors, a subsidiary of BYD Co,
Ltd, to be the Guarantor of the contract, in the event the Seller breached
the “Guaranteed Material Obligation” of the contract.
Pursuant to a “Sweatfree Code of Conduct” provision
of the contract, the Seller guarantees that no material furnished to the
Buyer “have been produced in whole or in part by sweatshop labor, forced
labor, convict labor, indentured labor under penal sanction, abusive forms
of child labor or exploitation of children in sweatshop labor…” In a
“Nondiscrimination” clause of the contract, the Seller agrees to not
“unlawfully discriminate” against any employee based on “ancestry”
or “religious creed.” The provision also calls for the Seller to adhere
to the “Fair Employment and Housing Act.”
California’s Office of Emergency Services had to provide a 50% down
payment totaling $495
million (one-half of the total $990 million contract) under the payment
terms of the contract.
According to a purchase
order, Global Healthcare Product Solutions (the Seller) is a subsidiary
of BYD International Development based in Los Angeles. BYD was to supply
300 million N95 masks at a unit price of $3.30 each.
In an April 3, 2020, email
exchange between Bollinger and BYD’s counsel, Zhuang, Bollinger asks
Zhuang why BYD is using a company called “Global Healthcare Product
Solutions, LLC” as the “contracting entity” for the masks. She notes
that “I understood this to be a contract directly with BYD North
America.” Zhuang then responds, saying, “BYD’s contract manufacturing
division started Global Healthcare Product Solutions earlier this year to
sell healthcare products in the US … They picked the name because they
wanted folks to recognize it as a business that sold healthcare products,
not to be conflated with the EV [Electric Vehicle] / clean energy
business.”
In the master agreement, under “ Limits
of Liability” section, the contract notes that “In no event shall
Seller be liable for any consequential, special, incidental, indirect or
punitive damages …” In the contract provision titled “Limits on
Warranty,” the contract notes that Seller … makes no warranties or
representations … as to the Equipment … provided for under this
Agreement …” The contract contains a provision that “Seller warrants
that no gratuities … were offered or given by the Seller, or any agent or
representative of the Seller, to any officer or employee of the Buyer with
a view toward securing the Agreement …”
California purchased a total of 300 million N95 masks from BYD for $990
million on April 7, 2020.
In an April 2, 2020, email,
Trevor
Houser of “ Frontline
Support” connects multiple BYD and the Office of Emergency Services
representatives. Frontline Support shares the same
address in Oakland, CA, as Rhodium Group, where Trevor Houser is listed
as a partner. Rhodium describes itself as “an independent research
provider” combining “economic data and policy insight to analyze global
trends.”
In an April 24, 2020, email,
Shige Honjo from “Frontline Support” provided advice/directives to BYD
on quality control measures for the masks that were to be provided to the
Office of Emergency Services, describing various metrics that BYD should
supply to ensure that the masks being provided met certain standards. These
metrics included, “Product cleanliness spec – number and size of
particles allowed, blemish, etc.” and “Reliability specs – when does
filtration become no good, how many times can the straps be stretched out,
etc.”
The BYD representative in charge of handling shipments of the masks to the
Office of Emergency Services is Sean
Li, Procurement and Logistic Supervisor of BYD Coach and Bus LLC.
In an
email on March 21, 2020, a California lobbyist named Mark Weideman sent
Gov. Newsom’s Chief of Staff, Ann O’Leary, a copy of an
article about BYD titled “A Chinese Electric Car Maker Backed by
Warren Buffett Re-Tooled to Make Face Masks When Covid-19 Hit – Now It
Says It’s the World’s Largest Mask Factory.” Weideman says in his
email that BYD was willing to “donate” 50,000 masks to California,
along with hand sanitizer, and asked if someone could “notify GGN”
[presumably Governor Gavin Newsom] so they could “hopefully execute on
BYD’s offer to help California, a place they and their unionized
workforce call home for their North American operations.” Abby Browning
of the Office of Emergency Services responds to Weideman, noting she’d
been forwarded his email from O’Leary, and said, “I am happy to help
you facilitate this donation.” Weideman replies to Browning, “Yes,
address and receiving information would be great. I am copying Frank
Girardot and Nancy Liu with BYD who can help coordinate logistics.”
In an April 24, 2020, email
exchange among the Office of Emergency Services officials handling
delivery of 3.4 million masks from BYD, CA Office of Emergency Services
Dep. Director Mitchell Medigovich notes that “The physical count will be
at the airport and upon movement into the warehouse for inventory and QC
[quality control], we will notify receipt and if there are any
deficiencies. We are only checking 1% due to volume.”
These documents show how a well-connected and controversial Chinese firm
was able to get a leg up on a billion-dollar mask contract with California
politicians.
Nasdaq Wants to Require Minority and Female Directors for
Members
We filed a public
comment with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) in response
to a proposed rule change requiring race and gender quotas on the boards of
corporations listed on the Nasdaq exchange. The proposed rule would require
a self-identifying female and a self-identifying member of certain listed
racial backgrounds, or an explanation from the company as to why it does
not have at least two directors on its board who self-identify as such.
In September 2020, we also filed a taxpayer
lawsuit in the Superior Court of the State of California County of Los
Angeles to prevent California from enforcing Assembly Bill 979 (AB 979),
which requires that boards of directors of California-based, publicly held
domestic or foreign corporations satisfy racial, ethnicity, sexual
preference and transgender status quotas by the end of the 2021 calendar
year ( Robin
Crest, et al. v. Alex Padilla, in his official capacity as Secretary of
State of the State of California (No.20ST-CV-37513)).
In a related case, we are prosecuting a taxpayer lawsuit
that challenges California’s gender quotas ( Crest
et al. v. Padilla, (No.19ST-CV-27561)). In June 2020, in a major
development, the court held
that Judicial Watch’s clients have standing to sue under state law and
Judicial Watch attorneys are now in discovery.
In our comment to the Securities and Exchange Commission we explained that
the proposed rule regulating Nasdaq corporations violates the equal
protection component of the Fifth Amendment’s Due Process Clause: “At
the heart of the Constitution’s guarantee of equal protection lies the
simple command that the Government must treat citizens as individuals, not
as simply components of a racial, religious, sexual or national
class.”
Race and gender quotas are brazenly unconstitutional, and NASDAQ’s
proposed rule must be rejected by the SEC. You can expect more litigation
if this discriminatory proposal moves forward.”
Here is our comment to the SEC:
Dear Secretary Countryman:
Judicial Watch, Inc. is a non-partisan,
not-for-profit, public interest organization headquartered in Washington,
DC. Founded in 1994, Judicial Watch seeks to promote accountability,
transparency and integrity in government, and fidelity to the rule of law.
In furtherance of these goals, Judicial Watch files public comments and
amicus curiae briefs on issues involving civil rights as well as prosecutes
lawsuits on matters it believes are of public importance. Judicial Watch
respectfully submits this comment in opposition to Nasdaq’s Proposed Rule
Change to Adopt Listing Rules Related to Board Diversity. We urge the SEC
to decline adopting the Proposed Rule because it violates the Fifth
Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, requires companies listed on Nasdaq to
discriminate, and will likely lead to extensive litigation. In addition,
Judicial Watch is concerned about potential conflicts of interest related
to the Proposed Rule as Nasdaq also has recently announced a partnership
with Equilar to provide services to listed companies that have not met the
Proposed Rule’s “diversity objectives.”
I. The Proposed Rule Violates the Fifth Amendment of the U.S.
Constitution.
Although the Fifth Amendment, unlike the Fourteenth Amendment, does not
have an express equal protection clause, the Supreme Court has held that
“[t]he reach of the equal protection guarantee of the Fifth Amendment is
coextensive with that of the Fourteenth.” United States v.
Paradise, 480 U.S. 149, 166, n. 16 (1987) (plurality opinion);
Adarand Constructors v. Pena, 515 U.S. 200, 217 (1995). Therefore,
the Fifth Amendment forbids the federal government from: (1) creating
racial classifications that are not narrowly tailored to serve a compelling
government interest; and (2) creating gender classifications that are not
substantially related to the achievement of important government
objectives. See Adarand, 515 U.S. at 227; see also United
States v. Virginia, 518 U.S. 515, 533 (1996).
The Proposed Rule violates the equal protection component of the Fifth
Amendment’s Due Process Clause. “At the heart of the Constitution’s
guarantee of equal protection lies the simple command that the Government
must treat citizens as individuals, not as simply components of a racial,
religious, sexual or national class.” Miller v. Johnson, 515
U.S. 900, 911 (1995) (quoting Metro Broadcasting v. FCC, 497 U.S.
547, 602 (1990) (O’Connor, J., dissenting) (internal quotation marks
omitted)). The Proposed Rule, however, does just that. It would
require:
Nasdaq-listed companies, subject to certain exceptions, (A) to have at
least one director who self-identifies as a female, and (B) to have at
least one director who self-identifies as Black or African American,
Hispanic or Latinx, Asian, Native American or Alaska Native, Native
Hawaiian or Pacific Islander, two or more races or ethnicities, or as
LGBTQ+, or (C) to explain why the company does not have at least two
directors on its board who self-identify in the categories listed
above[.]
Contrary to the fundamental guarantee of equal protection under the law,
the Proposed Rule’s requirement to have at least one director who
self-identifies as a specific race is a racial quota that, if adopted as
law, will violate the Fifth Amendment. All racial classifications, both
disadvantaging and benefitting minorities, are subject to strict scrutiny.
Adarand, 515 U.S. at 227. To survive strict scrutiny, the
government must demonstrate that the racial classifications are narrowly
tailored to further a compelling government interest. Id. “Diversity”
itself is not a compelling interest. See Grutter v. Bollinger, 539
U.S. 306, 330 (2003); see also Parents Involved in Cmty. Sch. v.
Seattle Sch. Dist. No. 1, 551 U.S. 701, 729-731 (2007). Neither is
“outright racial balancing,” which the Supreme Court deems “patently
unconstitutional.” Grutter, 539 U.S. at 330.
What Nasdaq proposes is unlike any other racial classification approved by
the Supreme Court. Cf. Grutter, 539 U.S., at 316, 335-336 (holding
constitutional an affirmative action program that considered race as only
one factor in achieving student body diversity and did not seek any
particular number or percentage of minority students). Nasdaq justifies the
Proposed Rule’s racial quota by relying on studies that purportedly show
that racial diversity on boards discourages “groupthink” by increasing
“cognitive diversity.” But this justification “embod[ies] stereotypes
that treat individuals as the product of their race, evaluating their
thoughts and efforts—their very worth as citizens—according to a
criterion barred to the Government by history and the Constitution.”
Miller v. Johnson, 515 U.S. 900, 912 (1995). This numerical
set-aside amounts to just another form of unconstitutional racial
balancing. See Parents Involved in Cmty. Sch., 551 U.S. at 732
(“Racial balancing is not transformed from ‘patently
unconstitutional’ to a compelling state interest simply by relabeling it
‘racial diversity.’”).
Moreover, employing racial classifications for the sake of “cognitive
diversity” and inclusion does not further a compelling government
interest. “[T]he interest in diversity of viewpoints provides no
legitimate, much less important, reason to employ race classifications
apart from generalizations impermissibly equating race with thoughts and
behavior.” Metro Broadcasting, 497 U.S. at 602 (O’Connor, J.,
dissenting) (emphasis in original); see also Lutheran Church-Missouri
Synod v. FCC, 141 F.3d 344, 355 (D.C. Cir. 1998) (citing approvingly
J. O’Connor’s dissent in Metro Broadcasting).
Additionally, “the [Supreme] Court has given every indication of wanting
to cut back Metro Broadcasting,” where it found that diversity
was only an “important” government interest. Lutheran
Church-Missouri Synod, 141 F.3d at 354-355. The Supreme Court
overruled Metro Broadcasting to the extent that it was
inconsistent with its holding in Adarand that racial
classifications at all government levels are subject to strict scrutiny
review. 515 U.S. at 227. It is thus doubtful that the Supreme Court would
now elevate “diversity” from an important to a compelling government
interest. Moreover, a race-conscious program is not narrowly tailored if it
uses a quota system, like the one proposed by Nasdaq. See Grutter, 539 U.S.
at 334. Thus, this quota system will surely fail strict scrutiny review.
Simply put, the diversity interest advanced by Nasdaq is insufficient under
the law to justify the Proposed Rule’s racial quotas.
Further, the Proposed Rule’s requirement to have at least one director
who self-identifies as a female is a gender quota that, like the racial
quota, if adopted as law, will violate the Fifth Amendment. Gender
classifications are constitutional only if the government can demonstrate
“exceedingly persuasive justification” for the classification.
Virginia, 518 U.S. at 531. To meet this burden, the government
must show that the classification is substantially related to achieving an
important governmental objective. Id. at 533.
Just like its justification for racial quotas, Nasdaq justifies the gender
quotas by relying on studies that purportedly show that gender diversity on
boards discourages “groupthink” by increasing “cognitive
diversity.” For a gender classification to be constitutional, not only
must the justification be “genuine, not hypothesized,” but it also
“must not rely on overbroad generalizations about the different talents,
capacities, or preferences of males and females.” Id. Yet,
Nasdaq’s justification is, at its essence, exactly that – an assumption
that women think so differently than men that it can affect the output of a
board.
Moreover, the “comply-or-explain” framework does not save the Rule from
its constitutionally fatal flaws. Nasdaq portrays its Proposed Rule as a
choice rather than a mandate. However, this “choice” is unduly
coercive. As explained below, the government cannot encourage or facilitate
private discrimination. The Proposed Rule is designed to do just that, with
or without the option to explain non-compliance. Although the Proposed Rule
permits a listed company to explain in a public statement why it has failed
to meet the racial and gender quotas, “the relevant question is not
whether a [Rule] requires the use of such measures, but whether it
authorizes or encourages them.” Bras v. California Public Utilities
Commission, 59 F.3d 869, 875 (9th Cir. 1995). If adopted, the SEC
would undoubtedly be authorizing and encouraging Nasdaq-listed companies to
use racial and gender quotas.
This sort of government authorization and pressure to employ such quotas
violates the Fifth Amendment. That is precisely what the D.C. Circuit Court
of Appeals found in MD/DC/DE Broadcasters Ass’n v. FCC, 236 F.3d
13, 18 (D.C. Cir. 2001). There, the court found that although an FCC rule
allowed broadcasters to select one of two options for “broad outreach”
in recruiting efforts, one of the options was unconstitutional because
“the rule [created] pressure to recruit women and minorities, which
pressure ultimately [could] not withstand constitutional review.” Id.
This “option,” the court explained, was instead a “government
mandate for recruitment targeted at minorities [and females]”
that constituted a “racial [and gender] classification” that subjects
persons of different races to ‘unequal treatment.’” Id. at
20 (emphasis added). This was true even though the other option did not
focus specifically on race or gender. Id. at 18-20. Similarly, the
Proposed Rule’s “comply-or-explain” framework does not transform the
Rule from being unconstitutional to being constitutional.
II. The Proposed Rule Requires
Nasdaq Members Discriminate.
The Proposed Rule, if adopted, will inevitably require listed companies to
discriminate on the basis of race and sex when selecting board members, in
violation of the Constitution: “A ‘law compelling persons to
discriminate against other persons because of race’ is a ‘palpable
violation of the [Fifth] Amendment,’ regardless of whether the persons
required to discriminate would have acted the same way regardless of the
law.” Monterey Mech. Co. v. Wilson, 125 F.3d 702, 707 (9th Cir.
1997) (quoting Peterson v. City of Greenville, 373 U.S. 244, 248
(1963)). This requirement to discriminate puts skin color and gender ahead
of merit.
As Warren Buffet explained in a letter to Berkshire Hathaway shareholders,
“At Berkshire, we are in the specialized activity of running a business
well, and therefore we seek business judgment.” Requiring Nasdaq members
to focus more on race and gender takes away from the focus on merit. To put
it bluntly, as Warren Buffet did when discussing such requirements, the
Proposed Rule “sounds as if the mission is to stock Noah’s ark.”
Under this Rule, the question won’t be “Who has the best business
judgment?” Instead, it will be “What are the racial and gender
checkboxes that we need to fill?” The SEC should not be in the business
of condoning and mandating such discriminatory decision-making.
III. The Proposed Rule Amounts to Government
Action.
For an action to violate the Fifth Amendment, the government must act.
Discrimination on the basis of race or sex violates the Constitution
“only when it may be attributed to [government] action.” Edmonson
v. Leesville Concrete Co., 500 U.S. 614, 619, 111 S. Ct. 2077, 2082
(1991) (citation omitted). Here, the Rule would constitute government
action on the part of the SEC for purposes of establishing an equal
protection claim. See Blount v. SEC, 61 F.3d 938, 941 (D.C. Cir.
1995).
The Proposed Rule only takes effect if the SEC approves it. Under the
Securities Exchange Act, the SEC is a governmental body charged with
ensuring that every self-regulatory organization (“SRO”), such as
Nasdaq, complies with the provisions of the Act, the SEC’s own rules and
regulations, and the SRO’s own rules. See generally 15 U.S.C. § 78s.
Nasdaq’s proposed rules cannot “take effect unless approved by the
Commission.” Id. at §78s(b)(1). Once the SEC approves a
proposed rule, it, in effect, becomes binding federal law. The rule then
“may be enforced by such organization to the extent it is not
inconsistent with the provisions of [the Exchange Act], the rules and
regulations thereunder, and applicable Federal and State law.”
Id. at § 78s(b)(3)(C).
As has been the case in other actions maintained against the SEC, a court
is likely to find that that the proposed rule, if adopted, constitutes
government action. In Blount, the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals
rejected the argument of defendant-intervenor, a self-regulatory
organization, that a challenged rule was not the product of government
action. Blount, 61 F.3d at 941. And in New York Republican State
Comm. v. SEC, government action was not an issue that barred the court from
hearing a claim challenging the constitutionality of FINRA’s proposed
rule that was adopted by the SEC. 927 F.3d 499, 503 (D.C. Cir.
2019).
Further, the SEC, as a federal governmental agency, is forbidden from
encouraging and facilitating discrimination on the basis of race and sex.
The U.S. Supreme Court has recognized that “the impetus for the forbidden
discrimination need not originate with the State if it is state action that
enforces privately originated discrimination.” Moose Lodge No. 107 v.
Irvis, 407 U.S. 163, 172 (1972) (citing Shelley v. Kraemer,
334 U.S. 1 (1948). As the Court announced in Reitman v. Mulkey,
the government may not authorize or encourage private discrimination. 387
U.S. 369, 375-76 (1967). In that case, the Court found that an amendment to
the California Constitution amounted to government authorization of private
discrimination in the housing market. This was enough for the Court to find
state action, such that the government was encouraging and facilitating
private discrimination in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment. Id.
In short, if the SEC adopts the Proposed Rule, it will amount to government
action facilitating and encouraging private discrimination on the basis of
race and sex, in violation of the Fifth Amendment. There is no doubt that
litigation will commence shortly after the Proposed Rule goes into
effect.
The Proposed Rule is repugnant to the Constitution’s guarantee of equal
protection under the law. Because it runs afoul to the Fifth Amendment,
Judicial Watch urges the SEC to reject this flagrantly unconstitutional
Rule.
Sincerely,
Thomas J. Fitton
President, Judicial Watch, Inc.
To read the full comment letter with footnotes, click here.
Until next week …
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