“Pro Bono Representation as Political Contribution”: The Fifth Circuit Clarifies Pre-Enforcement Standing and Immunity in Institute for Free Speech v. Johnson

“Pro Bono Representation as Political Contribution”:
The Fifth Circuit Clarifies Pre-Enforcement Standing and Immunity in Institute for Free Speech v. Johnson

1. Introduction

The United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit delivered a split decision on 28 July 2025 in Institute for Free Speech v. Johnson. At issue was whether the Texas Ethics Commission could treat pro bono legal services furnished to political actors as an illegal corporate “contribution,” and whether the non-profit Institute for Free Speech (“IFS”) could mount a pre-enforcement, First-Amendment challenge before actually representing two would-be clients. The district court had dismissed for lack of standing and ripeness and, in the alternative, found the individual Commissioners immune. The Fifth Circuit reversed on standing and ripeness, affirmed qualified immunity for individual defendants, and remanded for merits proceedings against the officials in their official capacities.

2. Summary of the Judgment

  • Standing & Ripeness – IFS established an imminent, constitutionally cognizable injury: its intended pro bono representation is “arguably proscribed” by § 253.094 of the Texas Election Code, and a credible threat of enforcement exists. Claims are therefore ripe.
  • Sovereign Immunity – The Ex parte Young exception applies because the Commissioners have statutory enforcement authority and have shown willingness to exercise it. Official-capacity claims survive.
  • Qualified Immunity – The individual Commissioners remain protected. No clearly established precedent resolved the tension between Button/Primus (protecting nonprofit litigation) and campaign-finance anti-corruption interests. Thus, the right allegedly violated was not “clearly established.”
  • Disposition – Reversed in part (standing/ripeness), affirmed in part (qualified immunity), and remanded.

3. Analysis

3.1 Precedents Cited and Their Influence

The panel synthesized a robust body of First-Amendment standing jurisprudence:

  • Susan B. Anthony List v. Driehaus, 573 U.S. 149 (2014) – Template for pre-enforcement standing: intent to engage in constitutionally relevant conduct, that conduct is arguably illegal, and a credible threat of enforcement.
  • Speech First v. Fenves, 979 F.3d 319 (5th Cir. 2020) – “Not hard to sustain” political-speech standing; relied on to measure “serious intent.”
  • Barilla v. City of Houston, 13 F.4th 427 (5th Cir. 2021) – Provided language on chilled speech and refusal by officials to disavow enforcement.
  • Turtle Island Foods v. Strain, 65 F.4th 211 (5th Cir. 2023) – Reinforced that no history of past enforcement is required when a statute is “non-moribund.”
  • Fed. Election Comm’n v. Beaumont, 539 U.S. 146 (2003) – Clarified that corporate contributions implicate (but are not at the core of) First-Amendment protection, shaping the “constitutional interest” analysis.
  • NAACP v. Button, 371 U.S. 415 (1963) & In re Primus, 436 U.S. 412 (1978) – Cornerstones for the right of nonprofit entities to engage in litigation as political expression; nonetheless not specific enough to strip qualified immunity here.
  • Catholic Leadership Coalition of Texas v. Reisman, 764 F.3d 409 (5th Cir. 2014) – Upheld § 253.094(a); highlighted the state’s anti-corruption interest, later used to show the right was not “clearly established.”
  • Immunity precedents: Ashcroft v. al-Kidd, 563 U.S. 731 (2011); Mullenix v. Luna, 577 U.S. 7 (2015); Guerra v. Castillo, 82 F.4th 278 (5th Cir. 2023).

3.2 Court’s Legal Reasoning

a) Injury-in-Fact. IFS had identified concrete clients, articulated its litigation plan, and refrained only because the next step—signing engagement agreements—would complete the statutory violation. That sufficed for “serious intent.”

b) Credible Threat of Enforcement. The Ethics Commission’s 5-3 advisory opinion labelled pro bono representation an “in-kind contribution,” a third-degree felony. The Commission refused to disclaim future enforcement, so the court “assumed” a credible threat under standard Fifth-Circuit doctrine.

c) Traceability & Redressability. Because the Commissioners wield the exclusive gatekeeping role for election-code prosecutions, an injunction against them would remove the impediment. Arguments that the Internal Revenue Code independently bars the representation were found speculative and unsupported.

d) Ripeness. The same facts satisfied ripeness; no further factual development is needed to decide a purely legal First-Amendment question.

e) Sovereign Immunity. The Commissioners possess statutory enforcement duties (Tex. Gov’t Code § 571.061(a)(3)). Under Ex parte Young they may be enjoined in their official capacity because they are not asked to pay retroactive damages but merely to conform future conduct to the Constitution.

f) Qualified Immunity. Even if a constitutional violation could be shown, the right was not “clearly established.” No precedent resolved the collision between Button’s protection of nonprofit litigation and Reisman/Beaumont’s campaign-finance interests. In the “specific and granular context” of corporate pro bono work for candidates, reasonable officials could disagree, so immunity stands.

3.3 Likely Impact

  • Standing Doctrine. The decision strengthens an already plaintiff-friendly lane for pre-enforcement First-Amendment challenges in the Fifth Circuit, emphasizing that: (i) only one unlawful “step” need remain, and (ii) refusal to disavow enforcement carries “heavy weight.”
  • Campaign-Finance Litigation. Nonprofit law firms and advocacy groups now have a template to secure federal jurisdiction before taking on clients affected by state contribution bans. Expect more facial and as-applied challenges to broad definitions of “contribution.”
  • State Ethics Agencies. Advisory opinions that chill speech can create an immediate federal forum, yet commissioners retain personal immunity unless precedent clearly forecloses their interpretation of campaign-finance laws.
  • Qualified Immunity Landscape. The ruling reaffirms the high bar plaintiffs must clear: abstract First-Amendment principles are insufficient; a tight match of facts and precedent is required.
  • Potential Legislative Responses. Texas (and states with similar bans) may clarify statutory language to exempt bona fide legal representation—paid or unpaid—to avoid future litigation and constitutional risk.

4. Complex Concepts Simplified

  • Article III Standing (Pre-Enforcement). A plaintiff need not wait to be prosecuted; it must show (1) an intention to do something protected by the Constitution, (2) that the law probably forbids that action, and (3) a real, not hypothetical, chance the government will enforce the law.
  • Ripeness. Courts avoid hypotheticals. When the only remaining questions are legal—not factual—ripeness is satisfied.
  • Sovereign Immunity & Ex parte Young. States cannot usually be sued in federal court, but officials may be sued in their official capacities for prospective relief when they enforce allegedly unconstitutional laws.
  • Qualified Immunity. Government officials are personally liable only if they violate rights so clearly established that every reasonable officer would have known their conduct was unlawful.
  • “Contribution” vs. “Expenditure.” Contributions are resources given to a campaign; expenditures are resources spent independently. Texas treats free legal services to a campaign as an in-kind contribution.
  • In-Kind Contribution. A non-cash donation—goods or services (here, attorney time)—that benefits a campaign or political committee.

5. Conclusion

Institute for Free Speech v. Johnson enlarges the doctrinal space for pre-enforcement First-Amendment suits in the Fifth Circuit, holding that nonprofit law firms chilled from offering pro bono representation enjoy standing to challenge campaign-finance restrictions. At the same time, it preserves a robust shield for individual regulators under qualified immunity, reflecting the judiciary’s continuing insistence on precise precedent before exposing officials to personal liability. Going forward, state ethics commissions should scrutinize whether extending “contribution” language to free legal services can survive First-Amendment review, and advocacy groups now possess a clear roadmap for entering federal court before risking criminal sanctions. The remand sets the stage for a merits showdown over whether Texas’s ban, as applied to pro bono legal services, can be squared with the Constitution.

Case Details

Year: 2025
Court: Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit

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