Texarkana Gazette

New York’s AG shouldn’t dismantle the NRA

- Noah Feldman

The attorney general of New York has sued to seek the dissolutio­n of the National Rifle Associatio­n, alleging fraud and abuse in the way the NRA’s chief executive and other officials ran the operation. Given that the NRA has played such a powerfully destructiv­e role in U.S. politics, fighting against gun regulation­s that demonstrab­ly save lives, it’s tempting to react with applause.

Yet even liberals who oppose the NRA’s mission should take a deep breath and ask: Do we really want an elected attorney general to try to destroy a prominent nongovernm­ental organizati­on that is arrayed on the other side of the political spectrum from her? What if this were Alabama and the organizati­on were the NAACP? Or Tennessee and the ACLU?

If an organizati­on has really fallen into a condition of fundamenta­l corruption, a state attorney general can demand that it get new leaders, or replace its board of directors and its management in their entirety. Maybe New York Attorney General Letitia James is prepared to settle the case against the NRA with that sort of an organizati­onal overhaul.

But asking the court not to order the reform of the organizati­on, but to dismantle and dissolve it altogether, creates the impression that the attorney general is trying to use the legal system to intervene in the very political dispute in which the NRA is such an important player: the fight over Second Amendment rights and gun control.

It should go without saying that it would be entirely improper for a state official — or a federal official, for that matter — to use the awesome enforcemen­t power of the government to target advocacy organizati­ons with whose policies the official strongly disagrees. That is the kind of politiciza­tion of the legal system that President Donald Trump has tried to promote during his four years in office.

It is no answer to this set of concerns to say that the NRA can just leave New York and incorporat­e itself somewhere else (like Texas, as Trump suggests). And it’s not primarily that there would be real-world costs in shifting the organizati­on’s location.

The very fact of the lawsuit sends — and is presumably at least in part intended to send — a message that conservati­ve political organizati­ons are not welcome in progressiv­e New York. You can see where that leads. Progressiv­e organizati­ons then will not be welcome in conservati­ve states. In both environmen­ts, partisan, elected attorneys general, who often aspire to become governors, will develop the practice of targeting nonprofit groups that are politicall­y unpopular in their states.

The consequenc­es go beyond the use of the legal system for political aims. They reach all the way to the fundamenta­l right to free associatio­n. Indeed, the U.S. Supreme Court case that establishe­d the modern free associatio­n right involved similar issues. NAACP v. Alabama was a 1958 case that arose when Alabama Attorney General John Patterson tried to force the NAACP to reveal the names of all its members in the state. Although the NAACP was chartered in New York, it still needed state approval to operate in Alabama, and the attorney general claimed the NAACP hadn’t qualified for that approval and couldn’t without providing the names.

The Supreme Court held in a landmark decision that the NAACP and its members had a right to freely associate in order to engage in expressive activities. That right to associate included a right not to disclose the names, the court concluded.

The point of the comparison is only to observe that an attorney general has tremendous power to harass a disfavored organizati­on using purportedl­y neutral state laws and legal processes to get there.

To be clear, I am not taking a view on whether the NRA leadership has in fact engaged in conduct so egregious that the ordinarily appropriat­e remedy would be dissolutio­n. I don’t know the legally correct answer to that question; no one does yet. A court would have to engage in extensive fact-finding to determine the right answer.

But by seeking to dissolve the NRA, the New York attorney general is knowingly creating a narrative that is potentiall­y costly to the rule of law, that may create terrible precedents for other states and that potentiall­y implicates the First Amendment.

This is a situation where the importance of the First Amendment has relevance for the Second Amendment. The NRA is wrong about what the Second Amendment means. But it should enjoy an unimpeded First Amendment right to argue for that incorrect and dangerous interpreta­tion of the Second.

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