Legal Insurrection readers may recall that when I covered the national celebration over the SpaceX booster catch, I noted that the California Coastal Commission denied launch permits to the company because commission members are unhappy with CEO Elon Musk’s comments on “X.”
Musk was angered at this direct attack on his free speech rights, and threatened to sue. His threats have now become the California Coast Commission’s reality.
Elon Musk’s SpaceX is suing a California agency that rejected his company’s plan to increase rocket launches from an Air Force base in Santa Barbara County, arguing that commissioners engaged in political bias while making the decision.Attorneys from Los Angeles-based law firm Venable LLP filed the complaint against the California Coastal Commission in Los Angeles federal court on Tuesday, days after Musk threatened in a weekend post on X to take legal action against the agency.The lawsuit argues that the agency’s 12-member commission “engaged in naked political discrimination” during last week’s debate on a Department of Defense proposal to expand the number of SpaceX rocket launches at Vandenberg Space Force Base from 36 to 50.“Rarely has a government agency made so clear that it was exceeding its authorized mandate to punish a company for the political views and statements of its largest shareholder and CEO,” the suit says.
You can read the Complaint here.
The commission has declined to comment. However, I believe it’s going to be hard for the panel to defend its actions in court.
One commissioner on the 12-member coastal panel recently accused Musk, who has increasingly asserted his voice in the U.S. presidential race, of “spewing and tweeting political falsehoods.”…The commission voted 6 to 4 to block the requested additional SpaceX launches. Some commission members expressed concern about Musk as a business leader and how much SpaceX activity at the site was commercial rather than government activity.Musk’s lawsuit called any consideration of his public statements improper, violating speech rights protected by the U.S. Constitution.It also accused the commission of “unconstitutional overreach,” intruding on national security and other federal interests, and said launches at the base have had “no significant effects on coastal resources.””Rarely has a government agency made so clear that it was exceeding its authorized mandate to punish a company for the political views and statements of its largest shareholder and CEO,” it said.
However, in an intriguing development, California Gov. Gavin Newsom is backing Musk in this dispute.
I’m with Elon,” Newsom, a Democrat, said in an interview late Thursday, after campaigning for Vice President Kamala Harris in the battleground state of North Carolina. “I didn’t like that.”…“Look, I’m not helping the legal case,” Newsom acknowledged. He added, “You can’t bring up that explicit level of politics.”Newsom indicated he broadly agreed with the lawsuit and that the independent agency should have confined its debate to the merits of the permit rather than engage in a discussion of Musk’s political activities.“These are friends of mine that said that,” said Newsom, who appoints some of the members. “These are good commissioners. But you got to call balls and strikes. And trust me, I’m not big on the Elon Musk bandwagon right now. So that’s me calling balls and strikes.”
Why is Newsom taking this stance?
Is he tired of losing business to Texas?
Can he foresee the results of the presidential election being more favorable to those who support Musk and his work?
It will be interesting to see if the commission revisits their vote in light of these developments….especially given the enormous pride SpaceX has allowed the American people to experience in its home-grown technology in recent weeks.
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