Camelot Banquet Rooms, Inc. v. United States Small Business A, No. 21-2589 (7th Cir. 2022)

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This opinion or order relates to an opinion or order originally issued on September 15, 2021.

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In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________________ No. 21-2589 CAMELOT BANQUET ROOMS, INC., et al., Plaintiffs-Appellees, v. UNITED STATES SMALL BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION, et al., Defendants-Appellants. ____________________ Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin. No. 2:21-CV-00447-LA — Lynn Adelman, Judge. ____________________ ARGUED NOVEMBER 1, 2021 — DECIDED JANUARY 26, 2022 ____________________ Before KANNE, ROVNER, and HAMILTON, Circuit Judges. HAMILTON, Circuit Judge. Plainti s-appellees in this case are twenty-three businesses all over the country that o er live adult entertainment in the form of nude or nearly nude dancing. They seek to obtain loans under the second round of the Paycheck Protection Program enacted by Congress to address economic disruption caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. By statute, Congress excluded plainti s and several other categories of businesses from the second round of the Program. 2 No. 21-2589 See 15 U.S.C. § 636(a)(37)(A)(iv)(III)(aa), incorporating 13 C.F.R. § 120.110, with two exceptions. Plainti s assert that their exclusion from the Program violates their constitutional rights, primarily under the Free Speech Clause of the First Amendment. The district court agreed. It issued a preliminary injunction that enjoins the United States Small Business Administration (SBA) from denying plainti s eligibility for the loan program based on the statutory exclusion that incorporates 13 C.F.R. § 120.110. Camelot Banquet Rooms, Inc. v. U.S. Small Business Admin., — F. Supp. 3d —, 2021 WL 3680369 (E.D. Wis. Aug. 19, 2021). We granted the government’s stay of the preliminary injunction, expedited brie ng on the merits of this appeal, and held oral argument on November 1, 2021. We now conclude that the district court erred in granting the preliminary injunction. I. Applicable Legal Standards Plainti s who seek a preliminary injunction must show that (1) they will su er irreparable harm in the absence of an injunction, (2) traditional legal remedies are inadequate to remedy the harm, and (3) they have some likelihood of success on the merits. If those elements are shown, the court must then balance the harm the moving parties would su er if an injunction is denied against the harm the opposing parties would su er if one is granted, and the court must consider the public interest, which takes into account the e ects of a decision on non-parties. E.g., Courthouse News Service v. Brown, 908 F.3d 1063, 1068 (7th Cir. 2018). On the merits, the district court concluded that plainti s are likely to succeed on their free speech claim. The court viewed the exclusion of plainti s from the Program as an No. 21-2589 3 “attempt to suppress a dangerous idea” and a classi cation that was not rationally related to a legitimate government purpose. The court found that the other factors also supported an injunction. Receiving funds under the Program only at the end of the lawsuit would likely come too late for plainti s’ businesses to survive, and if it turned out that their constitutional rights were violated, they would have no viable damages remedy against the government or any o cial. The court saw little harm to the government from an injunction, which it thought would also serve the public interest by aiding struggling businesses, consistent with the aims of the broader COVID relief legislation. On appeal, we review the district court’s issuance of a preliminary injunction for an abuse of discretion, though an error of law can often produce an abuse of discretion. E.g., Cooter & Gell v. Hartmarx Corp., 496 U.S. 384, 405 (1990); Ty, Inc. v. Jones Group, Inc., 237 F.3d 891, 896 (7th Cir. 2001); Abbott Labs. v. Mead Johnson & Co., 971 F.2d 6, 13 (7th Cir. 1992). In this appeal, we disagree with the district court’s pivotal conclusions about the applicable constitutional law and on that basis nd an abuse of discretion. As we explain below, the SBA has shown a strong likelihood of success on the merits. The other injunction factors are essentially a wash, so the nal result is driven by the likelihood of success on the merits. II. The Paycheck Protection Program No one who has lived through the COVID-19 pandemic will forget its devastating consequences for lives and health or the massive economic disruption it has caused. Congress responded with several rounds of massive economic assistance, including the Paycheck Protection Program. Under the Program, many small businesses became eligible for low- 4 No. 21-2589 interest loans that would be guaranteed by the federal government and even eligible for forgiveness if the businesses used them, in essence, to keep employees on the payroll during the economic downturn. The rst round of legislation was drafted and enacted in just a few weeks. That legislation gave the SBA considerable discretion to decide eligibility for the Program. In doing so, the SBA borrowed from a regulation that identi es categories of businesses that are not eligible for all or nearly all SBA loan programs. See 13 C.F.R. § 120.110. The list includes non-pro t enterprises, banks and other nancial companies, life insurance companies, businesses located in foreign countries, pyramid sale distribution plans, casinos and other gambling businesses, loan packagers, political or lobbying businesses, and speculative businesses. Subsection (p) of that regulation excludes plainti s. It bars loans to businesses that: (1) Present live performances of a prurient sexual nature; or (2) Derive directly or indirectly more than de minimis gross revenue through the sale of products or services, or the presentation of any depictions or displays, of a prurient sexual nature…. 13 C.F.R. § 120.110(p). In the rst round of Paycheck Protection Program loans, the SBA made an exception for non-pro ts, which the statute expressly deemed eligible. See 85 Fed. Reg. 20811, 20812 (Apr. 15, 2020). In an earlier related case brought by plainti Camelot Banquet Rooms in the Eastern District of Wisconsin, the No. 21-2589 5 district court issued a preliminary injunction barring denial of eligibility for the Program based on the regulation. That decision relied on statutory, administrative-law, and constitutional grounds. Camelot Banquet Rooms, Inc. v. U.S. Small Business Admin., 458 F. Supp. 3d 1044 (E.D. Wis. 2020). We denied a stay of that injunction in a conclusory order, and the government soon dismissed the appeal. But see Pharaohs GC, Inc. v. U.S. Small Business Admin., 990 F.3d 217 (2d Cir. 2021) (af rming denial of injunction in similar rst-round case brought by adult-entertainment club); American Ass’n of Political Consultants v. U.S. Small Business Admin., 810 F. App’x 8, 9–10 (D.C. Cir. 2020) (a rming denial of injunctive relief in similar First Amendment challenge to rst-round exclusion of lobbying and political consulting businesses). The second round of the Paycheck Protection Program was drafted with more time, and it took a di erent approach to eligibility. Congress adopted statutory language to exclude several categories of businesses, including plainti s’ adultentertainment venues. It did so by incorporating into the statute the terms of 13 C.F.R. § 120.110, the regulation that the SBA had used on its own initiative for the rst round. 15 U.S.C. § 636(a)(37)(A)(iv)(III)(aa). 1 1 Congress made exceptions for two categories of businesses in the regulation, not-for-profit businesses and businesses engaged principally in teaching, instructing, counseling, or indoctrinating religion or religious beliefs. 15 U.S.C. § 636(a)(37)(A)(iv)(III)(aa). The new exception for religious businesses is easy to understand in light of Trinity Lutheran Church v. Comer, 137 S. Ct. 2012 (2017) (religious school could not be excluded from government program to assist school playground construction). The Supreme Court has shown no indication that it would extend the Free Exercise Clause reasoning of Trinity Lutheran to cases like this one. 6 No. 21-2589 Accordingly, in this second round, the earlier issues of statutory interpretation and administrative law have fallen away. Plainti s can prevail only if denying them a subsidized loan under the Program violates the Constitution. Plainti s are unlikely to be able to make that showing. III. Plainti s’ First Amendment Theory Plainti s’ core claim is under the Free Speech Clause of the First Amendment. They contend that excluding them from the Program penalizes them for engaging in expressive activity protected by the First Amendment. See generally Barnes v. Glen Theatre, Inc., 501 U.S. 560, 565–66 (1991) (plurality opinion) (treating nude dancing as “marginally” within outer perimeters of First Amendment protection; a rming local ban on completely nude dancing). The problem with plainti s’ First Amendment claim and the preliminary injunction here is that Congress is not trying to regulate or suppress plainti s’ adult entertainment. It has simply chosen not to subsidize it. Such selective, categorical exclusions from a government subsidy do not o end the First Amendment. The Supreme Court has repeatedly drawn a line between government regulation of speech, on one hand, and government subsidy of speech, on the other. Its decisions show that the government is not required to subsidize activity simply because the activity is protected by the First Amendment. E.g., Ysursa v. Pocatello Education Ass’n, 555 U.S. 353, 358–59 (2009) (“While in some contexts the government must accommodate expression, it is not required to assist others in funding the expression of particular ideas, including political ones;” state could choose not to carry out payroll deductions No. 21-2589 7 for political contributions to labor unions); Rust v. Sullivan, 500 U.S. 173, 193 (1991) (“The Government can, without violating the Constitution, selectively fund a program to encourage certain activities it believes to be in the public interest, without at the same time funding an alternative program which seeks to deal with the problem in another way. In so doing, the Government has not discriminated on the basis of viewpoint; it has merely chosen to fund one activity to the exclusion of the other.”); Regan v. Taxation With Representation, 461 U.S. 540, 549 (1983) (“[A] legislature’s decision not to subsidize the exercise of a fundamental right does not infringe the right….”); accord, e.g., Wisconsin Education Ass’n Council v. Walker, 705 F.3d 640, 646–47 (7th Cir. 2013). To avoid the controlling line of subsidy cases, plainti s focus on language in Regan suggesting that a selective subsidy program may violate the First Amendment if it is “aim[ed] at the suppression of dangerous ideas.” 461 U.S. at 548. To take an easy example of such viewpoint discrimination, even if Congress can choose to exclude political lobbyists entirely from the Program’s subsidies, it could not choose to subsidize Democratic lobbyists while excluding Republicans. Plainti s’ theory here is that Congress chose to exclude their businesses from the subsidy program because it deemed their “ideas” about sexuality to be dangerous. This theory fails to distinguish between government suppression of protected activity and denial of a subsidy. Plainti s’ theory seems to be that the denial of a subsidy is itself the act of suppression. That theory loses sight of the di erence between regulation and denial of a subsidy—the di erence at the heart of Regan, Rust, Ysursa, and the rest of the selectivesubsidy line of cases. The only sign we see here of a supposed 8 No. 21-2589 e ort to “suppress” is the choice not to subsidize. Whatever door Regan left open—and as far as we can tell, the Supreme Court has never struck down a denial of subsidy on this ground—it surely requires something more, like viewpoint discrimination, than denial of the subsidy itself. See Wisconsin Education Ass’n, 705 F.3d at 650–52, and id. at 664–70 (Hamilton, J., dissenting in relevant part) (majority and dissent debating evidence of viewpoint discrimination in state’s choice to subsidize payroll deductions for dues for some public employee unions but not others). IV. Rational-Relation Review Like any statutory classi cation, the statutory boundaries of the Paycheck Protection Program are subject to rational-relation review. See, e.g., Ysursa, 555 U.S. at 359, citing Regan, 461 U.S. at 546–51. The district court found here that the exclusion of plainti s’ adult-entertainment businesses failed the rational-relation test. The district court applied an erroneous and unduly rigorous form of judicial review, second-guessing legislative decisions and compromises on policy grounds, and concluding that the Program was both over- and under-inclusive in various respects. See Camelot Banquet Rooms, Inc., — F. Supp. 3d at —, 2021 WL 3680369, at *8–11. A government spending program, especially one responding to an economic emergency, is subject to the least rigorous form of judicial review. In enacting such legislation, Congress must respond quickly to an emergency and must hammer together a coalition of majority votes in both houses. The need for compromises and tradeo s is never greater. No. 21-2589 9 When pressed in this suit to justify the exclusion of plainti s from the Program’s subsidies, the government pointed to the “secondary e ects” of sex-oriented businesses that can be used to justify time, place, and manner regulations of such businesses. See, e.g., City of Erie v. Pap’s A.M., 529 U.S. 277 (2000) (plurality opinion); BBL, Inc. v. City of Angola, 809 F.3d 317 (7th Cir. 2015). Plainti s and the district court responded by criticizing Congress for not having made a record on the subject at the time the legislation was enacted. Any expectation that Congress would have taken the time to make such a record is unrealistic, to put it mildly. And any requirement that Congress make such a record is contrary to constitutional doctrine. The rational-relation test requires a challenger in litigation to exclude any possible rational grounds that the legislature might have deemed su cient for the statutory distinction. E.g., Heller v. Doe, 509 U.S. 312, 319– 20 (1993). It does not require the legislature to have made a contemporaneous record on the subject. Id. at 320–21, discussed in Wisconsin Education Ass’n, 705 F.3d at 653 (rational basis for limit on government subsidies need not be in the record “so long as it nds ‘some footing in the realities of the subject addressed by the legislation’”). Similarly, the view that the rationale for excluding plainti s is under-inclusive has little impact under the rational-relation test. All sorts of legislative classi cations, exclusions, and compromises pass muster even if they are over- or underinclusive. “[C]ourts are compelled under rational-basis review to accept a legislature’s generalizations even when there is an imperfect t between means and ends. A classi cation does not fail rational-basis review because it ‘is not made with mathematical nicety or because in practice it results in some 10 No. 21-2589 inequality,’” and “[t]he problems of government are practical ones and may justify, if they do not require, rough accommodations—illogical, it may be, and unscienti c.” Heller, 509 U.S. at 321, rst quoting Dandridge v. Williams, 397 U.S. 471, 485 (1970), and then quoting Metropolis Theatre Co. v. City of Chicago, 228 U.S. 61, 69–70 (1913). 2 Plainti s also suggest that the government’s defense based on secondary e ects of sex-oriented businesses actually serves to condemn plainti s’ exclusion from the Program. They say the arguments show the government’s hostility to their “dangerous ideas.” This argument turns the rational-relation test upside down. Those secondary e ects are well known and widely recognized in First Amendment litigation and doctrine. See generally, e.g., City of Erie, 529 U.S. at 289– 301 (plurality opinion). Actual evidence of them can serve to justify time, place, and manner restrictions on businesses that are subject to “intermediate” constitutional scrutiny. We do not see how relying on those e ects shows animus toward any idea. If those secondary e ects can support time, place, and manner regulations, they surely provide a rational basis for Congress to choose not to subsidize this group of businesses. Plainti s’ arguments also lose sight of the fact that they were not singled out for this exclusion, even among 2 Illustrating the sorts of inconsistencies that are tolerated under the rational-relation test, five of the original plaintiffs-appellees withdrew from this case because defendant SBA funded their separate requests for COVID relief under the separate Restaurant Revitalization Fund established under 15 U.S.C. § 9009c as part of the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021, which uses different eligibility standards. See Motion for Partial Dismissal of Certain Appellees, Dkt. No. 45 (Nov. 23, 2021). No. 21-2589 11 businesses engaged primarily in activity protected by the First Amendment. Congress also chose to exclude from the Program businesses “primarily engaged in political or lobbying activities.” 13 C.F.R. § 120.110(r). Such business activities are much closer to the core of the First Amendment than the dances at plainti s’ bars and clubs. Yet lobbyists and political consultants were also excluded. Congress chose not to require taxpayers to subsidize them. We do not see a plausible constitutional basis for requiring government subsidies of lobbyists, at least as long as there is no viewpoint discrimination. Accord, American Ass’n of Political Consultants, 810 F. App’x at 9– 10. Congress also excluded many other categories of businesses: banks, lenders, nance companies, and some pawn shops; life insurance companies; businesses located in foreign countries; pyramid sale distribution plans; businesses engaged in any illegal activity; private clubs; governmentowned businesses; loan packagers; businesses with an “Associate” who is in prison, on probation, on parole, or who has been indicted for a felony or crime of moral turpitude; and businesses that have previously defaulted on SBA or other federally assisted loans. See 15 U.S.C. § 636(a)(37)(A)(iv)(III)(aa), incorporating 13 C.F.R. § 120.110, with two exceptions. These exclusions are not di cult to understand in terms of policy and politics. They all help defuse potential criticisms of a generous emergency program that might be used to undermine political support for the Program and the overall legislation. Such tailoring of legislation to build and maintain political support is perfectly constitutional, at least in the 12 No. 21-2589 absence of viewpoint or invidious discrimination, of which there is no sign here. 3 V. Viewpoint Discrimination The district court was also persuaded to apply more stringent judicial review. The theory was that even if the exclusion of plainti s’ businesses from the Program was not “traditional viewpoint discrimination,” the exclusion’s focus on “prurience” created a free-speech problem. The exclusion, as the court saw the issue, depends on prurience, which the court saw as the expressive, “sexually arousing” “message” of the adult entertainment. Camelot Banquet Rooms, Inc., — F. Supp. 3d at — & n.7, 2021 WL 3680369, at *9–10 & n.7. The court viewed the exclusion as thus an e ort to use a subsidy exclusion to suppress a “dangerous idea,” which Regan suggested could violate the First Amendment. 461 U.S. at 548. Plainti s’ argument along these lines is creative but not consistent with the role that prurience plays in the larger sweep of First Amendment doctrine. The statutory exclusion from the Program of businesses with prurient live entertainment is better understood not as viewpoint discrimination but as a permissible classi cation based on subject matter. The Supreme Court made this point in R.A.V. v. City of St. Paul: When the basis for the content discrimination consists entirely of the very reason the entire 3 The Constitution does not prohibit legislation on the basis of morality. Consider, for example, the possibility that Congress might choose to exclude from this or other subsidy programs alcoholic beverage makers, casinos and other gambling businesses, weapons makers, and so on. Such line-drawing is left to the legislature, absent viewpoint or invidious discrimination. No. 21-2589 13 class of speech at issue is proscribable, no significant danger of idea or viewpoint discrimination exists. Such a reason, having been adjudged neutral enough to support exclusion of the entire class of speech from First Amendment protection, is also neutral enough to form the basis of distinction within the class. To illustrate: A State might choose to prohibit only that obscenity which is the most patently o ensive in its prurience—i.e., that which involves the most lascivious displays of sexual activity. But it may not prohibit, for example, only that obscenity which includes o ensive political messages. 505 U.S. 377, 388 (1992), citing Kucharek v. Hanaway, 902 F.2d 513, 517 (7th Cir. 1990). In e ect, the Court was telling us, it would be a category mistake to think that prurience or lasciviousness re ects a “viewpoint” that the government may not discriminate against. The terms instead identify a category or subject matter of expressive conduct that may be subject to some forms of government regulation. That’s the point we made in the Kucharek case cited in R.A.V. We said that a statute could prohibit obscene (prurient) material entirely (a subject matter) but could not “distort the marketplace of erotic discourse by suppressing only that obscenity which conveys a disfavored message.” 902 F.2d at 517. Accordingly, excluding the entire category or subject matter of prurient live performances from a government subsidy program does not amount to viewpoint discrimination and does not violate the Free Speech Clause. See Pharaohs GC, 990 F.3d at 231 (term “prurient” in SBA regulation describes 14 No. 21-2589 subject matter, not viewpoint, for exclusion from Program); PMG Int’l Division L.L.C. v. Rumsfeld, 303 F.3d 1163, 1171 (9th Cir. 2002) (treating “lascivious” materials as articulating a “viewpoint” would “risk eviscerating altogether the line between content and viewpoint”); General Media Communications, Inc. v. Cohen, 131 F.3d 273, 282 (2d Cir. 1997) (“[H]ow, for example, would one go about discussing and considering the political issues of the day from a lascivious viewpoint?”). VI. Unconstitutional Conditions Doctrine Plainti s also rely on a line of First Amendment and other constitutional decisions in which the Supreme Court has held that a government may not condition certain government bene ts upon a recipient’s agreement to refrain from exercising her constitutional rights. For instance, in Speiser v. Randall, the Supreme Court declared unconstitutional a condition on a property tax exemption that required owners to sign declarations stating that they did not “advocate the overthrow of the Government of the United States … by force or violence.” 357 U.S. 513, 515 (1958). As the Court explained: “To deny an exemption to claimants who engage in certain forms of speech is in e ect to penalize them for such speech.” Id. at 518. The condition was thus unconstitutional. See also, e.g., FCC v. League of Women Voters of California, 468 U.S. 364 (1984) (federal nancial assistance to non-commercial radio and television stations conditioned on stations refraining from any editorializing; condition violated First Amendment). Plainti s argue here that the exclusion of prurient businesses constitutes an unconstitutional condition on Program funding. As explained above, however, the Court has also said repeatedly that Congress is not required to “grant a No. 21-2589 15 bene t such as [a tax exemption] to a person who wishes to exercise a constitutional right.” Regan, 461 U.S. at 545. How does one tell the di erence between an unconstitutional condition and a permissible congressional choice about whom to include in a government spending or subsidy program? It can be di cult in close cases, but the Supreme Court provided guidance in Agency for International Development v. Alliance for Open Society International, Inc., 570 U.S. 205 (2013), where the Court addressed grants to non-governmental organizations to combat HIV/AIDS around the world. Congress had prohibited using the money to promote legalization of prostitution or human tra cking. That condition was not even challenged in the case and posed no First Amendment problem. But the statute also required grant recipients to adopt a policy “explicitly opposing prostitution and sex traf cking.” Id. at 210, quoting 22 U.S.C. § 7631(f). The Court struck down that policy requirement. The Court explained the familiar scope of the government’s spending power: “As a general matter, if a party objects to a condition on the receipt of federal funding, its recourse is to decline the funds.” 570 U.S. at 214. “At the same time, however, we have held that the Government ‘may not deny a bene t to a person on a basis that infringes his constitutionally protected … freedom of speech even if he has no entitlement to that bene t.’” Id. (omission in original), quoting Rumsfeld v. Forum for Academic and Institutional Rights, Inc., 547 U.S. 47, 59 (2006). To distinguish between permissible limits on spending programs and unconstitutional conditions, the Court clari ed that “the relevant distinction … is between conditions that de ne the limits of the government spending program—those that specify the activities Congress wants to 16 No. 21-2589 subsidize—and conditions that seek to leverage funding to regulate speech outside the contours of the program itself.” Id. at 214–15. The Court acknowledged that this line is “hardly clear” and should not turn the First Amendment into “a simple semantic exercise,” id. at 215 (citation omitted), but after discussing Regan, along with League of Women Voters, 468 U.S. at 399–401, and Rust, 500 U.S. at 193, 196, the Court found that the condition requiring recipients to adopt speci c policy views about prostitution and sex tra cking was not permissible because it went “outside the scope of the federally funded program.” 570 U.S. at 218, quoting Rust, 500 U.S. at 197. The condition on the activities the government would fund, however, so as not to subsidize advocacy of prostitution or human tra cking, was not even challenged in the case, and we have no doubt it was permissible under the First Amendment. The Paycheck Protection Program limits at issue in this case t comfortably on the permissible Regan, Rust, and Ysursa side of the line as conditions that limit the scope of the subsidy/loan program. Just as Congress was not trying to require lobbyists to stop lobbying as a condition of the Program, it was not trying to pressure plainti s to change their adult entertainment. Congress was instead simply choosing to exclude certain categories of businesses from the program. In the words of Regan, Congress “has not infringed any First Amendment rights or regulated any First Amendment activity” by excluding prurient businesses from receiving Program funding. See 461 U.S. at 546. We thus agree with the Second and District of Columbia Circuits that the Program’s exclusions are not designed to regulate speech. See Pharaohs, 990 No. 21-2589 17 F.3d at 229–30 (for Program’s rst round of loans, the prurience exclusion did not “improperly leverage[ ] the subsidy to regulate speech”); American Ass’n of Political Consultants, 810 F. App’x at *9 (Program’s lobbying exclusion did not “seek to leverage funding to regulate speech outside the contours of the [Program] itself,” quoting Alliance for Open Society, 570 U.S. at 214–15). VII. Other Factors for Injunctive Relief Finally, the other factors for an injunction either favor the government or are neutral. Each side faces a threat of irreparable harm, depending on whether an injunction is issued. If the government were erroneously required to guarantee subsidized loans to plainti s, there is no reason to expect that it could recover such funds. Because the government is likely to prevail on the merits, denying plainti s an injunction serves the public interest by implementing the policy chosen by Congress. On the other hand, if the government were unlikely to prevail on the merits, an injunction would serve the public interest by enforcing constitutional rights and allowing plainti s to take advantage of a generous program of emergency economic relief. If we are mistaken in denying injunctive relief to plainti s, they risk going out of business, and governmental immunity would prevent any monetary recovery from the government or its o cials. That risk is mitigated somewhat by the government’s assurances that it has set funds aside for plainti s during the course of this litigation, but we recognize that delay in providing those funds could prevent plainti s from bene ting at all. On balance, however, the government’s 18 No. 21-2589 strong likelihood of success on the merits weighs decisively against a preliminary injunction. For these reasons, the district court’s preliminary injunction is VACATED and the case is REMANDED for further proceedings.

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