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DePaul outside speaker review policy predictably bad on free speech

Student Center on the Lincoln Park Campus of DePaul University CREDIT Kris Gallagher Wikipedia.jpeg

(Kris Gallagher / Wikipedia.org)

The at Chicago鈥檚 DePaul University vests a single DePaul administrator with broad powers to reject any campus speaker based on the content of his or her speech. The policy runs afoul of DePaul makes to its students and faculty.

Concerns over DePaul鈥檚 again came to light last month, when the university rejected a request by the DePaul chapter of Turning Point USA to host an event featuring TPUSA founder Charlie Kirk and the group鈥檚 communications director Candace Owens on campus on Oct. 16.

DePaul that the event was cancelled because TPUSA failed to follow its established marketing and ticketing guidelines for student events. It鈥檚 true that DePaul鈥檚 policy requires that student organizations 鈥渕ay not begin publicizing鈥 their intent 鈥渢o bring a particular speaker to campus until a final decision has been made鈥 by the Speaker Review Committee, and organizations are 鈥渟trongly encouraged to request that the speaker also not publicize the potential invitation.鈥 It鈥檚 also true that the Kirk and Owens appearance was publicized before a decision had been made. DePaul arguably could have rested its decision not to move forward on that basis and left it at that.

Instead, DePaul cited the speakers鈥 prior expression as a contributing factor in its decision to bar the event.

鈥淎 major contributing factor in the request denial was the marketing and ticketing of a proposed event prior to approval,鈥 Associate Vice President for Student Affairs Rico Tyler wrote in a Sept. 17 denial letter to DePaul鈥檚 TPUSA chapter. But 鈥渃oncerns regarding violent language at the sponsoring organizations [sic] national convention as well as identified populations being singled out in a demeaning fashion were discussed鈥 and counted among the 鈥渃onsiderations鈥 leading to the denial.

According to the , 鈥淸s]peakers that encourage hatred or physical violence are not aligned with DePaul鈥檚 mission.鈥

The university has not disclosed the specific 鈥渧iolent language鈥 that was considered and ruled sufficient to disqualify students from inviting Kirk and Owens.

In a series of tweets, Owens contested DePaul鈥檚 characterization of her words as violent.

鈥淏LACK PEOPLE DO NOT HAVE TO BE DEMOCRATS is not 鈥榲iolent language鈥,鈥 Owens (who is herself a black conservative) wrote. 鈥淒epaul is enslaving black minds.鈥

Owens鈥 event is now slated to happen on the original date, but at an off-campus location.

DePaul cannot discriminate based on viewpoint while claiming mantle of 鈥渇ree speech鈥

DePaul is a private institution. It is not bound by the First Amendment. But it should keep the promises that it makes, including its promises that students enjoy freedom of expression at DePaul.

For example, DePaul鈥檚 recently updated 鈥溾 maintain that 鈥渇ree and open expression [is] essential to intellectual inquiry鈥; 鈥渢hat, as a university, we have a responsibility to provide a setting in which a broad and diverse range of ideas can be exchanged civilly and respectfully鈥; and that 鈥渕embers of the DePaul community [have the right] to engage in speech and expression consistent with the values of academic freedom, free inquiry, and civil discourse.鈥

鈥淸I]ndividuals,鈥 the policy continues, 鈥淸may] express their viewpoints, even at the risk of controversy.鈥

Yet DePaul鈥檚 Speaker Review Policy undermines these promises by allowing the university to unilaterally disallow campus speakers whose views it finds distasteful.

That policy institutes a speaker review board whose purpose is to, among other things, decide which speakers are appropriate and which are not, while still giving a DePaul administrator final discretion to ultimately reject a student-sponsored speaker if he or she determines the speaker鈥檚 speech is subjectively 鈥渉armful鈥 or 鈥渄emeaning.鈥

This presents little threat to speakers whose views are relatively uncontroversial, but permits DePaul unfettered discretion to bar any speaker whose past statements have been in any way controversial.

And lest you think DePaul discriminates against only conservative-leaning speech, think again: The university has a long history of burdening speakers whose views extend far across the political spectrum, including and student advocates for drug reform.

The TPUSA incident demonstrates how also goes to great lengths to appear to provide an impartial process, when in reality, it simply gives DePaul additional opportunities to ensure controversial speakers stay off campus.

The speaker review committee consists of two faculty members, two staff members, and three students, and is tasked with making recommendations on speakers to the administration. Yet those recommendations are non-binding; instead, a DePaul administrator retains unfettered authority to decide which speakers are not aligned with 鈥淒ePaul鈥檚 mission鈥 or 鈥渆ncourage hatred.鈥

This strongly suggests DePaul鈥檚 policy is intended to be a means of allowing the administration to stop speakers under the guise of subjecting them to a majority vote, and giving them an override in case that stopgap fails.

DePaul鈥檚 dismal free speech record

Since DePaul promises students the right to free speech, students shouldn鈥檛 have to appeal a viewpoint-discriminatory decision about a speaker they want to invite. DePaul should be upholding its commitment to freedom of expression, not panels鈥 decisions to the contrary. The university should also be open about its speech-related processes.

DePaul has a downright dismal record of providing the free speech rights it promises students 鈥 so much so that when FIREnamed its 2018 Worst Colleges for Free Speech earlier this year, DePaul received 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 first-ever 鈥淟ifetime Censorship Award鈥 for having either or been considered for our Worst Colleges so frequently we felt it warranted a special (dis)honor.

With DePaul鈥檚 consistent disregard for the free speech rights of its students, including policies like the one implicated in this latest campus speaker debacle, the university appears poised to live down to its ignominious title for a long time to come.

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