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Drake student leaders claim they rejected TPUSA for its allegedly āracistā and ātransphobicā views, not for being conservative. Thatās still impermissible.
After Drake Universityās student senate denied recognition to a chapter of Turning Point USA for the third time ā citing disagreement with certain group membersā views ā FIREwrote to Drake explaining that student groups may not be denied recognition based solely on viewpoint. Although Drake did not respond to ¹ū¶³“«Ć½app¹Ł·½ās letter, its student senators to the media that the senate did not deny TPUSA recognition ābased on politics,ā but rather due to the perceived āracist and transphobic and homophobicā viewpoints of its student leaders.
As FIREpreviously reported, Drakeās student senate has denied TPUSA recognition three times since 2016. Student senators the group recognition most recently in March, citing what senators called the groupās āharmfulā views and explaining that the group makes some students āuncomfortable.ā
Although Drake is a private institution not bound by the First Amendment, it makes strong affirmative promises that students enjoy expressive rights. In fact, the university that it ācarefully refrains from restricting the exchange of ideas or regulating the content of speechā and ācherish[es] and defend[s] freedom of speech to the full extent protected by the First Amendment.ā
FIRE and faculty should be aware that the universityās promises are worth no more than words on paper.
Given these commitments, Drake cannot punish students or deny them resources based on their expression or viewpoints. And as Drake itself lacks the authority to deprive students of opportunities based on their views, it cannot grant such authority to its student senate. To do so would be blatant viewpoint discrimination in violation of the universityās free expression promises.
Unfortunately, thatās precisely whatās happening here.
Although student senators claim they did not deny recognition based on studentsā conservative views, a student senator local TV station KCCI that the senate denied recognition based on comments by TPUSAās prospective president that the senator labeled āracist and transphobic and homophobic.ā Given this statement, the student senate denied recognition to TPUSA based on either (1) studentsā protected expression or (2) viewpoints held by members of the group. Whichever is the case, that is unacceptable at a university which promises students expressive rights.
Although Drake did not respond to ¹ū¶³“«Ć½app¹Ł·½, the university provided a statement to KCCI that its student senate āhas full authority to approve or deny student organizations.ā If that means the university endorses the student senateās viewpoint-based decision-making, that cannot be reconciled with its strong promises that it ācherish[es] and defend[s] freedom of speech to the full extent protected by the First Amendment.ā If Drake strives to comply with First Amendment standards, it must guarantee its students full expressive and associational rights.
The university cannot stand on the sidelines while its students deprive other students of resources based on their views.
As the U.S. Supreme Court held in Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System v. Southworth, under the First Amendment, universities must grant expressive student organizations recognition and access to student fees on a viewpoint-neutral basis. By denying TPUSA recognition, Drake is depriving the group of resources ā including the ability to reserve event space on campus, apply for funding, and open financial accounts on campus ā based on the speech and viewpoints of the organizationās prospective members or leaders.
If Drake really does grant expressive rights commensurate with the First Amendment, it may not allow its student senate to deny recognition based on viewpoint ā regardless of whether student senators or other students find an organizationās views offensive or repugnant.
Drake must take action to end this cycle. The university cannot stand on the sidelines while its students deprive other students of resources based on their views, no matter how subjectively offensive those views may be to some members of the campus community. Otherwise, students and faculty should be aware that the universityās promises are worth no more than words on paper.
FIRE defends the rights of students and faculty members ā no matter their views ā at public and private universities and colleges in the United States. If you are a student or a faculty member facing investigation or punishment for your speech, submit your case to FIREtoday. If youāre faculty member at a public college or university, call the Faculty Legal Defense Fund 24-hour hotline at 254-500-FLDF (3533).
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