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Eckerd College student government says College Republicans must stop expressing ā€˜problemā€™ views on social media if they want recognition

Eckerd College Republicans logo

When Eckerd College student Tony Salvatori started an Instagram account, he aimed to be the outspoken conservative voice at the predominantly liberal school. Thatā€™s also why he applied to form a College Republicans club on campus ā€” to create a group where those with conservative viewpoints could engage with each other. The combination of these two activities, however, led to more than Salvatori bargained for.

After Salvatori applied for recognition, the Eckerd College Organization of ¹ū¶³“«Ć½app¹Ł·½, the collegeā€™s student government, refused to recognize the group because of posts on Salvatoriā€™s Instagram account, , that some deemed offensive. ECOS recognizes a College Democrats chapter on campus.

The posts to which students objected included Salvatoriā€™s that, while the events of Jan. 6, 2021 ā€œ[werenā€™t] necessarily the right thing to do,ā€ he ā€œsupport[s] the people going straight to the people they had an issue with instead of burning down the local Target.ā€ Salvatori also that heā€™s ā€œPro-Lifeā€ and ā€œCovid vaccines have killed more people in one year than every other vaccine in the past 30 years COMBINED.ā€ According to Salvatori, the that drew the most ire referred to transgenderism as ā€œGender Dysphoriaā€ and ā€œa mental illness.ā€

In denying recognition to the College Republicans based on Salvatoriā€™s posts, the college is allowing students to ā€œobstruct views they loathe.ā€

At a meeting with ECOS, the student government told Salvatori it would not recognize his proposed club until he stepped down as president and removed ā€œecā€ from the @ecconservatives account name. Additionally, ECOSā€™s then-President Ava McLeod The Current student newspaper that ECOS denied the College Republicans recognition because of Salvatoriā€™s social media posts. 

FIRE wrote EC today to explain that the student government may not discriminate against dissenting viewpoints in recognizing student organizations.

EC students the ā€œrights of free inquiry and free expression . . . co-extensive with the rights guaranteed by the First Amendment to the US Constitution.ā€ Given this strong promise, EC may not grant its student government ā€” a body whose authority flows from the university ā€” the ability to decide which opinions are right and wrong on campus.

As we told Eckerd today:

By allowing ECOS to deny recognition based on protected expression, EC violated the College Republicansā€™ expressive and associational rights and allowed ECOSā€™s members to ā€œinterfere with the freedom of others to express views they reject or even loathe,ā€ which is prohibited by college policy.  Additionally, ECOS may not infringe on individual studentsā€™ expressive rights by requiring them to change the names of their personal Instagram accounts as a condition to associate, as ECOS did by trying to require Salvatori to remove ā€œecā€ from his Instagram accountā€™s name.

The possibility that members of the College Republicans may express viewpoints with which others disagree, even vehemently so, is not a valid reason to prevent recognition; instead, it is precisely what EC contemplates when it promises students freedom of expression. As such, disagreement with a student organizationā€™s expression or viewpoint is not a legitimate basis for denying it recognition.

EC policy also that ā€œ[a]lthough faculty, students and staff are free to criticize, contest and condemn the views expressed on campus, they may not obstruct, disrupt, or otherwise interfere with the freedom of others to express views they reject or even loathe.ā€ 

In denying recognition to the College Republicans based on Salvatoriā€™s posts, the college is allowing students to ā€œobstruct views they loathe.ā€ This cannot stand. FIREwithin ECOS and the administration itself may object, even strongly, to Salvatoriā€™s views, but they may not censor them. 

The possibility that members of the College Republicans may express viewpoints with which others disagree, even vehemently so, is not a valid reason to prevent recognition.

FIRE saw a similar situation at Drake University, where the student senate denied recognition to a campus chapter of Turning Point USA because some students called the groupā€™s views ā€œharmful.ā€ Like EC, Drake promises students free expression commensurate with the First Amendment. Student senators at both Drake and EC have abused the power which the colleges have provided them to shut down views with which they donā€™t agree.

We asked EC to respond to us by May 26, confirming that it will recognize the College Republicans and reaffirm the collegeā€™s promises of free expression. 

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