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From Florida to Maine, school boards and city councils silence critics in the name of ādecorumā
FIRE has observed a troubling trend sweeping the nation in recent years, particularly since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic: School boards and city councils are increasingly shutting down criticism from their constituents at public hearings, often interrupting them, forcing them off the podium, and even having them arrested. When elected officials shut down speech, they often cite so-called ādecorumā policies that vaguely ban āabusive,ā āobscene,ā or āpersonally directedā comments during public comment periods.
Thatās exactly what the Brevard County School Board in Florida did when various members of a local chapter of Moms for Liberty, a parental advocacy group, tried to criticize school policies and decisions. The school board repeatedly interrupted Moms for Liberty members, ordered them to stop speaking on entire topics, and even removed them from the podium for criticizing the board. The board cited decorum policies to prevent the groupās members from speaking on topics ranging from COVID-19 masking policies to school library books to the boardās response to a case of indecent exposure on one of its campuses.
The group sued to block the school board from continuing to violate its membersā First Amendment rights, but the trial court didnāt agree and dismissed the case. Moms for Liberty has now appealed to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit.
FIRE and the Manhattan Institute filed an amicus curiae ā āfriend of the courtā ā brief in support of Moms for Liberty, asking the Eleventh Circuit to recognize that the First Amendment protects the right to criticize government officials and that ādecorumā policies are no exception to this ironclad rule.
As described in ¹ó±õøé·”ās brief, the definition of āabusiveā was entirely up to the school boardās discretion, and one board member testified that the term was so broad that she didnāt āknow that there even is an exhaustive definition of abusive.ā
FIRE recognizes that across the country for removing books from school libraries. To be clear, FIREopposes efforts to ban books from school libraries because of hostility to certain views or ideas. We agree with Supreme Court Justice Harry Blackmunās concurring opinion in 1982ās Board of Education, Island Trees Union Free School District No. 26 v. Pico: In exercising control over school libraries, school authorities āmay not remove books for the purpose of restricting access to the political ideas or social perspectives discussed in them, when that action is motivated simply by the officialsā disapproval of the ideas involved.ā FIRElikewise opposes efforts to shut down public libraries that refuse to ban books, and we have weighed in against laws, most recently in Virginia, that enable book banning. As FIRELegal Director Will Creeley has written: āBook bans are antithetical to the First Amendment and the pluralist values it protects.ā
But FIREalso does not support shutting down, interrupting, or forcibly removing members of the public from the podium at public school board meetings for criticizing the school board, regardless of the views at issue. If school board officials and city council members canāt take the heat, they should get out of the kitchen. The First Amendment demands no less.
The problem: Elected officials wield vague unconstitutional policies to suppress criticism.
¹ó±õøé·”ās amicus brief documents multiple examples of school boards, city councils, and other government assemblies silencing their constituents under vague and overbroad decorum policies. As these incidents show, appeals to decorum are often smokescreens for shutting down unwanted criticism.
FIRE sues Michigan mayor who abused power, shouted down constituents at city council meeting
Press Release
FIREfiled a lawsuit against the mayor of Eastpointe, Michigan, for censoring residents during public comment in city council meetings.
For a stunning example of a government official abusing her power to stifle criticism in the name of decorum, look no further than ¹ó±õøé·”ās recent lawsuit against the mayor of Eastpointe, Michigan. At city council meetings, Mayor Monique Owens repeatedly shouted down and interrupted constituents who attempted to comment on her public dispute with another council member. The mayor cited a policy banning public commenters from directing speech at a council member, yet had no objection to a supporter calling her ābeautifulā and āwonderful.ā
In another case last year, a Maine parent successfully a school district for violating the First Amendment by banning him from school board meetings for āobscenityā after he complained about a school library book he said depicted āhardcore anal sex.ā The same parent is now the district again, challenging a board policy that prohibits ācomplaintsā about school employees. His new lawsuit alleges the school board twice had police remove him from board meetings for criticizing board members by name.
All around the country, elected officials are sanitizing public comment periods in defiance of the First Amendment:
- In Louisiana, a security guard a teacher from a school board meeting, arrested her, and booked her in jail overnight after she objected to the school superintendent receiving a raise.
- A Minnesota school board chair a member of the public for framing her critical comments as questions.
- In Newton, Iowa, city officials a resident for repeatedly using public comment at a city council meeting to criticize a police traffic stop (he was ultimately acquitted).
- The West Virginia House Judiciary Committee of a public commenter who, while opposing a bill that would allow oil and gas drilling on private land without the ownerās consent, named committee members who had received financial contributions from energy companies.
āIf you donāt have anything nice to say, donāt say anything at allā might be a good rule for a kindergarten classroom, but the First Amendment requires government officials to endure the āunpleasantly sharp attacksā that sometimes arise from our democracyās āuninhibited, robust, and wide-openā debate on public issues.
The solution: Courts need to remind elected officials that viewpoint-discriminatory, unreasonable, vague, and overbroad decorum policies violate the First Amendment.
The above examples of suppressing speech are unconstitutional. As ¹ó±õøé·”ās brief to the Eleventh Circuit explains, the Brevard County School Boardās policies against āabusive,ā āobscene,ā and āpersonally directedā comments violate the First Amendment in several different ways, all of which compel the court to rule in favor of Moms for Liberty.
First, the school boardās nebulous ban on āabusiveā speech discriminates based on viewpoint. The Supreme Court has ruled that the government may not bar speech it considers disparaging, immoral, or scandalous because doing so ādistinguishes between two opposed sets of ideas: those aligned with conventional moral standards and those hostile to them; those inducing societal nods of approval and those provoking offense and condemnation.ā
It is never āreasonableā to bar criticism of controversial board actions at board meetings, even if that criticism necessarily involves vulgar or profane speech.
The school board made these exact types of subjective social norm-based distinctions to suppress āabusiveā criticism from Moms for Liberty members. For example, one Moms for Liberty member was cited for using the word āevil.ā As described in ¹ó±õøé·”ās brief, the definition of āabusiveā was entirely up to the school boardās discretion, and one board member testified that the term was so broad that she didnāt āknow that there even is an exhaustive definition of abusive.ā
Second, the school boardās blanket ban on āobsceneā speech is unreasonable because it impedes commentersā ability to speak about relevant issues ā defeating the entire purpose of soliciting public comments. As ¹ó±õøé·”ās brief explains:
Generally speaking, obscenity, properly defined, is one of a very few categories of speech that may be banned under the First Amendment. But unprotected obscenity is significantly narrower than everyday profanity, and the formerās exacting legal definition does not prohibit the use of ācurse wordsā in public spaces, even in courthouses.
The school board ignored this important distinction and repeatedly cited Moms for Liberty members for āobsceneā speech to suppress criticism of school board policies. For example, the board cited one Moms for Liberty member for using āuncleanā language when reading from a school library book ā even though her very complaint was that the bookās language was too inappropriate for school children. Another parent was cited for saying āpenisā to describe and complain about a case of indecent exposure on campus.
It is never āreasonableā to bar criticism of controversial board actions at board meetings, even if that criticism necessarily involves vulgar or profane speech.
Public comment periods donāt exist for the public to kiss leadersā rings.
Third, the Brevard County School Boardās ban on āpersonally directedā comments is unconstitutional. The board unevenly applied it in a manner that discriminated against unpopular viewpoints: Public commenters were allowed to direct comments at specific board members on uncontroversial topics like theater rehearsal, but Moms for Liberty members were banned from making āpersonally directedā complaints about masking policies.
The policy is also so vague that it does not clearly define a āpersonally directedā comment. Board members cited it to ban comments that did not name any specific person, such as a comment about a hypothetical āLGBTQ studentā or general criticism of Democrats in the audience.
Under the Constitution, free speech trumps ādecorumā
In short, the Brevard County School Board repeatedly cited unconstitutional decorum policies to shut down Moms for Libertyās criticism, all because it didnāt like what Moms for Liberty members said or how they said it. But the First Amendment prohibits that kind of politically motivated speech suppression, especially at public hearings.
Public comment periods donāt exist for the public to kiss leadersā rings. Ideally, they offer the public an opportunity to share candid and potentially useful feedback directly with their elected officials. Thatās how democracy works.
FIRE urges the Eleventh Circuit to rule in favor of Moms for Liberty and confirm that viewpoint-discriminatory, unreasonable, vague, and overbroad speech restrictions at public hearings violate the First Amendment.
You can read more about the case, and ¹ó±õøé·”ās brief, here.
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