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Free speech advocates converge to support ¹ū¶³“«Ć½app¹Ł·½ā€™s ā€˜Let's Go Brandonā€™ federal court appeal

¹ū¶³“«Ć½app¹Ł·½, with broad ā€˜friend of the courtā€™ support, appeals ruling on teenagersā€™ First Amendment right to wear ā€˜Letā€™s Go Brandonā€™ apparel to school
Let's Go Brandon sweatshirt

FIRE, supported by a wave of prominent organizations and scholars as ā€œfriends of the court,ā€ has appealed a district courtā€™s ruling that limited the rights of students to attend middle and high school wearing clothes bearing the ā€œLetā€™s Go Brandonā€ political slogan. FIREis asking a federal appeals court to strike down the decision below and uphold freedom of expression for public school students, and a broad spectrum of free speech advocates and language experts are backing us up.

So what happened? In April 2023, FIRE sued a west Michigan school district and two administrators for preventing two students from wearing ā€œLetā€™s Go Brandonā€ sweatshirts. The  slogan originated during an October 2021 NASCAR race. After the race, won by Brandon Brown, members of the crowd chanted ā€œFuck Joe Bidenā€ during Brownā€™s post-race interview. A commentator remarked that the fans were shouting ā€œLetā€™s Go Brandon!ā€ 

WATCH VIDEO: NASCAR fans chant "Fuck Joe Biden" after the race.

Since then, the presidential campaign of Donald Trump and Republican members of Congress have used the phrase widely, including during Congressional floor speeches, to show their displeasure with the Biden administration. The ā€œLetā€™s Go Brandonā€ slogan airs uncensored on broadcast television, national cable news, and broadcast radio for all to hear. In the case on appeal, ¹ū¶³“«Ć½app¹Ł·½ā€™s clients wore their ā€œLetā€™s Go Brandonā€ sweatshirts to school to express their disapproval of Biden and his administration. 

During the lawsuit, the school acknowledged the students did not cause any disruption with their apparel. Yet this past August, the District Court for the Western District of Michigan upheld the school districtā€™s censorship of ā€œLetā€™s Go Brandonā€ apparel, holding ā€œLetā€™s Go Brandonā€ is legally indistinguishable from ā€œFuck Joe Bidenā€ and therefore constitutes ā€œprofanity.ā€ 

As ¹ū¶³“«Ć½app¹Ł·½ā€™s appeal argues, thatā€™s not how speech works. ā€œHeckā€ is not the same as ā€œhell,ā€ ā€œdarnā€ is not the same as ā€œdamn,ā€ and ā€œLetā€™s Go Brandonā€ is not the same as ā€œFuck Joe Biden.ā€ The government may not censor public school studentsā€™ political expression absent substantial disruption. Nor may school districts bypass this First Amendment protection by dubbing disfavored political speech ā€œprofane.ā€ 

This case will play a critical role in protecting the rights of other minor students to engage in non-disruptive political expression as guaranteed under the First Amendment.

Last week, 18 individuals and organizations, including some of the worldā€™s foremost linguistic experts, joined together to file eight amicus curiae, or ā€œfriend of the courtā€ briefs in support of minorsā€™ free speech rights. These briefs urge the Sixth Circuit to recognize what has long been understood outside the courtroom ā€” sanitized expression is, by design, distinguishable from the profane language it replaces: 

Linguistic Scholars: Dr. Melissa Mohr, Dr. Rebecca Roache, Professor Timothy Jay, Professor John H. McWhorter, and Professor Steven Pinker are internationally recognized linguistic scholars whose works focus on the history, psychology, and sociology of swearing. Each has written extensively on how language works and the role it continues to play in society. Together, they submitted a brief through , helpfully delineating the different types of ā€œsanitized expression,ā€ including euphemisms like ā€œLetā€™s Go Brandon,ā€ and describing their ubiquity and importance in political discourse. As they state at the beginning of their brief: ā€œThis case is not about swearing; it is about not swearing.ā€

First Amendment Scholars: Dean Erwin Chemerinsky, Professor Clay Calvert, Professor Roy Gutterman, Professor Mary-Rose Papandrea, and Professor Joseph A. Tomain submitted an amicus brief through  and attorney Michael Grygiel. Drawing on decades of study, the scholars methodically apply seminal First Amendment decisions to this particular case. Their brief argues: ā€œthe lower court failed to apply Tinkerā€™s ā€˜substantial disruptionā€™ test, as required when schools seek to prohibit student expression within the school environment that communicates a political message,ā€ and thus ā€œdeparted from longstanding public student constitutional free speech principles.ā€

Liberty Justice Center: The  asserts the district courtā€™s decision represents an unprecedented expansion of ā€œprofanityā€ and is part of a nationwide increase in political censorship. The brief describes how ā€œcensorship of entirely mainstream political discourse has become all too common around the countryā€ and school authorities increasingly seek to restrict free expression. The LJC argues that the district courtā€™s opinion exacerbates this growing problem, by authorizing schools to treat ā€œevery euphemism . . . as the equivalent of its reference.ā€

Dhillon Law Group, Young Americaā€™s Foundation, and Hamilton Lincoln Law Institute: These organizations  asserting the lower courtā€™s failed to properly apply Tinker and its progeny to the studentsā€™ ā€œLetā€™s Go Brandonā€ sweatshirts, which likewise represented political, non-profane student speech. Through careful analysis of First Amendment doctrine, their brief explains that the ā€œdistrict court erred in disregarding the political nature of appellantsā€™ ā€˜Letā€™s Go Brandonā€™ apparelā€ and undervaluing the importance of First Amendment protections in K-12 public schools.

National Coalition Against Censorship: The National Coalition Against Censorship submitted an amicus brief through  to challenge the district courtā€™s categorization of ā€œLetā€™s Go Brandonā€ as unprotected ā€œprofaneā€ expression. The brief argues that the ā€œdistrict courtā€™s analysis would create a new, ill-defined category of ā€˜euphemisticā€™ profanity,ā€ and ā€œgive school officials wide latitude to silence viewpoints they find objectionable, a result at odds with existing First Amendment doctrine.ā€ The brief asserts that the lower courtā€™s decision ā€œrepresents a serious departure from our nationā€™s historical commitment to protecting political speechā€ and urges the Sixth Circuit to reverse. 

Manhattan Institute: The  emphasizes the critical importance of preserving free speech rights in K-12 public schools, where students develop the skills necessary to productively engage in democratic society. The brief describes case law reflecting the importance of these freedoms in primary and secondary schools ā€” and argues the district courtā€™s opinion fails to ā€œaccurately reflect this understanding.ā€

Parents Defending Education: Parents Defending Education  through  arguing that the district courtā€™s decision cannot be reconciled with First Amendment principles. The brief emphasizes how the school codes at issue in this case are part of a growing and concerning ā€œtrend of schools adopting speech codes prohibiting controversial speech.ā€ And the brief asserts each of the cases relied on by the lower court are distinguishable.

Buckeye Institute: The  contends that under established First Amendment doctrine, ā€œ[r]egulation of speech under the First Amendment should constitute a rare exception.ā€ Yet, they argue, the Michigan school district, motivated by desire to censor what it deems undesirable speech, disregarded that doctrine in order to censor non-disruptive political speech ā€œthat does not fall within one of the Supreme Courtā€™s approved exceptionsā€ to the First Amendmentā€™s protection. 

Our clients and their counsel are grateful for the support of this impressive and diverse amicus coalition. This case will play a critical role in protecting the rights of other minor students to engage in non-disruptive political expression as guaranteed under the First Amendment.

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