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RED FLAG: Franklin & Marshall students wave their speech rights goodbye
Even a small flag can unfurl a world of meaning. Just ask immigrants being sworn in as U.S. citizens or the students currently waving Israeli and Palestinian flags on campuses across the country.
But in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, Franklin & Marshall College wants students to put away their flags 鈥 or else. In its new , the college warns community members that 鈥淔lags promoting a political candidate or party are not allowed anywhere on campus.鈥
What could students expect once a policy like this is enforced? FIREcould get in trouble for the serious offense of waving a . The phrase 鈥淢ake America Great Again鈥 in is similarly banned. Thanks to the policy鈥檚 broad language, even flags bearing vague political messages aren鈥檛 safe from administrators (or ). A plain red flag could various left-of-center causes, while flipping the U.S. flag could be seen as a nod to former President Donald Trump. And because the policy as 鈥渃loth or a similar material attachable by one edge to a pole or rope,鈥 anything from waving around a miniature flag to temporarily draping a flag on a chair or table is a potentially punishable offense.
No matter how small or potentially innocuous, these displays aren鈥檛 acceptable at Franklin & Marshall thanks to this new policy.
Who gets to wave the American flag?
This ridiculously restrictive policy extends far beyond politics and parties. According to another provision, 鈥淔lags representing the home country of currently enrolled students may be displayed in the Steinman Center and during College ceremonies. Other flags may be displayed in Steinman with the approval of the Director of Student Engagement.鈥
This strange stipulation forbids, hypothetically, foreign nationals from spontaneously displaying the U.S. flag in a building as Franklin & Marshall鈥檚 鈥渓iving room鈥 because the U.S. is not their home country. It鈥檚 unclear what 鈥渉ome country鈥 even means, and whether a non-citizen student who has lived in the U.S. for half their life is permitted by the policy to call the U.S. home. And if you are from a place whose flag incorporates the symbols of a political party, , you may be out of luck altogether.
Franklin & Marshall has no excuse for this blatant disregard of free speech principles. The school may be private and not bound by the First Amendment, but it promises freedom of expression to its students. In its 鈥,鈥 the college claims it 鈥渆ncourages an atmosphere that supports civil discourse.鈥 The policy goes on to state, 鈥淭he right of free expression at F&M includes the opportunity to engage in peaceful dissent, protests in peaceable assembly and orderly demonstrations.鈥
Apparently, this right to dissent, demonstrate, and engage in discourse stops when a flag, however small, is unveiled.
Flag ban chills political speech
Franklin & Marshall鈥檚 flag ban is especially frustrating because of the upcoming general election. Now more than ever, students must be able to express themselves and advocate for their preferred candidates. Franklin & Marshall鈥檚 anti-flag frenzy will make students think twice before speaking their minds on the most important issues of the day. FIREcautioned against these sorts of speech-squashing policies in our 2024 Policy Statement on Political Speech on Campus:
Protecting robust political expression, debate, and peaceful protest at our nation鈥檚 colleges and universities is vital to the health of American democracy. It follows that students and faculty peacefully expressing political views during the 2024 election season must not face any form of suppression . . . While intentional viewpoint discrimination against certain candidates or causes is a common throughline, more obscure culprits 鈥 like genuine administrative confusion about how IRS requirements can impact campus campaigning 鈥 show up time and again, too.
The college鈥檚 misguided flag ban is likely a result of misinterpreting the above-cited IRS rules. Fortunately, America鈥檚 tax collector isn鈥檛 interested in a couple of nineteen-year-olds waving around politically-motivated pride or Palestinian flags. The IRS on its website:
[A]ll section 501(c)(3) organizations [e.g., Franklin & Marshall College] are prohibited from participating in any political campaign on behalf of (or in opposition to) any candidate for elective public office [including] [c]ontributions to political campaign funds, public statements of support or opposition (verbal or written) made by or on behalf of an organization, and the distribution of materials prepared by others that support or oppose any candidate for public office all violate the prohibition on political campaign intervention.
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Harvard University undergraduates were reportedly told to remove this display from their suite window over concerns it was "offensive."
The IRS is clear: tax-exempt organizations cannot engage in partisan politics. But allowing community members to speak their minds is another matter entirely, so long as the institution is clear that it is not taking a side. FIREand student groups generally do not speak on behalf of their university, and it鈥檚 nonsensical to impute their expression to Franklin & Marshall or any other school.
To avoid playing political favorites, Franklin & Marshall can enact reasonable and viewpoint-neutral 鈥渢ime, place, and manner鈥 restrictions on where students can put displays, including flags, on campus. It can certainly avoid any appearance of partiality by barring students from installing flags on university gates or buildings where they would reasonably appear to be a statement from the institution itself.
But no effort to stick to political neutrality necessitates or justifies punishing students for displaying their own flags to represent their own views. The university must avoid joining the growing ranks of colleges violating their students鈥 freedom of speech.
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