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University of Houston Student Government Rescinds Suspension of VP for Facebook Post

Last week on The Torch, 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 Will Creeley explored the legal and practical issues surrounding a decision by the University of Houston Student Government Association (SGA) to suspend its vice president, Rohini Sethi, in response to : 鈥淔orget #BlackLivesMatter; more like #AllLivesMatter.鈥 On August 5, the SGA that and the SGA鈥檚 judicial branch would review whether the bill that authorized the suspension violated the SGA鈥檚 bylaws.

As Will deftly explained, Sethi鈥檚 post is unquestionably protected by the First Amendment. But this isn鈥檛 the typical FIREcase of a university punishing a student for her speech or a student government unlawfully withholding student fees from a recognized student group. In fact, the University that it would 鈥渟tand firm in support of free speech and does not discipline students for exercising their Constitutional rights.鈥

Instead, the SGA鈥檚 sanctioning of Sethi for her speech is problematic because it is inconsistent with SGA鈥檚 own rule that it 鈥渟hall take no action abridging the rights, immunities and privileges granted to students under the Constitution of the United States of America.鈥

鈥淧erhaps just as lamentably,鈥 Will wrote last week, 鈥渢he SGA has chosen to privilege punishment over dialogue, teaching fellow students that the answer to speech with which one disagrees is top-down punishment, not grassroots persuasion, conversation, and, ultimately, education.鈥

In , Sethi said she is a number of steps to 鈥渞e-earn [the] trust鈥 of the student body, including taking a leave of absence until the start of the new semester and participating in a diversity leadership workshop. In the same letter, Student Body President Shane Smith has reaffirmed the importance of the First Amendment and urged his peers to continue learning through 鈥渙pen and honest discussion.鈥

Any students with the authority to sanction others should take care to understand and abide by the rules that bind them, from the U.S. Constitution to the bylaws that students have created for themselves. If they do so, students can achieve the ideal result鈥攁voiding even temporarily chilling speech.

FIRE is glad to see that at least in this case, the SGA recognized its error and reversed course before the start of the new school year.

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