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VICTORY: Facing public pressure, Rutgers Law Student Bar Association rescinds critical race theory requirement

Rutgers Law Student Bar Association rescinds critical race theory requirement

Earlier this month, FIREcalled on Rutgers University, home of the largest public law school in the Northeast, to rescind a requirement that forced student groups to host certain ideological events in order to be eligible for student fee funding. (Peter Bond / Flickr.com)

Six months after passing an unconstitutional amendment that would force student groups to promote critical race theory or lose funding, Rutgers Law School-Camden鈥檚 Student Bar Association has finally done the right thing. 

After facing public pressure from 果冻传媒app官方, the SBA met with the Rutgers administration and then sent an email to the Rutgers Law student body announcing that they rescinded the Nov. 20 amendment to the SBA constitution, which mandated that any group hoping to receive more than $250 in university funding must 鈥減lan at least one (1) event that addresses their chosen topics through the lens of Critical Race Theory, diversity and inclusion, or cultural competency.鈥

The Rutgers SBA was right to rescind a mandate that was anything but viewpoint-neutral.

In yesterday鈥檚 email, SBA presidents Elena Sassaman and Ashley Zimmerman cited 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 recent letter to Rutgers, which called on the school to immediately rescind the condition and commit to distributing funds in a viewpoint-neutral manner. Sassaman and Zimmerman then wrote, 鈥淲e think-- and we hope, we can still create change, still fight for what is right, and pass this amendment, or something similar again.鈥

As a public university, Rutgers is bound by the First Amendment, which prohibits discrimination based on viewpoint. The SBA鈥檚 amendment was blatantly unconstitutional because it made funding conditional upon the promotion of an ideology and would discriminate against any student group that objects to the 鈥渓ens鈥 of critical race theory or wishes to remain neutral. 

The Rutgers Law SBA was right to rescind a mandate that was anything but viewpoint-neutral. Now that it鈥檚 gone, students will no longer face a choice between receiving funding and staying true to their beliefs. 

Nick DeBenedetto, president of Rutgers Law Camden Federalist Society, alerted FIREto the viewpoint discrimination on his campus.

One such student is Nick DeBenedetto, the president of Rutgers Law-Camden鈥檚 Federalist Society chapter. 鈥淚 am happy to see that the SBA has chosen to rescind the amendment,鈥 he told 果冻传媒app官方. 鈥淭his decision respects the First Amendment rights of all Rutgers Law students and restores the free and open status quo that student organizations used to enjoy.鈥

Ideological diversity is essential to a healthy campus culture. The Rutgers Law SBA鈥檚 about-face serves as a reminder that efforts to promote diversity and inclusion should include students who think differently, not give them ultimatums and pressure them into expressing support for beliefs they do not hold. College campuses are home to students and faculty holding a wide range of opinions on the significance of diversity and the merit of ideologies such as critical race theory. By rescinding an amendment that would pressure their peers to espouse topics through only one 鈥渓ens,鈥 the SBA has taken a step towards greater diversity and inclusion on their campus.

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