Part of a Florida law limiting discussions on race, gender and diversity unconstitutionally restricts the speech of college professors, a divided 11th Circuit panel ruled, according to Courthouse News Service.
“If the First Amendment offers any boundary of
protection at all for public university classrooms, this statute crosses it,”
U.S. Circuit Judge Britt Grant wrote on behalf of the majority.
In
a 2-1 decision, the Atlanta-based appeals court rejected a request by
Florida officials to toss out a federal
judge’s ruling preventing the Sunshine State from enforcing a
provision of Florida’s Individual Freedom Act, also known as the Stop Wrongs
Against Our Kids and Employees Act (Stop WOKE Act).
The law would have restricted state university
professors from endorsing certain views on eight concepts related to race,
color, national origin or sex during classroom discussions.
The Individual Freedom Act amended the Florida
Education Equality Act by creating new speech restrictions barring any
“training or instruction that espouses, promotes, advances, inculcates, or
compels” students at public state universities to believe any of eight
concepts: a “blacklist of ideas,” an attorney for the plaintiffs said.
The concepts include ideas suggesting that members of
one race, color, sex or national origin are morally superior to others, that a
person is “inherently racist, sexist or oppressive” by virtue of his race or
sex, or that people should feel guilty about the actions of their ancestors.
Students, professors and a student organization at six
of Florida’s public universities sued the Florida Board of Governors to prevent
officials from enforcing the provision.
“Viewpoint-based restrictions designed to compel or
ban a set of beliefs are dangerous in any setting, and they are especially
pernicious in the classroom context,” Grant, an appointee of Donald Trump,
wrote on Tuesday. “That goes double for broadly worded yet imprecise
regulations like these, which are sure to leave both professors and their
students guessing about what kind of speech might violate the rules.”
To read more CLICK HERE


