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Trump Says He’ll Withhold Funding From Campuses That Don’t Protect Free Speech


President Donald Trump announced Saturday he would soon sign an executive order requiring colleges and universities to support free speech if they want federal resources.

Trump is highlighting concerns from some conservatives that their voices were being censored, whether on social media or at the nation’s universities. He did not go into more detail about what the order would say, but his comments immediately drew scrutiny from those who noted that public research universities already have a constitutional obligation to protect free speech.

“An executive order is unnecessary as public research universities are already bound by the First Amendment, which they deeply respect and honor,” said Peter McPherson, president of the Association of Public and Land-Grant Universities. “It is core to their academic mission.”

Trump invited Hayden Williams to join him Saturday while he addressed activists attending the Conservative Political Action Conference. Williams was punched Feb. 19 while on the campus of University of California, Berkeley. He was recruiting for the conservative group Talking Points USA.

Two men approached and one punched him during a confrontation captured on student cellphones. University of California, Berkeley police arrested a suspect, Zachary Greenberg, on Friday.

Williams, who had a black eye, told Fox News that the men objected to a sign that said “Hate Crime Hoaxes Hurt Real Victims.”

Neither Williams nor Greenberg are affiliated with UC Berkeley.

Trump told the audience Saturday that Williams “took a hard punch in the face for all of us.” Meanwhile, Williams said many conservative students face “discrimination, harassment or worse if they dare speak up on campus.”

Trump offered no details about what the executive order might say about what has become a thorny issue on college campuses.

(AP)



2 Responses

  1. 1 He has no authority to do so. Funding is authorized by the Congress, not the president. He can refuse to sign a budget unless it includes protections of first amendment rights of students in colleges that accept federal money, but there isn’t any law at present protecting political speech at non-public schools. So at present, if a student at Yeshiva University announces his support for the Nazis and the Palestinians, YU is free to kick him out (note that CUNY as a public school, could not).

    2. The first amendment right of association (not be required to forced speech) protects the rights of private universities to suppress (politically incorrect) ideas they disagree with.

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