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First test of Floridaās commitment to campus free speech looms

Florida Capitol Complex buildings in Tallahassee.
Earlier this month, Florida became a leading defender of campus free speech rights. But now, pending legislation threatens to reverse the gains.
On April 15, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis held a press conference to announce an agreement with the stateās 12 public universities and 28 state colleges to a modeled on the āā at the University of Chicago.
The announcement was an important victory for students, faculty, and civil libertarians. The āChicago Statementā represents an ideal framework for institutions of higher education to navigate offensive, dissenting, or simply unpopular speech.
Chief among the principles embodied in the Chicago Statement is the declaration that ādebate or deliberation may not be suppressed because the ideas put forth are thought by some or even by most members of our communities to be offensive, unwise, or immoral.ā The statement explains that students and faculty must respond to those ideas ānot by seeking to suppress speech, but by openly and vigorously contesting the ideas they oppose.ā Institutions that instead stifle difficult conversations about controversial issues undermine the pursuit of truthāa central purpose of higher education.
While Floridaās landmark, across-the-board plan to adopt the Chicago Statement is impressive, lawmakers in Florida may soon put it to the test. to address anti-Semitism on campus sent to the Governor starkly contradicts the Chicago Statement and violates the First Amendment by targeting protected political speech related to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The bill passed the Florida House of Representatives on April 11 and was approved by the Florida Senate yesterday.
The billās intentions are laudable, but its consequences for free speech would be dire.
The legislation states that anti-Semitism is āa certain perception of the Jewish people, which may be expressed as hatred toward Jewish people, rhetorical and physical manifestations of anti-Semitism directed toward a person, his or her property, or toward Jewish community institutions or religious facilities.ā This vague prohibition will chill political debate because it forces speakers (and the administrators tasked with enforcement) to guess at the definitionās boundaries. What exactly qualifies as a ācertain perception of the Jewish peopleā subject to punishment?
The bill provides examples of speech it deems anti-Semiticāfor example, applying ādouble standardsā to Israelās behavior, or comparing āIsraeli policy to that of the Nazis.ā
But these examples are protected under the First Amendment, which does not have a ādouble standardā exception. If hypocrisy was exempted from the First Amendment, protections for political speech would be illusory. Comparing Israeli policyāor the policies of any country for that matterāto Nazi policy is similarly protected, whether the comparisons are valid and persuasive or not.
The billās problem isnāt only that it uses an overbroad definition of anti-Semitism. Defining the term at all is unhelpful. Historically, our state and federal laws ban discrimination on the basis of protected classes like race, ethnicity, gender, religion, and disability. Courts are then tasked with analyzing the facts of individual cases to determine whether conduct is discriminatory, and thus unlawful.
Our laws do not define or provide examples for terms like racism, sexism, or anti-Semitism because doing so would open a Pandoraās box of political considerations into the judicial process. For example, is it racist to support affirmative action or to oppose it? That line should not be drawn by whoever is in the majority in the legislature at a particular time.
Institutions must protect students from unlawful anti-Semitic harassment. But a statute that violates the First Amendment and will likely be struck down by the courts isnāt the answer. If signed into law, HB 741 threatens to immediately undo the progress made throughout the state to promote free speech on campus.
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