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Skidmore could be sued for denying recognition to libertarian student organization

In an interview on Fox News, Skidmore College student Hannah Davis accused classmates of launching a "cancel culture campaign" to stop her from forming a campus chapter of the student activism group Young Americans for Liberty.
Pressure is once again mounting on Skidmore College to approve a student club that was denied recognition by its Student Government Association over concerns the group would promote āhate speechā on campus ā making it one of two student organizations this year initially denied recognition due to their political views. In a to Skidmoreās president, the threatened legal action against the private liberal arts college if it did not reverse the denial of recognition of a chapter of the Young Americans for Liberty by May 21.
Skidmoreās chapter of , a libertarian student organization, was denied approval for a ātrial periodā to become a registered student group back in early March. During an appeals meeting with student government officials on March 23, YAL organizer Hannah Davis alleged that student leaders were āopenly hostileā and ārepeatedly characterized her and YAL as hateful and bigoted,ā according to ADFās letter.
āI started emailing students and almost immediately, I got pushback,ā Davis said in an .

In an started by members of the Skidmore student body, which has since garnered more than 1,800 signatures, YAL was accused of a āpattern of racism, homophobia, and transphobia,ā and Skidmore was urged to āmake no space for this kind of open bigotry on campus.ā The petition included several alleged examples of such behavior, including a 2018 YAL with right-wing provocateur Milo Yiannopoulos hosted by an Oregon chapter almost 3,000 miles away.
Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS is once again calling on Skidmore to adhere to its own commitments to recognize and protect its studentsā freedom of expression.
Skidmoreās student government recognizes nearly , ranging from political organizations to dance clubs to religious groups, but it refused to recognize YAL based solely on viewpoint. Although Skidmore students have argued that individuals associated with YAL on other campuses have said racist, hurtful, or offensive things, the controversial words and actions of outside speakers ā or even students who might say similarly controversial things ā should have no bearing on the student groupās recognition at Skidmore.
If Skidmore promises free speech, that means providing it even to those whose speech is controversial.
And as mentioned above, this is the second time this year that Skidmoreās student government has denied recognition to student group applicants over differences in political viewpoint. In March, Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS sent a letter to Skidmore expressing concern over the student governmentās decision to reject an application by Progressive Zionists for Peace to form a chapter at the college. PZP student organizers were informed the club had been denied recognition because āsome members [of the committee] expressed concern that a dialogue focused club with one perspective being conveyed could be troublesome.ā (Two days after Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS's letter, Skidmore reversed course and certified PZP as an official student group.)
It was a similar refrain that to that lodged by Fordham University in denying recognition to a chapter of Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS for Justice in Palestine, where administrators first fretted that allowing advocacy of āpolitical goals of a specific groupā would lead to āpolarizationā and then claimed that SJP chapters at other institutions had engaged in misconduct. Fordham, to its discredit, fought to censor the SJP chapter for nearly half a decade, ultimately prevailing (wrongly, Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS thinks) in New Yorkās appellate courts. A trial court had first ruled in that case that āconsideration of whether a groupās message may be polarizing is contrary to the notion that universities should be centers of discussion of contested issues,ā as Fordham purports its mission to encompass āfreedom of inquiry.ā
The case was brought under a provision of New York law that grants considerable deference to the decisions of private universities and colleges while purporting to hold them accountable to promises made to students, including freedom of expression and association. However, taking deference to a whole new level, the appellate court blessed Fordhamās conflicting explanations and policies, undermining the procedureās purpose to ensure āessential fairness in the somewhat one-sided relationship between the institution and the individual.ā
According to ADFās letter, the lawsuit that potentially faces Skidmore would take a different tack, invoking not the overly-deferential procedural claims brought against Fordham, but instead arguing that Skidmore breached its contract and engaged in ādeceptive trade practices,ā arguing that the college āhas falsely promised that it will protect studentsā ability to speak and associate freelyā and misled students āby misrepresenting the nature of who can form student groups and what views are allowed on campus.ā Itās hard to argue that this isnāt exactly what happened.
Skidmore is a private institution, so the First Amendment does not require the college to grant its students any form of freedom of expression. But because it makes to do so, it has a legal obligation ā arising from contract and other law, not the Constitution ā to keep those promises. Giving the student government the ability to decide what groups can be recognized, then standing idly by when it abuses that authority to refuse recognition based on viewpoint, is flatly incompatible with any commitment to the freedom of expression it promises.
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