The Volokh Conspiracy
Mostly law professors | Sometimes contrarian | Often libertarian | Always independent
Can Professors be Sanctioned for Political Flyers?
District court's opinion in Gruber v. Bruce shows problem with how Pickering balancing is done
Fearless blog leader Eugene Volokh highlighted a recent federal district opinion involving the First Amendment and political speech by state university professors. Unfortunately, the opinion illustrates the problem with how many courts conduct a Pickering balancing test in university settings. An appellate court could productively correct this error if it paid head to my forthcoming Wake Forest Law Review article on "What Can Professors Say in Public?"
To briefly recap, Professor Andrew Donadio serves as the faculty advisor for the local chapter of Turning Point USA at Tennessee Tech University. Professor Julia Gruber and Andrew Smith (an instructor) produced a flyer that they placed around campus declaring that the "hate and hypocrisy" of "Professor Donadio and Turning Point USA" are "not welcome at Tennessee Tech" and that there should be "no unity with racists" and that "hate speech is not free speech." In response to a complaint by Donadio, Provost Lori Bruce disciplined Gruber and Smith for violating Policy 600, which requires members of the faculty "to conduct themselves fairly, honestly, in good faith, and in accordance with the highest ethical and professional standards." The flyer can be seen here. Gruber and Smith sued Bruce for retaliatory action against constitutionally protected speech. The district court upheld the university's discipline.
The Supreme Court laid down the relevant analytical framework for resolving such cases in Pickering v. Board of Education. When a government employee speaks in his or her personal capacity about a matter of public concern, the courts recognize some First Amendment interest against reprisal by the governmental employer. When such speech is at issue (as is the case here), then courts must balance the employee's First Amendment interests against the employer's interest in the efficient delivery of government services. That balancing is understood to require a highly contextual judgment.
Unfortunately, Tennessee Tech ignored its own policy against punishing speech that some might find "offensive" or "disagreeable" on the grounds that the flyer constituted unprofessional conduct and a "personal grievance" rather than political speech. The court agreed that "calling a colleague a racist is hardly collegial" and "sneaking around and dropping-off anonymous flyers . . . falls short" of "respectful" conduct. Even though the university had shown "little in the way of actual harm" (Donadio got a Fox News hit out of the dust-up and it was otherwise business as usual on campus), the court thought the university had an overriding "interest in fostering a collegial educational environment."
As I argue in the forthcoming article, such an analysis is completely unsuited to a university environment. The government's interest in fostering a harmonious working environment might be quite strong in the context of a police department, but in the context of professors at a university the demand for "harmony" and "collegiality" too easily becomes a heckler's veto aimed at silencing disagreeable political speech. As then-Judge Alito noted, "'Harassing' or discriminatory speech, although evil and offensive, may be used to communicate ideas or emotions that nevertheless implicate First Amendment protections." Although the district court quoted the 6th Circuit on a "university's interest in maintaining a hostile-free learning environment," it ignored that court's warning that such speech is protected when it "serve[s] the purpose of advancing viewpoints, however repugnant, which had as their purpose influencing or informing public debate."
The key question is what should count as disruptive speech in the university context. If academic freedom values are going to be adequately protected, the government employer's concern with fostering workplace harmony needs to be sharply cabined when it comes to the extramural speech of university faculty. The demand for harmony in academia can easily become a demand for "supineness and dogmatism." Reconciling academic freedom with the university employer's interest in preventing disruption requires more guidance than the Court has thus far provided. Protecting academic freedom means protecting "the freedom to teach and write without fear of retribution for expressing heterodox ideas." Universities should foster intellectual disruption, but they need not tolerate "interfer[ence] with the work of the school."
. . .
Professors who incite anger by expressing unpopular ideas or making use of inflammatory rhetoric are a byproduct of fostering a vigorous intellectual environment, and universities have no legitimate interest in disciplining them for ruffling feathers by speaking their minds. Professors who incite anger by being verbally abusive to students or staff, however, are not speaking as citizens or advancing ideas. They are not disrupting their workplace by challenging conventional wisdom but by bullying those around them. Professors who are merely "demeaning, rude, and insulting" give universities good cause to take action to curb their behavior. The Court has said that the "manner, time, and place" of a government employee's speech should weigh in the Pickering balance. Professorial speech that is directed to the broader community or to an audience and addresses a matter of public concern will always deserve a high degree of constitutional protection, even when members of the audience take offense, but the face-to-face hurling of personal insults at a student or fellow employee is much less likely to weigh in favor of a professor in a Pickering balancing.
The distribution of a flyer on a college campus denouncing the political activities of professors and student groups is precisely the kind of "free exchange of ideas" that Tennessee Tech has committed itself to tolerating and that the First Amendment protects on a state university campus. Speech is no less protected whether it offends the sensibilities of those on the left or on the right. Donadio should not be disciplined for his "shocking" speech, and Gruber and Smith should not be disciplined for their counter-speech.
Weaponizing professional conduct regulations on campus to suppress unpopular speech is the kind of action that courts should deter rather than encourage. Unfortunately, if not appropriately calibrated to the university context, the Pickering balancing test can subvert rather than protect First Amendment values.
Editor's Note: We invite comments and request that they be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of Reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
I'm all for encouraging those who like to casually toss around labels like racist/nazi/fascist/etc and advocate for silencing every/anyone who says things they don't like. It makes it very easy to spot the loons who aren't to be taken seriously and/or those who are enemies of personal liberty.
At Turning Point, it's the Turning Pointers who casually toss around the racist labels.
How many Volokh Conspirators and Federalist Society members are faculty sponsors of Turning Point chapters?
Your first link is paywalled, but appears from the headline to be the WaPo casually tossing around the "racist" label. The second contains allegations of faked emails that may have induced TP to falsely accuse its staffer of racism, but that's just my impression from memory, not something mentioned in the article, and it's really, really hard to believe that you disapprove of false accusations of racism since it's what you do all the time. As I've said before my final straw when it comes to you was when you slurred that TN volleyball player who was abused by her woke coach as racist. Your name is "Shit" to me.
First, here is some of the Post's reporting:
"Kirk spokesman Andrew Kolvet reaffirmed the New Yorker’s account when I wrote about Clanton’s departure last year, and repeated in a conversation Saturday that she was “terminated from Turning Point after the discovery of problematic texts.”
Before writing the October column, I made certain, by emailing Clanton and through representatives of Scalia Law, that Clanton knew I was writing; I received no response; I also emailed Pryor, who did not reply.
In short: At no point before or after publication of the New Yorker story was there any public dispute that Clanton had sent the texts at issue. Neither Clanton nor her lawyer, to whom Mayer spoke at the time, suggested that there was any fabrication. Indeed, O’Rourke confirmed their authenticity to Mayer."
Second, I am not looking for your approval. All I expect from you is compliance with the preferences of your betters -- that's what happens to culture war losers -- until you are replaced. Come up with better ideas -- less bigotry, backwardness, and superstition would be a good start -- or prepare for continued failure at the modern American marketplace of ideas.
Your claim was, “At Turning Point, it’s the Turning Pointers who casually toss around the racist labels.”
Nothing in your excerpts from the article you linked to show Turning Pointers casually tossing around any racist label.
I would call you a liar as well as a shit except that I recall, as I said, that TP may indeed have slurred Clanton. Behavior very like yours. Only your behavior is regularly worse.
Volokh Conspirators and Federalist Society members are faculty sponsors of Turning Point chapters?
Did it ever occur to you that a true lover of free speech would sponsor a club they didn't agree with so the kids could HAVE it?
There is no reason to entertain that speculation when there is no reason in evidence to think Donaldio either did or ought to "disagree with" the club.
Did you read the case? The flyer denounced a coworker as a local founder of a Klan-like group dedicated to harassment and terror, dismissing him and his associates as a racist whose presence was unwelcome and whose speech was unprotected "hate speech." It even included his picture! What more could it have included if the objective were to subject this professor to harassment other than to explicitly say "harass this person?"
Let's go the other way -- say the flier had described co-workers as "n*ggers" and all the rest. Maybe had a picture of a noose.
While that would be protected speech in general, would it be protected as EMPLOYEE speech???
I suspect the addition of a noose image in your example substantially changes the fundamental nature of the speech wrt determining 1A projection.
Eh, I don't know. Yelling "racist" is sort of the the left-wing noose, isn't it? More threatening than a pull rope on a garage door, anyway.
Not really. One is just stupid and isn't taken seriously by anyone with an IQ that's above room temperature, while the other can reasonably be interpreted as threatening...when it hasn't been revealed to be a hoax, that is.
Oh, come on, your people with an IQ above room temperature know better than to be scared by pictures of nooses, too.
Since I read Grimes as not thinking the actual flyer was protected employee speech (correct me if I’m wrong) Whittington, not he, is the one to ask.
Let's be real. Prof. Whittington plants his feet squarely on one side of this tolerance debate. This dude would not be making this same analysis had it been TPUSAs voice that had been silenced.
False dichotomy. Those are not the “two sides” in “this tolerance debate”.
Anyway, there is nothing wrong with “planting your feet squarely”.
I take it that what you are actually accusing him of is motivated reasoning.
I’d be more sympathetic to this screed if it weren’t so infused with special pleading. “Free speech for me but not for thee” just doesn’t cut it with people outside the charmed circle. Apparently Whittington needs to get outside his echo chamber more in order to see how unappealing this is.
"It ignored that court's warning that such speech is protected when it "serve[s] the purpose of advancing viewpoints, however repugnant, which had as their purpose influencing or informing public debate.""
I suppose demanding that somebody you disagree with be silenced "influences" public debate. Informs it? Not so much. I'm not seeing where he was "incit[ing] anger by expressing unpopular ideas". Looks to me like he was just trying to sic the mob on somebody.
The paradox of tolerance is a difficult one, I'll grant that.
You act as if the Paradox of Tolerance is a real thing and not some cognitive window dressing to mask the fascistic tendencies of the Democrats.
Yeah, it's a real thing.
No it's not. I mean it's real in the sense it's a thing, but it's not real in the sense it's an actual moral dilemma
Whittington is a Democrat?
Professor Whittington acknowledges the Court of Appeals correctly applied Pickering, but says Pickering should not apply to university faculty employment.
At least in this case, it should. What happened here was name-calling, not discourse. The level of civility in the workplace that government can require of government employees who are expected to be role models for children in their work simply is not identical to what its most disruptive citizens can get away with without criminal sanction. The Court of Appeals was correct not to equate the two.
The faculty member here had many ways to express disapproval of the other faculty members’ views and work without resorting to pure name-calling.
As long as a no-name-calling rule is applied in a viewpoint neutral way, it is constitutional under Pickering, and properly so.
I would partially agree with Professor Whittington that government can’t censor content for university professor employees to the same extent they could for, say, a police department. But they can impose viewpoint-neutral civility requirements.
Professor Whittington’s dichotomy between treating university faculty like the most controllable employee possible, and no disciplining for speech at all (treating like ordinary citizens), is (as usual) a false dichotomy. As usual, the proferred alternatives. aren’t the only possible choices. As is commonplace in these sorts of fallacious arguments, one can just about always construct a dichotomy that supports any policy choice one wants, simply by picking an alternative from the universe of possible options that makes the choice one wants people to follow look better.
"It's wrong to censor me trying to censor you!"
Sincerely,
The Democrats
"I'm going to protect people from harassment by . . . harassing people!"
My attitude is very simple: Schadenfreude.
The left has done everything possible to destroy my career and even my life over the past 35 years -- exactly WHY should I feel sorry for a leftist experiencing my reality?
You can view the flier here: Tennessee Tech professors lose First Amendment case against university
Frankly, when she complained about being punished, the university rep should have just done air quotes while saying, "Hate speech is not free speech>". Might have had some slight chance of penetrating her aura of self-rightiousness.
gotta wonder what she would have said to a response in kind...
How dare one of Keith's commie brethren be held to any consequences. It would be one thing if they were providing a factual record but this is just baseless slander. It's one thing if the government were trying to jail these people but an institution holding it's employees to a standard of "you can disagree and debate but don't slander each other" is apparently a bridge too far for leftists.
"the extramural speech of university faculty"
The distribution of flyers on campus, particularly within the lounge, would be "intramural."
They're still EMPLOYEES. The idea that the government as employer has to sit and let their employees be assholes to each other and can't do anything about it is ridiculous.