The Volokh Conspiracy
Mostly law professors | Sometimes contrarian | Often libertarian | Always independent
Students Don't Have a Right to Use Public University Social Events for Their Own Political Orations,
whether at administrators' homes or in law school classrooms.
A couple of people, both of whom I respect a great deal, asked me for a First Amendment analysis of the students' trying to orate about the Israel-Palestine conflict at the class party at Berkeley Dean Erwin Chemerinsky's home. Happy to oblige!
[1.] Some people have argued that the party was a public law school function, and thus not just a private event. I'm not sure that's right—but I don't think it matters.
Even if Berkeley law school put on a party for its students in a law school classroom, students still couldn't try to hijack that for their own political orations. Rather, much government property is a "nonpublic forum"—a place where some members of the public are invited, but which is "'… not by tradition or designation a forum for public communication'" (Minnesota Voters Alliance v. Mansky (2018), quoting a leading 1983 case).
In a nonpublic forum, the government acting as proprietor may impose restrictions so long as they are "reasonable and viewpoint-neutral." (The restrictions need not be content-neutral, by the way, so long as they are viewpoint-neutral; and I expect that Dean Chemerinsky wouldn't have tolerated this sort of political speechmaking at their dinner by anyone.)
This is because the government has the "power to preserve the property under its control for the use to which it is lawfully dedicated." If the place is a room opened up to students for listening to a lecture, or if it's open for dinner or lunch or a party, people have no First Amendment right to bring microphones and take the event over for their own political diatribes.
Indeed, I think the same would apply to ordinary campus cafeterias. People are free to go there, and to talk politics to their friends over lunch, or to wear T-shirts containing political slogans. But they don't have a First Amendment right to get up and interfere with their classmates' lunches by taking out microphones and making a speech.
[2.] Now it's possible that people who hold events, even public law school events, at their own homes have extra power to control what is said and done in their own homes, beyond what I describe above. I know of no cases on point, perhaps because so few people try to turn a function at someone's home (even one that is organized by a public organization) into an occasion for their own political demonstration.
In any case, though, I wouldn't rely on that potential rationale, because I think the same would apply to a dinner that's clearly on government property, too. The government generally can't stop you from speaking on private property (real or virtual) when you have the property owner's permission. It generally can't stop you from speaking on government-owned traditional public forums, such as parks and sidewalks. Once it opens up a designated or limited public forum for speech (or certain kinds of speech), it must generally tolerate that speech. (Open outdoor spaces at universities may qualify as such "traditional public fora" or "designated public fora" or "limited public fora.")
But when government buildings aren't opened up for public speech, people don't have a First Amendment to give speeches there. And that is likewise true for private homes, even when they have public law school parties hosted there (regardless of whether private homeowners have extra authority in such situations).
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This suggests a lack of ability to recognize social cues, norms, and interactions. Had one of the guests risen to laud Chemerinsky’s views with respect to alleged antisemitism or endorse Chemerinsky’s seeming disdain for Palestinian interests, I doubt anyone would have grabbed the microphone or told that person to leave.
This does not make the student's conduct any better.
This, but without being a dick.
Every time I unmute that guy, I regret it. Not falling for it again.
I wouldn't wade through that much dick to get to a point. But because of your comment, I did. I found not enough insight in the point to offset that much dick.
The fault here, though well-intentioned, is yours. But the damage is quite marginal. Your reputation should bounce back by the time I wake up tomorrow.
It's not as if you were saying Hitler was right.
I see no reason to think that is true.
I doubt Chemerinsky who threw this party to celebrate 3L's graduation, who had been warned a week earlier of a possible protest of this party, who wrote the textbook on 1A, would have allowed Vegans, Zionists, Crossfitters, Pilots, Surgeons, Lawyers, or even Hamasniks to take a microphone out of their purse stand on the steps and proceed to hijack the party.
> "But when government buildings aren't opened up for public speech, people don't have a First Amendment to give speeches there."
This seems like a solid analysis in the prospective "permission" sense: you can't insist on a right to speak in such a forum. But what is the analysis in a retrospective "punishment" sense?
Consider the not-entirely-hypothetical scenario of a weekly law school happy hour, in a courtyard at the (public) law school. Students gather on the lawn, drink and talk. No rules are posted; no assessment of specific prohibitions on behavior have been deemed necessary. One Friday afternoon, a law student carries a sign into the courtyard during happy hour, stands at one end, and proceeds to give a loud speech about a divisive political event. This causes a decent number of fellow students to be aggravated, and they complain.
Can the administration issue a retrospective punishment against the student, after the fact, on the basis of the speech and associated complaints? That seems extremely problematic in the stated scenario -- because there is no previous rule that has been broken. The fact that the courtyard may not be a public forum, so the student cannot insist in advance on speaking, isn't the same as saying that the student can be punished for that speech in the absence of a specific prohibition.
Now the hard part: Can the administration shut the speaker down mid-speech and physically remove her from the lawn? In the absence of prior notice and some kind of rulemaking, what principle of law (beyond "I don't like what you're saying") would be at work there?
Well yes I guess, though I assume there are one or two good behaviour statutes. But I’m not sure you can run a University on the principle that seems to govern qualified immunity for police officers - nothing is off limits unless there’s a precise rule or an exact precedent.
What if the gal didn’t make a speech but decided to defecate on the lawn ? Maybe she should be able to work out for herself that some things are inappropriate in some circumstances if any social institution is to function at all.
"What if the gal didn’t make a speech but decided to defecate on the lawn ?"
Don't give her any ideas and by the way, what is this "good behavior" you speak of?
Looked this up today, and it is apparently his private residence -- not university property.
In general in such a situation, the student would not be subjected to trespass liability for beginning her oration, but once told to leave and refusing to do so, she would be liable for trespass. I don't know the specifics of California law to know whether that is the case here.
If the Dean uses his home for political meetings skewed, say, toward Democrats, the remedy is *not* for a bunch of Republicans to get on his lawn and start orating.
On public property there are various gradations of permissible speech, on private property it’s up to the owner, and he can order people off his lawn and have them arrested if they don’t go.
But is it his property ? Or is it the “Dean’s House” owned by the University and made available to the Dean qua Dean ?
I'm not sure. In that case it would still, in the case of parties, be a nonpublic forum.
According to Chemerinsky, it's his property.
Dean Erwin Chemerinsky was deliberately targeted by those students because he is a Jew.
I doubt Afaneh cared whether Chemerinsky was Jewish, but anger is increasing at legal scholars. While Sen. Warren has stated the obvious, few legal scholars have supported Warren's statement of the obvious.
Administration officials like Austin don't interpret the definition of genocide. Genocide is within the jurisdiction of the US courts because the definition is found in 18 U.S. Code § 1091 - Genocide.
The bar, which must be reached for genocide in US law, seems to be significantly lower than the bar, that must be reached in international law.
Israel has already victimized the Afaneh family directly: Family left in shock by shooting of young Palestinian woman.
If UC Berkeley wants to bring charges of violation of the Student Conduct Code against the student who spoke over a microphone at the Dean's dinner party, it will have to invoke jurisdiction over Off-Campus Conduct, which is available only "where it a) adversely affects the health, safety, or security of any other member of the University community, or the mission of the University, or b) involves academic work or any records or documents of the University."
Provision b) doesn't apply, and under provision a), it would seem that the private/public forum distinction EV sort of makes is not relevant.
Good point, he should report the matter to the real-world police.
Ok, everyone enjoys a good hypothetical argued by academics, but the issue here is a whole lot simpler: "get off my lawn". That's all you need to say. It's my party, you weren't invited, get out. Don't argue, call the police.
It's ok to just be the adult and put your foot down, no excuses.
The obvious point is that the homeowner can as you to leave his home, and if you don't, it's trespass. The First Amendment doesn't mean that I can ignore the homeowner telling me to leave so long as I'm making an ass of myself.
Unless the trespasser claims he lives there, in which case the police will say he has to be allowed to stay until he's formally evicted.