JURISPRUDENCE
THE LAW, LAWYERS, AND THE COURT.OCT. 3 2017 11:38 AM
Sessions the Censor
The attorney general says he values free speech. In 1996, he tried to stop LGBTQ students from meeting at a public university.
By Mark Joseph Stern
Last week, Attorney General Jeff Sessions delivered a
speech at Georgetown University Law Center in which he argued that freedom of thought and speech on the American campus are under attack.
As my colleague Dahlia Lithwick explained, the attorney general said this in a room full of prescreened students who asked him prescreened questions while
political demonstrators outside were penned off in free speech zones. Ensconced in a safe space of his own, Sessions blasted the notion that speech can be hurtful, criticizing administrators and students for their crackdown on speech they may have disagreed with.
Sessions hypocrisy on speech issues is not a new development. In 1996, the thenattorney general of Alabama used the full power of his office to try to shut down an LGBTQ conference at the University of Alabama. Sessions took his battle to court, asking a federal judge to let him block the conference altogetheror, at the very least, silence students who wished to discuss LGBTQ issues. He ultimately failed, but his campaign reveals a great deal about his highly selective view of free expression. Sessions claims to support freedom for offensive speech, but when speech offends him, he is all too happy to play the censor.
When Sessions served as Alabama attorney general, the state still criminalized sodomy. A
1992 law, Alabama Education Code Section 16-1-28, also barred public universities from funding, recognizing, or supporting any group that fosters or promotes a lifestyle or actions prohibited by the sodomy statute, either directly or indirectly. The law also forbade schools from allowing such organizations to use public facilities. Sessions predecessor, Jimmy Evans, had interpreted the statute to effectively outlaw the discussion or promotion of gay rights on public campuses, with that prohibition even extending to AIDS awareness campaigns.
In 1995, the University of South Alabamas Gay Lesbian Bisexual Alliance sued in federal court to block Section 16-1-28. That summer, the U.S. Supreme Court had
ruled that, under the First Amendment, public universities may not deny access to facilities or funding for student organizations on the basis of their viewpoints. This decision, the GLBA asserted, rendered Section 16-1-28 unconstitutional. U.S. District Judge Myron H. Thompson
agreed, holding the law to be invalid in a January 1996 ruling. ... This decision was excellent news for the Gay Lesbian Bisexual Alliance at the University of Alabama at Tuscaloosa. The GLBA had planned to host the
Fifth Annual Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual College Conference of the Southeastern United States in February 1996. Sessions, by now attorney general, was trying his hardest to shut it down.
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