WATCH: Free speech lawsuit targets University of Minnesota gender policies
The University of Minnesota is facing a lawsuit alleging school policies on gender violate students’ First Amendment rights.
The lawsuit, filed by the Southeastern Legal Foundation on behalf of Young America’s Foundation students, challenges university policies that define certain speech about gender identity and transgender issues as “hostile environment sexual harassment” and require the use of preferred pronouns. It was filed in the U.S District Court for the District of Minnesota.
“These are blatant First Amendment violations,” Kimberly Hermann, president of the Southeastern Legal Foundation, told The Center Square in an exclusive interview.
According to the foundation, university policies could subject students to disciplinary action for expressing belief that there are only two genders, objecting to transgender individuals in sex-segregated spaces like bathrooms, or refusing to use preferred pronouns.
Hermann said the policies create a school environment where students must carefully monitor their speech.
“The university essentially says that if you believe in biological sex and you so much as say a boy is a boy, a girl is a girl, or if you’re a female student and a biological male is in the bathroom and you say you’re uncomfortable, then you could be brought up on harassment charges, potentially even expelled from the university,” Hermann explained.
The SLF, a conservative legal organization, is hoping for a court order that will declare the policies unconstitutional. It is asking for nominal damages of $1.
“This is not a case about money,” Hermann said. “It’s a case about the Constitution.”
The University of Minnesota did not respond to a request for comment from The Center Square regarding the lawsuit.
Jackson Barrick, a senior at the University of Minnesota and a member of Young America’s Foundation, said the policies have created uncertainty for students on campus.
“It’s been really challenging,” Barrick told The Center Square, “To make sure I’m not put under academic suspension or further repercussions.”
Barrick said students, because of the policies, often hesitate to express dissenting views in classrooms because they fear social or academic consequences.
“You don’t really want to say anything because odds are pretty heavily against you,” Barrick said. “It’s kind of that culture of homogeneity where people aren’t exposed to different ideas.”
Barrick explained the broader effects this is having on students across Minnesota.
“This affects 70,000 students across five campuses in pretty much every corner of the state,” Barrick said. “It’s about encouraging that healthy environment and the ability to conduct reasonable debate or reasonable conversation without fear of the university going against you.”
Hermann argued the school’s policies amount to both viewpoint discrimination and compelled speech. She said similar policies have been challenged elsewhere and expressed confidence the lawsuit will succeed.
“Many courts have already said that policies like this are unconstitutional. They haven’t stopped doing it to this point, and there’s been lots of warning shots,” Hermann said. “The reach of this lawsuit can be absolutely tremendous when we win it.”
She said the foundation is hopeful the lawsuit will quickly strike down the policies and affirm students’ free speech rights.
“These students are paying a tremendous amount of money to go to these universities across our country to get an education. Not to be silenced, not to be shamed for their beliefs in basic common sense,” Hermann said. “They need to stop, and until they do, we will keep filing lawsuits just like this throughout the entire country.”
Latest News Stories
Unions sue Trump over immigrant drivers license crackdown
Battery storage financials remain in question as lawmakers consider energy omnibus
Illinois quick hits: Pritzker praises credit upgrade; Cook County approves $20M quantum grant
Op-Ed: Main Street businesses, customers would bear brunt of a tax on services
Supreme Court grants extra time for arguments in tariff case
WATCH: White House vows to ‘fight’ lawsuits over $100,000 H-1B visa fee
WATCH: Illinois leaders on both sides send Bailey family condolences for loss of 4
Democrats tank GOP bill to pay troops, essential workers during govt shutdown
Texas lawmaker introduces agricultural visa reform
Home sales rise 1.5% in September as mortgage rates dip
FBI arrests 34 in NBA, poker gambling probe involving crime families
Poll: Americans divided on Trump’s deportation, immigration policies