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Fifth Circuit: First Amendment protects drag show from campus censors

果冻传媒app官方鈥 victory in the court of appeals reaffirms that the First Amendment limits the government鈥檚 power to ban drag performances at public universities
A student holds up a sign reading "drag is rad" in protest at West Texas A&M University in response to the president canceling an on-campus drag show.

Michael Cuviello / Amarillo Globe-News / USA TODAY NETWORK

On March 20, 2023, the students of Spectrum WT 鈥 an LGBTQ+ organization at West Texas A&M University 鈥 were in the final stages of preparing a charity drag show when University President Walter Wendler sent a community-wide email unilaterally banning all drag shows from campus. In his email, Wendler derided drag shows as 鈥渕isogynistic,鈥 and enacted the ban despite acknowledging that 鈥渢he law of the land appears to require鈥 him to allow the show to go on. 

On Aug. 18, 2025, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit confirmed that, indeed, it does. The 2-1 panel opinion overturned the trial court鈥檚 denial of Spectrum WT鈥檚 motion for a preliminary injunction and ordered the lower court to block Wendler from enforcing the drag ban while the case proceeds. The court held the students are substantially likely to prevail on the merits of their claims that singling out drag performances to ban them from a campus theater, otherwise open to students and the public alike, violates the right to free speech. 

To start, the court affirmed that the First Amendment protects drag performance 鈥 just as it protects other theatrical performance 鈥 rejecting the trial court鈥檚 holding that drag shows constitute nonexpressive conduct outside the First Amendment鈥檚 protection. The appeals court explained that like the 鈥渦nquestionably shielded painting of Jackson Pollock, music of Arnold Sch枚enberg, or Jabberwocky verse of Lewis Carroll,鈥 art, whether painted, sung, or performed on stage, is expressive as so long as it is 鈥渆vident that conveying some message, even if nearly opaque or perhaps smeared, was intended.鈥 

Spectrum WT鈥檚 drag show passes that test, the court explained, because 鈥渢he message sent by parading on a theater stage in the attire of the opposite sex,鈥 in support for the LGBTQ+ community, 鈥渨ould have been unmistakable鈥 to its ticketed audience.

The second question the court considered was whether the university could lawfully keep Spectrum WT鈥檚 drag show out of Legacy Hall, a performance venue the college allows both students and outside groups to rent for expressive events like magic shows, beauty pageants, and even a past drag show. Here, again, the court sided with Spectrum WT. The court conducted a public forum analysis, which examines the underlying purposes and practices of government property to determine what restrictions officials can place on protected expression in the property. 

The court noted that the university had let pretty much anyone beside the plaintiffs use Legacy Hall for expressive events, including, "a local church group鈥檚 'Community Night of Worship and Prayer,' a congressional candidate forum, a local high school鈥檚 'Casino Night' dance, a local nonprofit鈥檚 benefit gala, Randall County鈥檚 livestock show, and a religious retreat center鈥檚 event dinner."

Because President Wendler singled out a particular type of expression to exclude from a space WTAMU generally opens to third parties for expressive use, his drag ban must survive strict scrutiny, the toughest level of judicial review. And because Wendler made no attempt to overcome strict scrutiny, the court held 鈥渢he plaintiffs are entitled to an injunction protecting their rights, and the district court erred in concluding otherwise.鈥

Spectrum WT鈥檚 legal battle may not be completely over, as the case waits to return to the trial court, but this opinion represents a real victory for all students at West Texas A&M, reaffirming the First Amendment principles that protect their free speech rights on campus. It鈥檚 also another victory for students across Texas 鈥 where drag performance bans have become all too common 鈥 whose abilities to express themselves shouldn鈥檛 be subject to the whims of censorial college administrators.

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