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Former graduate instructor, blacklisted over testy exchange with TPUSA student, sues University of Nebraska ā Lincoln

Courtney Lawton at the Aug. 25, 2017 protest near the Turning Point USA recruitment table at University of Nebraska ā Lincoln. Lawton was subsequently relieved of her teaching assignments. Now, she's suing. (TPUSA/YouTube)
On Aug. 25, 2017 at the University of Nebraska ā Lincoln, graduate student and adjunct lecturer Courtney Lawton attended a small protest on the quad of her campus, adjacent to where a student group was recruiting new members. The group, Turning Point USA, publishes the controversial Professor Watchlist, which has been criticized for targeting college professors who espouse liberal viewpoints. After learning that the organization was recruiting members, Lawton and others hastily arranged a counter-protest, where she displayed a sign that read, āJust say No! to Neo-Fascism,ā called the conservative student behind the recruitment table ā who had her ā a āneo-fascist,ā and flipped her off.

Within days of the incident, TPUSA posted a video of Lawtonās remarks online and, after public outrage mounted, her teaching assignments were cancelled. Weeks later, after three Nebraska state senators wrote an open letter to UNL questioning the universityās ability to āconduct an honest investigation when a conservative studentā is targeted by what they describe as ādiscriminatory actions,ā Lawtonās teaching contract was allowed to expire. The universityās senior leaders to government officials that she would never again teach at the university.
FIRE wrote a letter to UNL in December 2017, urging the university to reinstate Lawton because ācourts have repeatedly held that the nonrenewal of an untenured faculty memberās contract on the basis of constitutionally protected expression constitutes impermissible retaliation.ā UNL refused.
Now, Lawton is suing UNL for violating her rights to due process and free speech guaranteed under the Constitution.
University of Nebraska officials bowed to political pressure
According to the , which was filed last week in the U.S. District Court for the District of Nebraska, UNL officials offered conflicting explanations for their decision to remove Lawton from the classroom, and ultimately her job.
UNL officials initially explained to Lawton privately that she was reassigned to non-teaching duties for safety reasons. As Lawton told the :
Executive Vice Chancellor Donde Plowman told me I was being removed from the classroom due to a security threat to me and to my students after Turning Point USA publicized the protest and released a troll storm upon the university.
Yet public anger at protected speech ā however offensive others on or off campus may find it ā is not a defensible basis to take action against the speaker. Instead, condemnation or counterspeech are the appropriate responses to speech others find offensive, not censorship. If outrage at speech is a reason to take action against the speaker, then a good deal of speech is a viral clip away from justifying censorship ā as provocative or offensive speech will almost always find an audience angered by it.
Shortly after the Lawton incident, a Nebraska state senator complained in an that the demonstration against the TPUSA recruitment table was āpremeditated,ā that the student had been āverbally assaulted,ā and urged the university āto terminate the employmentā of the demonstrators āimmediately.ā
That same day, UNL released a explaining that Lawton was relieved from her teaching assignments because of her expression:
Our expectations for civility were not met by the lecturer in her behavior toward a student, and not representative of a university where the robust free exchange of ideas takes place 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
Ultimately, UNL officials, including President Hank Bounds and Chancellor Ronnie Green, bowed to political pressure. Speaking to the media, Bounds Lawtonās gesture āunprofessionalā and said her behavior was ānot in keeping with [UNL] standards of conduct,ā and Green said in an , āWe communicated today to the grad student that she will not teach at our university going forward because of this inappropriate behavior.ā
Lawton is suing UNL for violating her rights to due process and free speech guaranteed under the Constitution.
The political firestorm was unrelenting and ultimately successful. Yet Lawtonās expression, even if abrasive, was fully protected by the First Amendment. Although a university has greater ability to regulate faculty membersā in-class treatment of students, that does not give it license to require civility, at the expense of core First Amendment rights, between every member of the community at all times. Faculty membersā First Amendment rights do not turn off whether students ā or any other member of the community ā find their exercise offensive. As FIREwrote at the time:
Legislators should certainly be concerned about ensuring that the campus community is a place where students are free from discriminatory harassment, regardless of their viewpoints. But legislators should also consider that students, including graduate students, enjoy full First Amendment protections at public universities. Lawtonās speech, including displaying her middle finger and using an allegedly derogatory term, is expressive conduct protected by the First Amendment. While the TPUSA students certainly had the right to recruit at UNL . . . counter-protesters also enjoy First Amendment protections while protesting in the open, outdoor areas of a public institution.
Yet public anger at protected speech ā however offensive others on or off campus may find it ā is not a defensible basis to take action against the speaker.
Given the gravity of wrongdoing on the part of UNL officials, the American Association of University Professors launched its own into the matter and arrived at the āinescapableā conclusion that āpolitical pressure played a significant roleā in Lawtonās dismissal. In June 2018, the AAUP voted to UNL for violating Lawtonās academic freedom and for denying her the due process typically afforded to employees.
Since terminating Lawtonās employment, UNL has taken the praiseworthy step of adopting a new Commitment to Free Expression and appears on track to the AAUPās censure. But it should take steps not only to mitigate the broader chilling effect, but to also restore the damage done to Lawtonās First Amendment rights.
Now in litigation, a favorable outcome for Lawton could have a lasting impact on the expressive rights of countless UNL students and faculty for years to come. Accordingly, FIREwill be watching this case closely.
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