Texas A&M Sued for Silencing Pro-Life Speaker Star Parker

State   |   Steven Ertelt   |   Jun 21, 2012   |   4:47PM   |   College Station, TX

Texas A&M University faces a lawsuit from the Alliance Defense Fund for attempting to stop a student conservative group bringing black pro-life speaker and political activist Star Parker to speak to students.

Texas Aggie Conservatives sought funding in December from the college, as other student groups do, to bring Parker to Texas A&M University. But college officials told the group months later, the request “cannot be approved for recognized organizations with a classification of social and political issues.”

Alliance Defense Fund attorneys filed a lawsuit Tuesday against Texas A&M University to challenge a policy that unconstitutionally denies funding to political and religious student organizations while providing funds to many other student groups.

“Student groups should not be singled out for discrimination because of their political or religious views,” said ADF Legal Counsel David Hacker. “Universities are supposed to be the marketplace of ideas, not a place where funding earmarked for student groups only goes to the ones the university prefers. ADF has successfully litigated similar cases because the Constitution requires that political and faith-based student organizations not be targeted for discrimination based upon their viewpoints.”

ADF says the student group Texas Aggie Conservatives submitted a funding request to offset costs for bringing a well-known speaker to campus to discuss poverty, race, and social justice issues in America from a political and religious perspective.

The university’s policy requires the group to abandon its First Amendment protected right to access funding but does not impose the same requirement on non-political and non-religious student organizations. The policy allows the university to allocate resources at its discretion, without any clearly defined criteria or standards. As a result, the university has the power to unconstitutionally favor the speech of some groups over others.

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Houston attorney G. Scott Fiddler, one of more than 2,100 attorneys in the ADF alliance, is serving as local counsel in the lawsuit, Texas Aggie Conservatives v. Loftin, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas.