Liberty in the Balance in North Carolina
by Charles Mitchell
February 1, 2006
Last month, we (along with the John William Pope Center for Higher Education Policy) released the landmark
Report on the State of the First Amendment in the University of North Carolina System. And not to no avail: not only did the Report make all the papers, but it’s already having a concrete impact on university policies. As
yesterday’s press release revealed, UNCG student Allison Jaynes, already a free-speech heroine for leading the charge against UNCG’s unconstitutional “free speech zones,” read the report and was appalled that her university had an unconstitutional “nondiscrimination”
policy that required political groups like hers to admit members of opposing political parties. Note the verb tense there: “required.” After Jaynes made the leader of the UNCG College Republicans aware of the policy and the two
protested it, UNCG political groups’ freedom of association has been
restored.
Not only that, but Jaynes’ crusade against the “free speech zones” is bearing fruit. The press release also notes that UNCG’s counsel
asked FIRE for advice on better speech policies, which we just
provided. Now the ball is in UNCG’s court. Will the school cease turning the vast majority of its campus into a censorship zone? Only time will tell, but we are pleased with recent developments and look forward to seeing the fever swamp of campus repression that is North Carolina disinfected.