Attorney General Jeff Sessions Addresses Free Speech on College Campuses at Georgetown Law

September 27, 2017

Attorney General Jeff Sessions spoke with Professor Randy Barnett, director of the Center for the Constitution, at Georgetown Law on September 26.

 

Georgetown Lawโ€™s Center for the Constitution hosted an event on September 26 with U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions, who made remarks on free speech on university campuses.

โ€œI know that the vast majority of youths like youโ€ฆneed no lecture on the dangers of government imposed group think,โ€ said Sessions, speaking in Hart Auditorium. โ€œBut we have seen a rash of incidentsโ€ฆof those students and professors unable or unwilling to defend their own beliefs in a public forum.”

“Unfortunatelyโ€ฆthese trends have been tolerated by administrators and shrugged off by other students,” he added. “So let us directly address the question: Why should we worry about free speech that may be in retreat [at] our universities?โ€

Sessions spoke before an audience that included Georgetown Law Professor Randy Barnett, director of the Center for the Constitution, students affiliated with the Center or in Barnettโ€™s constitutional law classes, and members of the media. The attorney general noted recent examples where students on college campuses were prevented from handing out copies of the Constitution, relegated to โ€œfree speech zonesโ€ or subject to university policies that silenced speech.

โ€œThe right of free speech does not exist only to protect the ideas upon which most of us agree at a given moment in time,โ€ he said. โ€œAs Justice Brandeis eloquently stated in 1927โ€ฆ the remedy to be applied is more speech, not enforced silence.โ€

Protecting free speech, Sessions said, does not mean condoning violence like we saw recently in Charlottesville. โ€œIndeed, I call upon universitiesโ€ฆto stand up against those who would silence free expression by violence or other means,โ€ he said. โ€œBut a mature society can tell the difference between violence and unpopular speech, and a truly free society stands up, speaks up for cherished rights precisely when it is most difficult to do so.โ€

Following Sessionsโ€™ remarks, the attorney general engaged in a conversation with Barnett, who asked questions submitted by students.

The attorney generalโ€™s remarks affirmed that we have a tradition of free speech in this country that goes beyond the First Amendment, Barnett said after the event. โ€œItโ€™s a culture of free speech that could be very well endangered if the majority in a given community can act even nonviolently to suppress the speech of a minority.โ€

Noah McCullough (Lโ€™20), a Bradley Fellow at the Center for the Constitution, said that the issue of free speech on college campuses has become more problematic in recent years. โ€œI thought it was interesting the way he framed the unique role that the First Amendment has played in American history,โ€ McCullough said of the attorney general. โ€œHe discussed how our constitutional right to free speech is fundamental to our republic, and that this fundamental right is part of what empowered people like Abraham Lincoln and Martin Luther King Jr. to shape this nation for the better.”

Protests

While the conversation took place, law students and faculty were outside of McDonough Hall with signs protesting Sessionsโ€™ visit (some students who attended also engaged in silent protests in the auditorium). Sessions said he respected the views of the protestors. โ€œWe will defend your views and the right to express them in appropriate and effective ways,โ€ he said.

Georgetown Law Dean William M. Treanor said that free speech in higher education is at the core of Georgetown Lawโ€™s academic mission.

โ€œGeorgetown Law is a place that takes ideas very seriously, and where people sharply disagree,โ€ he said. โ€œIโ€™ve heard from many faculty and students that they wanted to protest the actions of the Administration and the attorney general, and itโ€™s part of the mission of a great academic institution that they are able to express their views and engage in civil debate. As an academic institution, it is also important that we hear the attorney general express his ideas about free speech at the university.โ€

More than 100 Georgetown Law faculty and staff members protested the visit in writing, citing recent examples of โ€œgovernmental actions antithetical to freedom of speech and association for which Attorney General Sessions is either closely related or directly responsible.โ€ These include the NFL player protests and the prosecution of Desiree Fairooz for unlawful conduct.

โ€œAdhering to the First Amendment requires more than rhetoric,โ€ the statement reads. โ€œIt requires adherence through action, applied equally and equitably, by the head of the Department of Justice.โ€

The Administration โ€œhas shown time and time again that they sometimes can talk about free speech,โ€ asserted 3L student protester Ian Engdhal (Lโ€™18), who listened to the attorney general in a room outside Hart Auditorium. โ€œBut the day-to-day actions of the Administrationโ€ฆare inconsistent with free speech.โ€