Obama Campaign's Ejection of Student Raises Liberal Bias Questions
By Todd Starnes
An expert on the First Amendment said the Obama campaign's decision to
bar a University of Florida student from attending a Michelle Obama
speech smacked of viewpoint discrimination and raised questions about
liberal bias in academia.
Clay Calvert, the director of the Marion B. Brechner First Amendment
Project at the University of Florida, said the incident also raises
questions about the university's involvement.
"While the university might not have done anything legally wrong in
allowing Obama officials to discriminate against Republicans in terms of
attendance, certainly the incident will, in the eyes of some folks,
appear -- rightly or wrongly -- to be another indicator of liberal bias
in academia," Calvert told Fox News.
Matt Pesek, a student at the university, was denied entry to the speech
even though he had a ticket for the event. He told the website Campus
Reform that an Obama staffer pulled him out of line because he was
wearing a John McCain t-shirt.
The First Lady's speech, the Obama staffer allegedly told the student, was for "supporters only."
The revelation surfaced the same day President Obama appeared on CBS'
Late Show With David Letterman and said he represented the entire
country.
"If you want to be president, you have to work for everyone," he told Letterman.
Pesek said he offered to turn his shirt inside but was still denied entry.
University of Florida spokesperson Janine Sikes told Fox News that the
university had absolutely no control over the event. She said the Obama
campaign paid money to rent the facility and could determine who was
allowed inside.
However, that appears to contradict a stipulation in the contract between the university and the Obama campaign.
Fox News obtained a copy of that document which includes a non-discrimination clause.
"User shall not prohibit attendance at the Event by any person in
violation of law," the clause states. "In the event entrance to any
person is restricted by law, User shall provide written notice of such
restricted use to University's vice president for business affairs prior
to signing of the agreement."
Sikes said the campaign did not violate the law by denying the conservative student entry into the event.
Calvert said the incident raises troubling questions about the university's handling of the situation.
"My primary question and concern is whether university officials knew in
advance about the attendance discrimination policy that the Obama
officials implemented -- that people with pro-Republican garb that
didn't include anything offensive about the First Lady or the President
would be turned away," he said. "If officials new that in advance, then
it would be highly problematic. Second, if university officials did not
know in advance, then why didn't they know?"
Saturday, September 22, 2012
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