Genevieve Lakier
@genevievelakier.bsky.social
13K followers 500 following 340 posts
Law professor at UChicago Law. Thinks a lot about freedom of speech. Curious about this platform.
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genevievelakier.bsky.social
Excellent post by @evelyndouek.bsky.social about the most important doctrinal move made by the Court in the Rubio case: to take seriously the chilling of speech as a First A injury. It should not be hard to understand why recognizing this matters so much to all of us RIGHT NOW.
evelyndouek.bsky.social
I wrote about an under-appreciated aspect of AAUP v. Rubio. It is the first case of the Trump Era to explicitly identify and reject the primary and most pernicious form of speech suppression employed by this Administration: Chill.

balkin.blogspot.com/2025/10/aaup...
Balkinization: AAUP v. Rubio and the Big Chill
A group blog on constitutional law, theory, and politics
balkin.blogspot.com
Reposted by Genevieve Lakier
carolinemalacorbin.bsky.social
Hello!

I am your friendly neighborhood First Amendment professor here to provide some background on Chiles v. Salazar, to be argued in Supreme Court this morning.

At issue is whether Colorado can ban licensed therapists from inflicting the discredited practice of “conversion therapy” on minors
genevievelakier.bsky.social
Your post is excellent but I don't want administrators to read it and think that they need do nothing to defend themselves against what may (or may not!) be a very serious threat to their institutions
genevievelakier.bsky.social
I hope you are right! You are obv right that now is the time to put as much pressure as possible on red state private schools to not sign. But vagueness is itself a 1A problem, bc of its chilling effects, so litigation is a viable parallel track that schools can and I think should explore.
genevievelakier.bsky.social
I think universities should instead SUE the gov for what is a blatantly unconstitutional art of the deal. And they should start prepping their lawsuit now, before the Compact goes into effect.
genevievelakier.bsky.social
I worry however that it underplays the partisan dynamics at work here. If all (public) schools in red states are forced to sign on to the Compact, and therefore get priority in federal funds, will schools in blue states feel free to resist? Do unis really have the capacity to simply...do nothing?
genevievelakier.bsky.social
Excellent post--and in its own way remarkably hopeful about the unlikeliness of the Compact to succeed in its effort to control American higher education...
fishkin.bsky.social
I thought I'd put the administration's proposed "compact" with universities in context, so I wrote the blog post below.

It's especially for journalists covering this story!

Many details about how the compact itself works and why the administration has retreated to this strategy.
Balkinization: The Art of Replacing the Law with the Deal
A group blog on constitutional law, theory, and politics
balkin.blogspot.com
genevievelakier.bsky.social
I don't think that it does. First, Finley treats the conditionality of the grants as in fact a serious 1A prob--which is why the majority works so hard to interpret the conditions narrowly. As do all the post-Finley cases, including Open Society.
genevievelakier.bsky.social
Finley is a pretty bad opinion I think, but the majority upholds the restrictions only after finding them to be both advisory and not likely to result in targeted viewpoint discrimination. Pretty different to the situation here!!
genevievelakier.bsky.social
The requirement of institutional neutrality in particular makes the parallel to the earlier unconstitutional conditions case even closer than I thought! Here too speakers are being asked to not editorialize in order to receive funds from the gov.....
Reposted by Genevieve Lakier
rezekjoe.bsky.social
University presidents it’s time for a united front. I mean, it’s past time. What are you going to do.
From the NYT: “The White House on Wednesday sent letters to nine of the nation's top public and private universities, urging campus leaders to pledge support for President Trump's political agenda to help ensure access to federal research funds.”
genevievelakier.bsky.social
Hence, I dearly hope that @aceducation.bsky.social and the institutions it represents do not just sign on the dotted line to a “compact” that they should fight tooth and nail against—and that the constitution likely protects them against. Do they have the political courage to do so though? End.
genevievelakier.bsky.social
It is continuing to try--as it has for the entire year--to leverage its power of the purse to control American higher ed and by proxy the ideas that students around the country are exposed to. In principle, the 1A limits its ability to do so--but only if those protected by it stand on their rights.
genevievelakier.bsky.social
Actually universities receive much STRONGER First A protection than broadcasters under contemporary precedents. And yet the admin is asking them to forego a core 1A right, just as the govt attempted to do in the radio case in order to receive federal funding
genevievelakier.bsky.social
Indeed, the facts are quite similar to a case in which SCOTUS unanimously found the gov violated the doctrine when it prohibited radio stations that received federal funds from “editorializing”—for similar lets not create a less partisan public sphere reasons

supreme.justia.com/cases/federa...
FCC v. League of Women Voters, 468 U.S. 364 (1984)
FCC v. League of Women Voters
supreme.justia.com
genevievelakier.bsky.social
Even if institutions that don’t agree merely receive limited access to federal funds, it is hard to see how this is NOT an unconstitutional condition. They would still be effectively denied benefits bc they refused to waive their constitutionally protected right to academic freedom
genevievelakier.bsky.social
I haven’t been able to access the document itself—if someone can point me to a copy I would be grateful—but the quoted language suggests that universities that do not comply with these demands will, in effect, not be eligible for federal benefits at all
genevievelakier.bsky.social
But the “compact” the admin is asking universities to sign demands that they change how they regulate speech on campus—including by abolishing departments that “belittle… conservative ideas” ????? in order to continue to receive federal funds
Quotes text from the WSJ article that says as much
genevievelakier.bsky.social
The doctrine of unconstitutional conditions says that govt actors cannot condition access to federal benefits on their agreement to waive their constitutional rights.
genevievelakier.bsky.social
The admin’s efforts to get universities to agree to a list of demands in exchange for preferential access to federal funding isn’t just “troubling” as Ted Mitchell, prez of the @aceducation.bsky.social says in this article; it looks blatantly unconstitutional.🧵
www.wsj.com/us-news/educ...
www.wsj.com
genevievelakier.bsky.social
The takeaway: the Roberts Court has been enabling speech repressive govt action for a long time now, not just this year. Hopefully this wil lbe a spur for the FIfth Circuit to act to protect academic freedom in Texas unis... but I'm not holding my breath.
genevievelakier.bsky.social
But the Fifth Circuit has not carved out an exception for govt workers who are researchers or teachers. It should! But AFAIK as of now in Texas, it is not at all clear that profs at Texas Tech have any 1A rights when they research or teach