https://www.juancole.com/2021/06/floridas-political-professors.html

Democratic lawmakers and educators nationwide are expressing alarm over
legislation signed this week by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis which is
ostensibly aimed at ensuring college students and educators in the state
feel permitted to express a variety of political views—and which critics
say could end up punishing professors whose opinions don’t line up with
those of the state’s right-wing leaders.

DeSantis on Tuesday signed House Bill 233
<https://www.flsenate.gov/Session/Bill/2021/233> into law, requiring more
than three dozen public colleges and universities in Florida to conduct
yearly surveys of their students’ and faculty members’ beliefs to determine
the institutions’ levels of “intellectual freedom and viewpoint diversity.”

The state university system and board of education will be tasked with
creating the surveys, which will ask whether campus community members “feel
free to express their beliefs and viewpoints.”

“[Faculty members] with controversial views, be they liberal or
conservative, may find themselves increasingly vulnerable to political or
ideological pressure, including from legislation like this.” —AAUP

The law is vague regarding how state authorities can proceed if a
university is found to be insufficiently welcoming to certain viewpoints;
state Rep. Spencer Roach, a Republican who sponsored the bill in the House,
told
<https://www.chronicle.com/article/florida-law-will-require-public-colleges-to-survey-for-intellectual-freedom-and-viewpoint-diversity>
 the *Chronicle of Higher Education *the survey results “could shape
whatever action a university president may want to take or whatever action
a future legislative body may want to take.”

At a news conference on Tuesday, DeSantis said his government could
intervene if it finds universities to be “hotbeds for stale
ideology”—without specifying what that ideology might be—and suggesting
funding cuts could ensue.

“That’s not worth tax dollars and not something we’re going to be
supporting moving forward,” the governor said
<https://www.washingtonpost.com/education/2021/06/24/florida-intellectual-freedom-law-mandates-viewpoint-surveys/?utm_campaign=wp_main&amp;utm_source=twitter&amp;utm_medium=social>
.

The law does not ensure that surveys will be taken anonymously, raising
concerns that faculty members could also face retaliation if they express
progressive views or share that they would not welcome certain
viewpoints—for example, discriminatory or abusive comments directed at a
student—in their classrooms.

Under the law, students will also be permitted to record professors without
their consent “in connection with a complaint,” according to
<https://www.chronicle.com/article/florida-law-will-require-public-colleges-to-survey-for-intellectual-freedom-and-viewpoint-diversity>
 the *Chronicle.*

The measure “sounds like fascism to me!” tweeted Democratic state Rep. Anna
V. Eskamani.

The legislation bars universities from “shielding” community members from
views that they “may find uncomfortable, unwelcome, disagreeable, or
offensive,” noted the American Association of University Professors (AAUP).

“But does this mean that a professor could be barred from enforcing
respectful and appropriate classroom conduct by students?” the group asked.

AAUP senior program officer Anita Levy called
<https://www.chronicle.com/article/florida-law-will-require-public-colleges-to-survey-for-intellectual-freedom-and-viewpoint-diversity>
the
law “a solution in search of a problem,” while a union representing 20,000
college instructors in Florida questioned state Republicans’ claims that
the public university system is currently chilling free speech rights in
classrooms.

The United Faculty of Florida has seen no rise in complaints against
university instructors regarding their attitudes toward left-leaning
viewpoints versus conservative opinions, or vice versa, union president
Karen Morian told
<https://www.chronicle.com/article/florida-law-will-require-public-colleges-to-survey-for-intellectual-freedom-and-viewpoint-diversity>
 the *Chronicle*.

The AAUP pointed out that the University of Florida poured hundreds of
thousands of dollars into campus safety measures in 2017 when Richard
Spencer, a white nationalist, spoke at the school.

“Such expression is already protected by the First Amendment, as the
state’s universities have recognized,” the organization said.

If DeSantis and state Republican legislators were truly concerned about
ensuring “viewpoint diversity” on college campuses, the AAUP said, they
would not threaten funding cuts but would instead “consider increasing
funding for higher education so that a larger proportion of the faculty
might be offered the prospect of tenure, which protects a faculty member’s
right to free expression.”

“As it is, with nearly three-fourths of all U.S. faculty on short-term
contingent contracts, often subject to arbitrary non-renewal, those with
controversial views, be they liberal or conservative, may find themselves
increasingly vulnerable to political or ideological pressure, including
from legislation like this,” the group said.


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