Viewpoint Discrimination in Hiring at UVa – “Presumptively Unconstitutional”

University of Virginia Counsel James Iler

by James C. Sherlock

The University of Virginia engages today in in-your-face viewpoint discrimination in hiring.

The counterfactually named University of Virginia Office for Equal Opportunity and Civil Rights (EOCR) declares itself responsible for:

Recruitment and Hiring: facilitating and monitoring faculty and staff recruitment and hiring and training faculty and staff regarding applicable laws and best practices for search and hiring processes.

Indeed.

OECR has turned viewpoint discrimination into a science by considering contributions to inclusive excellence” in hiring. Do yourself a favor. Open that page and click to open each section.

OECR helpfully offers hiring officials and search committees phrases as “examples of what could be added” to job applications at UVa.

[Faculty] “Candidates should also describe how their courses, research, and/or service have helped, or will help, students to develop intercultural competencies or otherwise advance excellence through diversity, equity, and inclusion within the institution.”

Those requirements are not viewpoint neutral because diversity, equity and inclusion as practiced at the University of Virginia are not viewpoint neutral. The DEI bureaucracy, including OECR, there is authoritarian, and proud of it.

OECR actively tries to screen out applicants who may disagree with the University’s thought police approach to DEI. In that pursuit, they don’t even just require commitment to DEI going forward.

The applicant must demonstrate previous activity.

That makes UVa a government a DEI spoils/patronage system, defined as a practice to reward active supporters by appointment to government posts.

If only the University had a legal department.

The University has reason to know better.

In Rosenberger v. Rectors and Visitors of the University of Virginia (1995), the Supreme Court declared: “When the government targets not subject matter but particular views taken by speakers on a subject, the violation of the First Amendment is all the more blatant. Viewpoint discrimination is thus an egregious form of content discrimination. The government must abstain from regulating speech when the specific motivating ideology or the opinion or perspective of the speaker is the rationale for the restriction.” (emphasis added)

“All the more blatant” indeed.

In R.A.V. vs. City of St. Paul, a cross-burning case, the Court found that the city

“has proscribed fighting words of whatever manner that communicate messages of racial, gender, or religious intolerance. Selectivity of this sort creates the possibility that the city is seeking to handicap the expression of particular ideas. That possibility would alone be enough to render the ordinance presumptively invalid, but St. Paul’s comments and concessions in this case elevate the possibility to a certainty.”

“The Court concluded, “Let there be no mistake about our belief that burning a cross in someone’s front yard is reprehensible. But St. Paul has sufficient means at its disposal to prevent such behavior without adding the First Amendment to the fire.”

I suspect the Supreme Court would not be amused to a second trip into its docket by the University on the same violation.

I suspect also that any federal district court could quickly sort it out based on ample precedent.

Take a minute to read the guide for Evaluating (prospective employee) Statements on Contributions to Inclusive Excellence. That offers an unvarnished political litmus test.

The First Amendment protects against viewpoint discrimination in government employment.  In Duda v. Elder, 10th Cir., No. 20-1416 (July 27, 2021), the 10th Circuit commented:

the sheriff engaged in viewpoint discrimination—”an egregious form of content discrimination that occurs when the specific motivating ideology or the opinion or perspective of the speaker is the rationale for the restriction” and that violates the core of the First Amendment.

From the First Amendment Encyclopedia of the Free Speech center comes the most direct definition and discussion of the illegality of viewpoint discrimination

“Viewpoint discrimination is a form of content discrimination particularly disfavored by the courts. When the government engages in content discrimination, it is restricting speech on a given subject matter. When it engages in viewpoint discrimination, it is singling out a particular opinion or perspective on that subject matter for treatment unlike that given to other viewpoints.

For example, if an ordinance banned all speech on the Iraq War, it would be a content-based regulation. But if the ordinance banned only speech that criticized the war, it would be a viewpoint-based regulation.

Because the government is essentially taking sides in a debate when it engages in viewpoint discrimination, the Supreme Court has held viewpoint-based restrictions to be especially offensive to the First Amendment. Such restrictions are treated as presumptively unconstitutional. (emphasis added)

UVa does not tolerate speech that criticizes its DEI bureaucracy, and actively harasses employees who do not kiss its ring. Ask Professor Lomasky.

The University Counsel and all Associate University Counsel are appointed by the Attorney General of Virginia, Jason Miyares. I will presume that both Governor Youngkin and General Miyares are unaware of UVa’s current hiring practices.

I cannot say the same for the Board of Visitors, University President James Ryan or University Counsel Clifton Iler.

Ryan actively supports the viewpoint discrimination on display in hiring. We are left to wonder whether the Board of Visitors knows it has gone this far.

But Iler is a employed for the sole and exclusive representation of the University.

“The Office of the University Counsel represents the Rector and Visitors of the University of Virginia in all legal and regulatory matters and provides advice and counsel to the Board of Visitors, the President, executive officers, and other administrators, faculty, and staff in their official capacities.”

We wonder whether Iler is prepared to go to court to represent the University to defend its “presumptively unconstitutional” hiring practices.

I suspect we will find out soon enough.

This column has been republished with permission from Bacon’s Rebellion.

5 1 vote
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest

13 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
walter smith
walter smith
1 year ago

I think I have filed 16 complaints to EOCR about this.
Crickets.
I got one denial on a mostly jurisdictional dodge. When I challenged that and followed up – numerous times – (cue Simon and Garfunkel – sounds of silence)

Wahoo'74
Wahoo'74
1 year ago
Reply to  walter smith

Hello darkness my old friend………

James B Newman
James B Newman
1 year ago

Thanks, Jim for making us aware of this insanity. Hopefully, this will end sooner rather than later. Sadly even with the mighty efforts of Bert Ellis, little will change until the Governor can appoint another round of board members and the current batch of progressives are in the minority. It is so sad that this is happening.

Fred Larmore
Fred Larmore
1 year ago

Which is why I discourage anyone from going to the school, have very little respect for the vast majority of recent graduates, and could not care less about their sports teams. The woke administration and woke faculty need to be driven out of this once respected institution.

John Hunt, MD
1 year ago
Reply to  Fred Larmore

unfortunately, almost all colleges are the same. Some are worse. I suppose there is Hillsdale that is still worthwhile.. Rest? Indoctrination centers.

The Bootstrap Kid
The Bootstrap Kid
1 year ago
Reply to  John Hunt, MD

Although I have never been on the Hillsdale grounds, it is the only school that I give money to. UVA law and my undergraduate University will probably never receive one dime of my money.

Legacy Grad
Legacy Grad
1 year ago

Are the words of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. considered passe’ or heretical by these DEI Commissars? I’d like to hear what they have to say about character not color.

John Buckley
John Buckley
1 year ago

Hope Attorney General Miyares will step in. Time to fight.

Wahoo'74
Wahoo'74
1 year ago

Superb article on all points. Thank you. It should be an interesting 24 months as the BOV morphs into a Youngkin appointee dominated voting majority.

Will Garner
Will Garner
1 year ago

Keep the pressure and information coming. Thanks for your time and effort. This is an important fight for the future of our schools and nation.

Walter smith
Walter smith
1 year ago

You need to understand that racial discrimination is also occurring in admissions, and very skillfully obscured. I have analyzed the Class of 2026 statistics in depth, and have reached an impasse where UVA won’t provide any more info, whether asking as a citizen/alum/parent or through FOIA.
Besides the raw numbers of Blacks having a 31% offer rate down to Whites having a 17% offer rate, the numbers are even more distorted when you layer on SAT scores (which is why UVA has gone SAT optional!)
The sleight of hand appears to be done through something from College Board called “Landscape.” Landscape used to be called the Adversity Index, but that name was too descriptive.
In the initial screening of the 50000 applications there is some Landscape score applied for school and neighborhood. This is where UVA has clammed up. I wish to run the same hypothetical student through different schools and different neighborhoods. UVA refuses.
So I am left to read what College Board describes and then theorize. It appears that the student is then graded only against that school – meaning a mediocre applicant overall but out of a universe of a horrible school gets a high grade, while an applicant with higher credentials but in the middle of the pack at an excellent school gets a lower score. The neighborhood appears to be inversely related (remember, it used to be the “adversity” index). To put this in Richmond perspective, Windsor Farms or Cherokee Road would score lower than some of the less glamorous parts of the City and Counties. Finally, and I have to think this is a LIE, UVA Admissions insists there is no objective score required in the first screening. How is that possible with 50000 applications?
I think this has to be for legal reasons, the same way that Landscape obscures the intended discrimination. Under the horrible Michigan cases where explicit quota was bad but obscure discrimination was good, I think UVA insists there is no score so the process remains obscure. I think they whisper the number in the ear of the reviewers and make them sign a NDA to keep it secret.
Nonetheless, that is the reality of UVA Admissions under the Great and Good Jim Ryan.

John Hunt, MD
1 year ago
Hal Juren
Hal Juren
1 year ago

I assume that this column has been copied to the Governor, Attorney General Miyares, and University Counsel Iler. It may be that litigation is the only practical way of informing all alumni and the general public of what is going on. I’m assuming that new members of the BOV seeking detailed information are being stonewalled, but in litigation they would be valuable witnesses and aids to honest discovery responses by the University. When I represented a divided governmental body, having one or more members opposed to the majority position in litigation was a nightmare.