Posted on 12/04/2005 7:07:16 PM PST by rface
The future of military recruiting at Harvard Law School hangs in the balance as the Supreme Court prepares to hear oral arguments in the high-profile Solomon Amendment case Tuesday morning.
In case youve tuned out three years of protests and press conferences on campus, heres the issue in a nutshell: the Solomon Amendment, first passed by Congress in 1994, blocks federal funding for universities that limit military recruitment. It poses a dilemma for Harvard Law School, which requires all on-campus recruiters to sign a pledge saying they wont discriminate against gays and lesbians. The military, which bars gays and lesbians from serving openly under its dont ask, dont tell policy, refuses to sign the pledge.
For Harvard, the financial stakes are enormous. If the court upholds the Solomon Amendment, Harvard would lose over $400 million in federal funds each year unless it continues to exempt the military from the nondiscrimination pledge.
The case now before the Supreme Court, Rumsfeld v. FAIR, pits the secretary of defense and five other cabinet officials against the Forum for Academic and Institutional Rights, a nationwide coalition of 36 anti-Solomon Amendment law schools. Harvard is not a member of the coalition, but the University has filed a friend-of-the-court brief backing FAIR, and half of the Harvard Law faculty has submitted a separate brief in the case.
In a move that reflects the cases watershed significance, the Supreme Court announced last month that it will release audiotapes of tomorrows proceedings to news organizations immediately after oral arguments. The court has only arranged for the prompt release of audiotapes in a handful of landmark casesbeginning with Bush v. Gore in December 2000.
FAIR argues that the Solomon Amendment violates law schools freedom of association by forcing them to cooperate with military recruiters. The coalition also argues law schools have a right to be free from government-compelled speech, and that they cant be forced to disseminate the militarys recruiting messages.
But the justices could avoid the complicated First Amendment issues by deciding the case on other grounds, and Tuesdays oral arguments could provide an indication as to whether the high court will sidestep FAIRs controversial claims.
IS IT EVEN A CONSTITUTIONAL CASE?
The 40 Harvard Law professors who filed a friend-of-the-court brief in September dont think so. [T]here is no way of deciding the Solomon Amendments constitutionality, either way, without venturing into uncharted terrain, the professors wrote.
The text of the Solomon Amendment requires schools to give recruiters access to students at least equal in quality and scope to the access...that is provided to any other employer. Since all employers must comply with the nondiscrimination requirement, Harvard and other law schools can hold the military to this pledge without violating the Solomon Amendment, according to the professors brief.
But will FAIRs lead lawyer, E. Joshua Rosenkranz, present the Harvard professors argument?
The answer is almost certainly no, according to Laurence H. Tribe 62, the Loeb university professor at Harvard who was an organizer of the facultys brief and who has argued more than three-dozen cases before the high court.
FAIR has steadfastly resisted our effort to avoid the constitutional showdown it seeks by pursuing the statutory path, Tribe wrote in an e-mail.
According to a New York University constitutional scholar who is one of the named plaintiffs in the initial FAIR suit, Sylvia Law, the arguments presented in the Harvard brief are not as strong as those presented by FAIR.
The military and its supporters in Congress actually want more than equal treatment; they want special treatment, Law wrote in an e-mail. Were the Court to adopt the statutory reading advanced by the Harvard brief, we can be pretty confident that Congress will quickly change the words.
But the Harvard professors brief could still sway the justiceseven if FAIR doesnt raise the point. The dean of George Mason University School of Law and a prominent Solomon Amendment supporter, Daniel D. Polsby, wrote in an e-mail, I would not be surprised if the Dellinger brief came up at oral argument. (The lead counsel on the Harvard faculty brief is actually a Duke University professor, Walter E. Dellinger III, who served as the Justice Departments top lawyer before the high court under President Clinton.)
The Harvard professors are bound to hold some sway with the justices. After all, six of the current justices attended law school hereincluding Chief Justice John G. Roberts, Jr. 76, who once took Tribes constitutional law class.
IS THIS A NATIONAL SECURITY CASE?
Meanwhile, the governments lawyers will contend that the Solomon Amendment is necessary in order to recruit the most talented men and women into the armed services, as they argued in a brief filed this past July.
The court historically has granted extra deference to the military. And according to Polsby, the stipulations of the Solomon Amendment are far less onerous than, say, the military draft.
But according to a September brief from FAIR, the courts traditionally defer to the military only on complex, subtle, and professional decisions regarding issues such as strategy and training. By contrast, a court of nine law school graduates is perfectly competent to decide whether the military needs campus access in order to attract the attention of brilliant young lawyers. FAIR will argue that the Solomon Amendment is unnecessary for that purpose.
Government attorneys have not offered a speck of evidence that on-campus law school recruiting helps them at all, according to Law, the NYU scholar.
But government lawyers could cite a friend-of-the-court brief filed by two former defense secretaries, four admirals, and 20 generalsincluding former presidential candidate Wesley K. Clark and two former chairmen of the Joint Chiefs of Stafftestifying that the Solomon Amendment is essential to the militarys mission.
The daily news about the militarys difficulty in recruiting does not create a good atmosphere for us, Law acknowledged.
Law and the other plaintiffs hope thatrather than deciding the case on statutory or national security groundsthe justices tackle FAIRs innovative First Amendment arguments head-on.
But many legal experts fear that if FAIR wins a constitutional showdown, the high court might also scrap other laws that place conditions on schools that take federal fundssuch as the 1964 Title VI statute barring racial discrimination, and the 1972 Title IX law against sex bias.
Among Harvard law professors, the first fear is that FAIR might loseand military recruitment will continue.
The secondand perhaps more dauntingfear is that FAIR might actually win.
The next installment in The Crimsons two-part Rumsfeld v. FAIR preview will explore the far-reaching ramifications of FAIRs First Amendment arguments.
Staff writer Daniel J. Hemel can be reached at hemel@fas.harvard.edu.
I would take them at their word. They prefer gays to our military. Fair enough. Not taking fed money has nothing to do with Freedom of Speach or Association.
I'm not really sure what the "Ivy League" stands for anymore, it seems to be sliding and sliding. Another 20 years it will just mean "weird leftist propagandist".
Harvard has already done plenty of damage to their reputation by knuckling under to feminists rather than defend the truth of male intellectual superiority (at the far end of the performance scale - not fishing for an argument girls - it is beyond discussion).
Now they want to knuckle to gays. What exactly do they stand for?
This should be a slam dunk. Harvard can do whatever they want, however they are not entitled to Federal funds if they act contrary to Government policy. Not getting Federal funds doesn't restrict your freedom of speech. Harvard simply has the opportunity to put its money where it's values are.
Don't recruiters have any 1st amendment rights?
Its not the gay pledge that is the problem.The CIA doesn't want military recruiters on their turf. Harvard is the CIA's frat house.
Let's not forget their recent attempts to install "speech codes."
Not that I think about it, it's hilarious that they're trying this stunt. Not too long ago their adminstration was arguing that they should be able to punish those who used "incendiary and hateful speech."
So there you go. Now Harvard is trying to say that it should still be entitled to government money based on their right to free speech.
In other words, freedom of speech only applies when the right thing is said, namely, how Harvard decides to define it for the day.
http://archives.cnn.com/2002/EDUCATION/11/24/harvard.speech.ap/
We all know that their real agenda is to have the US be defeated in the War on terrorism.
Priceless
It the colleges win versus the Secretary of Defense!!! then you all can start the countdown of the return of Jesus Christ--because the World has gone to HELL in a hand basket.
I am not a lawyer, but I am telling you----when the Military loses this fight, then end the discussion of what a free country we are.
End of soapbox.
If private businesses can recruit on campus there is no reason why the military can't. I've made a career of the military and it has been wonderful. If the students don't want the military around then why don't they just not talk to the recruiters? Why ban recruiters when there are some who want to join. After all a big chunk of student loans can be paid off by Uncle Sam.
It's obvious for us, but not for the commies from Harvard...
I don't know why the court even took this case. The law is well settled that nobody is entitled to federal funding of abortions or education, i.e. if you don't register for the draft you don't get a student loan.
My guess is that there are too many Harvard and Yale grads clerking this year.
For a more balanced article, see:
http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/1206/p03s01-usju.html
I really don't think they know how far they have fallen. It's really a shame.
What schools are there to replace these homes of lunacy?
I was never comfortable there myself - as an engineer in a school with no engineers, but a bunch of full of themselves liberal arts types - but still there was some sense that they were respectable, even if soft. Now they aren't respectable, and other people will know.
What does it mean now when someone says "I went to Harvard"? Where can smart kids go to get an education, rather than an indoctrination?
For those students who wish to speak with a recruiter, it's not fair to make them go somewhere ELSE to talk to them. They aren't there to draft.
Gag orders need to be issued on this... schools, private or not, must learn to deal with it.
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