Idaho Educators File Lawsuit Challenging State Law Censoring Professors’ Speech on Abortion

The law violates educators’ First Amendment right to academic speech by criminalizing teaching and scholarship on pro-abortion viewpoints at Idaho’s public universities.

Affiliate: ϰſ of Idaho
August 8, 2023 1:00 pm

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BOISE, Idaho – Six Idaho professors and two teachers’ unions filed a lawsuit today in the U.S. District Court for the District of Idaho challenging the state’s No Public Funds for Abortion Act (NPFAA), a law that makes it a crime to use public funds to promote or counsel in favor of abortion. This law censors teaching, discussion, and scholarship about abortion at Idaho’s public universities, effectively stripping professors of their First Amendment right to academic speech. The plaintiffs are represented by the ϰſ, the ϰſ of Idaho, Professor Seth Kreimer, and the law firm Strindberg Scholnick Birch Hallam Harstad Thorne.

The lawsuit argues that the NPFAA violates the First Amendment rights of professors across Idaho’s public universities by broadly and prospectively criminalizing all academic speech that might express a viewpoint favorable to abortion. It also argues that the law is unconstitutionally vague, forcing individuals to guess at what speech it prohibits, in violation of the 14th Amendment’s Due Process Clause. In particular, the law does not define the terms “promote” or “counsel in favor of.” Indeed, Idaho’s public universities are uncertain about where the NPFAA draws the line between criminal and permissible speech. As one university wrote to its staff, the NPFAA is “vague in many respects which creates uncertainty as to the extent of the law.”

“The NPFAA represents an unprecedented and dangerous attack on speech about abortion, part of the unrelenting assault on reproductive health care in the wake of the overturning of Roe. Our clients have been forced to censor their teaching and scholarship about abortion or risk imprisonment, loss of livelihood, and financial ruin,” said Scarlet Kim, senior staff attorney with the ϰſ Speech, Privacy, and Technology Project. “This impossible choice is both outrageous and unconstitutional, and runs fundamentally counter to the Supreme Court’s declaration over 50 years ago that imposing ‘any straight jacket upon the intellectual leaders in our colleges’ would ‘imperil’ the very ‘future of our nation.’”

The NPFAA is one of the latest actions in Idaho to limit reproductive health care and abortion — and information about essential care — in the wake of Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, which overturned Roe v. Wade. The Dobbs ruling allowed Idaho’s ban on abortion to go into effect, prohibiting virtually all abortion care. Since then, the Idaho attorney general has issued a legal opinion claiming that health care providers cannot refer patients out of state for abortion care under Idaho’s ban — a threat recently blocked by a federal court for violating the free speech rights of physicians to make appropriate medical referrals.

“It's vital for Idaho's public universities to have autonomy in fostering vibrant debate on their campuses, free from government interference,” said Leo Morales, executive director of the ϰſ of Idaho. “However, Idaho's abortion censorship law directly undermines that autonomy, attempting to restrict educators’ free speech and stoke fear of retaliation for such speech in our state. This unconstitutional interference with the First Amendment must be challenged, and rejected, to protect the fundamental rights of educators and students across Gem State university campuses.”

The professors and teachers’ unions are asking the court to declare the law unconstitutional under the First and 14th Amendments and are urging the court to issue a preliminary injunction that would immediately bar enforcement of the act and allow students and educators to have full and open discussions around abortion and reproductive rights in the classroom.

“For university employees and students the NPFAA is a minefield. It creates a set of poorly-defined concepts and perspectives that must be avoided if we are to protect ourselves from draconian penalties,” said Martin Orr, president of the Idaho Federation of Teachers. “This makes reasoned discussion impossible. How can we teach about U.S. society without addressing abortion – one of the defining cultural and political issues of the day? Our educators and students deserve better.”

The ϰſ has advocated against similar attempts across the country to stifle speech and infringe on the free speech rights of people related to abortion in the aftermath of the Dobbs decision. These include politicians’ efforts to require internet providers to block websites that provide information on abortion and to censor physicians from advising their patients on where to obtain abortion legally. The NPFAA is an integral part of this censorship wave; indeed, it has already resulted in one Idaho public university pulling art about reproductive health care from a planned exhibit. Last week, the ϰſ and ϰſ of Alabama filed a lawsuit to prevent the Alabama attorney general and district attorneys throughout the state from prosecuting health care providers who give medical advice and support to Alabamians seeking to access legal out-of-state abortion care after the attorney general to bring felony charges against health care providers who provide such assistance.


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