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Apr 16th, 2021 4 min read
COMMENTARY BY
Legal Fellow, Meese Center
Sarah Parshall Perry is a legal fellow for the Edwin Meese III Center for Legal and Judicial Studies at The Heritage Foundation. Cleland’s ruling flipped the script. In fact, it was InterVarsity that had been discriminated against by Wayne State, whose actions were “obviously odious to the Constitution.” SDI Productions / Getty Images
Key Takeaways
Campus groups, students, and professors who aren’t interested in kowtowing to groupthink have had a run of good luck lately in federal courts.
InterVarsity’s constitution allows all students to join the group as members, but leadership positions are limited to those who agree with its statement of faith.
Federal Court Issues Win for Campus Religious Group at Wayne State dailysignal.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from dailysignal.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The fight for campus access for faith-based student groups scored another legal victory this week.
A district court judge ruled on Monday that Wayne State University violated the First Amendment with a 2017 decision that temporarily denied InterVarsity Christian Fellowship its status as a student group over the chapter’s requirement that its leaders be Christian.
Wayne State’s nondiscrimination policy, according the 83-page opinion by Robert Cleland, “violated plaintiffs’ rights to internal management, free speech, freedom of association, freedom of assembly, and free exercise as a matter of law.”
The judge ruled that the First Amendment protects religious organizations’ rights to select their own ministers, and that the InterVarsity chapter’s student leaders qualified as ministers. While InterVarsity is open to all students, it asks leaders to sign a statement of faith.