Campus monoculture targeted with ban on political loyalty tests in state school oaths and pledges

by | Mar 8, 2023



  • A bill has been proposed in Florida to prevent colleges and universities from requiring or soliciting a “political loyalty test” as a condition for admission, employment, or promotion within the institution.
  • The bill defines “political loyalty tests” as the requirement to identify a commitment to or make a statement of personal belief in any ideology or movement that promotes the differential treatment of a person or group based on partisan, political, or ideological beliefs.
  • The bill’s sponsor, State Rep. Sencer Roach, says several schools in Florida require students to agree to pledges or oaths that include ideologically-loaded statements.

TALLAHASSEE — A proposal that seeks to prevent Florida colleges and universities from requiring people to complete “political loyalty” tests began moving in the state House Tuesday, as the bill’s sponsor pointed to what he called a “monoculture” on campuses.

The House Postsecondary Education & Workforce Subcommittee advanced the measure (HB 931) in a 12-5 vote along party lines on the opening day of the 2023 legislative session.

Under the bill, schools would not be allowed to require or “solicit a person to complete a political loyalty test as a condition of employment or admission into, or promotion within, such institution.”

Institutions also would be barred from giving people preferential treatment based on factors such as partisan, political or ideological beliefs.

The measure defines political loyalty tests, in part, as “compelling, requiring, or soliciting a person to identify commitment to or to make a statement of personal belief in” any “ideology or movement that promotes the differential treatment of a person” or group.

Rep. Lindsay Cross, D-St. Petersburg, questioned whether Florida’s colleges and universities currently have a requirement that people on campus be subjected to any kind of political loyalty tests.

Rep. Spencer Roach, a North Fort Myers Republican who sponsored the bill, pointed to things such as diversity, equity and inclusion statements.

A House staff analysis of the measure included an example of a DEI statement used by the University of Florida College of Medicine. The analysis also said the medical school incorporated diversity-related principles into its student ethics code.

“UFCOM (UF College of Medicine) includes ‘anti-racist’ principles into its student code of ethics, requiring all students to adopt these principles as a requirement of attending the institution,” the analysis said.

Roach, who said the bill is a continuation of efforts to address what he called “a monoculture on college campuses,” argued that most state universities use similar statements.

“I think the majority of our universities in Florida, probably 100 percent of them, have some kind of required test, which I would consider compelled speech, that would require or solicit a person to identify, make a commitment to, a statement of personal belief in support of these DEI (diversity, equity and inclusion) sort of mission statements,” Roach told the panel.

The bill comes as Gov. Ron DeSantis spearheads a broader effort to target diversity, equity and inclusion, or DEI, initiatives in higher-education. The governor earlier this year appointed six conservative allies to the New College of Florida Board of Trustees — which led to the revamped board last month voting to scrap its Office of Outreach and Inclusive Excellence.

DeSantis’ administration also in January required the state’s colleges and universities to report how much money the institutions spend on diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives. Schools in the university system, for example, reported collectively about $34.5 million in such expenditures.

Speaking to reporters after delivering his State of the State speech on Tuesday, the governor took aim at “ideology” in higher-education.

“We want the mission to not be about the social engineering, to not be about ideology. We want the mission to be about rigor, pursuit of truth, and we want students to have a foundation so they can think for themselves,” DeSantis said.

Another part of the House bill deals with institutions inviting speakers to campuses. The proposal would direct the state university system’s Board of Governors to create and fund an “Office of Public Policy Events.”

The office would be required to have satellite offices at each of the state’s 12 universities and would be tasked with organizing, publicizing and staging “a substantial number of debates, group forums, and individual lectures” on campuses. The events would have to “address, from multiple, divergent, and opposing perspectives, an extensive range of public policy issues widely discussed and debated in society at large.”

Rep. Yvonne Hinson, D-Gainesville, asked why such changes are needed.

“Currently, I believe, student government and student activities are allowed to bring in speakers of diverse points of view,” Hinson said. “Why do we need to change that?”

“I would posit that they’re certainly allowed to, but that’s not happening to the extent that I think it should happen,” Roach replied.

The measure also would require that, “when necessary,” the newly created office provide per diem and travel reimbursement funds for speakers who are not within the state university community.

The bill approved Monday also would push back the publishing date for required “intellectual freedom and viewpoint diversity” surveys given to employees and students in the state’s higher-education system. Florida lawmakers mandated the surveys, now required to be published on Sept. 1, in legislation passed and signed by DeSantis in 2021. Under Roach’s proposal, the survey results would be published on Dec. 31, beginning in 2024.

A similar Senate bill (SB 958) has not received a committee hearing yet.

3 Comments

  1. Anonymous

    It sounds like Roach is just trying to waste more tax dollars by creating another unnecessary department. Aren’t we supposed to be fiscally conservative, too?

  2. Anonymous

    help me understand how this is ok? The State (via GOP & DeSantis) required employees in the State U system (also surveyed students, but didn’t require it) in Fall ’22 to complete a survey on their POLITICAL IDEOLOGY. And this bill – oh by the way – delays publishing results from Sept 1 23 to Dec 31 2024?
    What will they be doing with the results of the survey during that time? Why on earth do you need that much time?
    This Gov is an authoritarian – he shows it on a consistent basis by using the State as a cudgel.
    “The bill approved Monday also would push back the publishing date for required “intellectual freedom and viewpoint diversity” surveys given to employees and students in the state’s higher-education system. Florida lawmakers mandated the surveys, now required to be published on Sept. 1, in legislation passed and signed by DeSantis in 2021. Under Roach’s proposal, the survey results would be published on Dec. 31, beginning in 2024.”

    • Anonymous

      You say, “help me understand” then go on to state certain interpretations of the bill. Very admirable for you to want to “understand” the bill.
      The currant dates of survey coincide with the start of classes. Freshman will not have any experience to answer a survey. Now, moving the dates allow all students to be able to participate.

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