As we have extensively documented, University of Texas Finance Professor Richard Lowery has been a vocal critic of UT CRT and Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) Policies, because he believes deeply that such policies “are fundamentally incompatible not only with the idea of academic freedom, but with the ultimate goals of seeking and conveying truth, which should be the cornerstone of any university.” This is because, Professor Lowery argues, they suppress any and all dissent, and only allow promotion of “predetermined activist goals.” See our coverage here:
In fact, Professor Lowery even brought a class-action lawsuit against Texas A&M in the federal court in Houston in September of last year, arguing that Texas A&M was unlawfully discriminating against white and Asian males in its hiring practices. As Legal Insurrection’s own Professor William Jacobson remarked at the time:
This is an important case that puts the legal test to what we all know happens throughout higher education, racial and sex discrimination in the name of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion. Too many schools incorporate the discriminatory philosophy of “antiracism” huckster Ibram Kendi, that current discrimination is the remedy for past discrimination. Such a philosophy is illegal when put into hiring and promotion practices, and thanks to Prof. Lowery for having the courage to say so and to challenge this immoral regime in court.
This case is ongoing; see our detailed coverage here: Lowery v. Texas A&M: The Beginning of the End of ‘Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion’ Discrimination?
Now, Professor Lowery has brought another lawsuit, this time against three University of Texas officials.
In a press release, the Institute for Free Speech, which is representing Professor Lowery in federal court, claims the officials violated Professor Lowery’s constitutional right to “criticize government officials,” “harmed his right to academic freedom,” and “threatened to punish him for his criticism of the university by threatening his job, reducing his pay, and removing his affiliation with UT’s Salem Center” for Public Policy (Salem Center), an academic institute that is part of the UT McCombs School of Business at UT-Austin.
The defendants in the lawsuit are three officials at UT-Austin, who are all sued in their official capacity: Lillian Mills, Dean of the UT McCombs School of Business; Ethan Burris, Senior Associate Dean for Academic Affairs of the McCombs School of Business; and Sheridan Titman, Finance Department Chair for the McCombs School of Business.
Key allegations in the Complaint regarding Lowery’s criticism of the UT officials include the following:
The Complaint then details how Lowery criticized UT’s “Global Sustainability Leadership Institute (‘GSLI’ or ‘Sustainability Institute’), which promotes Environment Sustainability and Governance (‘ESG’) based viewpoints that are consistent with the predominant DEI-ideology at UT and are often at odds with free-market principles and Lowery’s views.”
He also criticized UT’s diversion of $6 million in state funding for the “Liberty Institute,” which Professor Lowery created as a counterweight to UT’s CRT and DEI initiatives, to those same CRT and DEI initiatives and renaming the Liberty Institute “Civitas.”
This criticism, the Complaint alleges, was not well received, and allegedly resulted in the following threatening and retaliatory action against Professor Lowery:
The Complaint also alleges that the three UT officials “also allowed, or at least did not retract, a UT employee’s request that police surveil Lowery’s speech.”
As a result, the Complaint claims that “Lowery would continue speaking his mind about political and academic matters, including criticizing the UT Administration, DEI policies, the Sustainability Institute and the hijacking of the Liberty Institute. But he refrains from doing so because he believes Defendants will make good on their threats, including ending his affiliation with the Salem Center, cutting his pay, accusing him of incivility, equating his opinions with inciting violence, and placing him under police surveillance.”
In short, the Complaint claims that the three UT officials waged a “campaign to silence Lowery,” which Lowery claims has been effective and which violates his First Amendment right to free speech.
As mentioned, “[a]ttorneys at the Institute for Free Speech, a nonpartisan First Amendment advocacy group, are representing Lowery in court. Michael E. Lovins, of the Austin law firm Lovins Trosclair, also represents Lowery in the lawsuit.”
Del Kolde, senior attorney at the Institute for Free Speech, said, “Professors at public universities have the right to criticize administrators and speak to elected officials. The First Amendment protects such speech and, in a free society, DEI programs and UT’s president are not above public criticism.”
The lawsuit asks the court to:
The case is Lowery v. Mills in the United States District Court for the Western District of Texas, Austin Division. To read the complaint, click here. The case is assigned to District Judge Earl Leroy Yeakel III, a George W. Bush appointee to the federal bench and a graduate of the University of Texas School of Law.
We inquired, but UT has not yet responded to a request for comment.
We will update this case as it proceeds through the federal court system.
_______________________________________
Note: The original post stated that the Press Release cited was from the Institute for Justice. It was actually from the Institute for Free Speech, as loyal reader Milhouse correctly pointed out.
CLICK HERE FOR FULL VERSION OF THIS STORY