Table of Contents
After Binghamton shoutdown, protesters need to know how the First Amendment works

Protestors interrupt Art Laffer during his speech at Binghamton University. (Senator Fred Akshar/Facebook)
It happened again. This time, at New York鈥檚 Binghamton University.
A protester with a bullhorn a Nov. 18 lecture from economist Art Laffer, who was invited to speak by the BU College Republicans. The shoutdown, which happened just minutes after the event began, is the latest in a disturbing trend of protesters silencing others rather than debating them.
Binghamton prepped for controversy about as well as a university can 鈥 it provided an alternative space for protesters to exercise their own First Amendment rights, ensured police were on site to prevent violence, and asked attendees to save questions for after Laffer鈥檚 speech. Today, the university also issued a laudable acknowledging that 鈥渇reedom of speech is fundamental to our core mission; academic inquiry and the exchange of ideas rest on the principle that all have a right to express their beliefs.鈥
On a campus still navigating the aftermath of between protesters and College Republicans, tensions were already high.
Authorities should not punish every instance of protest at a public speech 鈥 particularly quiet or fleeting protests. But where a time and space is reserved for a particular speaker, and protesters create a sustained disruption, colleges can and should step in. The First Amendment does not protect continuous protest intended to make it impossible for an event to continue. Protesters don鈥檛 have the right to silence a speaker鈥檚 event, and open discourse is not for sale to the loudest bidder.
In that sense, there is a sad irony in protesters chanting 鈥淔ree speech!鈥 as police attempted to allow the event to proceed. The biggest threat to free speech at Binghamton Monday evening wasn鈥檛 the police or Art Laffer 鈥 but the vigilante censors who decided they alone should dictate what others can say or hear.
Binghamton鈥檚 statement and footage of the event indicate the university took reasonable steps to prepare for and respond to the possibility of disruptive protest. However, the exact nature of what transpired between police and protesters at the event is unclear. Before the event prematurely ended, police arrested two protesters for refusing to allow the program to continue. In (2015), the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit decided that 鈥減olice may limit speech in order to protect the speaker from a violent reaction, but only as a last resort.鈥 When law enforcement officers intervene in response to hostile audiences, they must use the 鈥渓east restrictive means for coping with a crowd鈥檚 hostile reaction鈥 and cannot simply silence the speaker, lest they effectuate a heckler鈥檚 veto.
It鈥檚 not immediately clear whether this was law enforcement鈥檚 last resort, or whether the decision to end the event was made by law enforcement. Either way, 蜜桃直播 is disappointed that the event didn鈥檛 continue after the protesters were removed.
Robust debate and discourse is a foundation of what it means to attend college, and our whole mission as a civil liberties organization is to defend students鈥 exercise of that right. But the First Amendment right to peaceful protest doesn鈥檛 override someone else鈥檚 First Amendment right to speak (and to hear those they鈥檝e invited to speak) in spaces they鈥檝e reserved.
We encourage students who disagree with Laffer 鈥 or any speaker invited to any campus 鈥 to ask tough questions, protest in a way that doesn鈥檛 infringe upon others鈥 rights, and organize their own events. And if anyone tries to shout them down, we鈥檒l be there.
It should take more than a bullhorn to override the First Amendment at Binghamton. 蜜桃直播 encourages university leaders to use this situation to teach students about free speech. We will continue to monitor developments.
Recent Articles
FIRE鈥檚 award-winning Newsdesk covers the free speech news you need to stay informed.

People want AI regulation 鈥 but they don鈥檛 trust the regulators

Introducing Expression, 蜜桃直播's official new Substack

No gay rights without free expression
