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Stanford student newspaper sues Trump officials over immigration law that's led to chilling of free speech

Stanford student newspaper sues Trump officials over immigration law that's led to chilling of free speech

NBC News14 hours ago
Stanford University's student newspaper on Wednesday sued the Trump administration over two provisions in federal immigration law that they say the officials have wielded against those with pro-Palestinian views.
The Stanford Daily, in addition to two former college students, filed the lawsuit against Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem, accusing the administration of using the provisions to threaten deportation and the revocation of visas. They say it's led to censorship and violations of free speech rights.
The paper's staff members who are on visas have self-censored and declined assignments related to the war in Gaza, fearful that their reporting could jeopardize their lawful immigration status, the lawsuit said.
'In the United States of America, no one should fear a midnight knock on the door for voicing the wrong opinion,' said Conor Fitzpatrick, attorney at the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression, a group that is helping to represent the plaintiffs, in a statement. 'Free speech isn't a privilege the government hands out. Under our Constitution it is the inalienable right of every man, woman, and child.'
A senior State Department official declined to comment on the ongoing litigation, but directed NBC News to comments Rubio previously made about visa holders and complying with U.S. law.
In April, Rubio wrote in an opinion piece published on Fox News that he would be taking a 'zero-tolerance approach to foreign nationals who abet terrorist organizations.'
'The Supreme Court has made clear for decades that visa holders or other aliens cannot use the First Amendment to shield otherwise impermissible actions taken to support designated foreign terrorist organizations like Hamas, Hizballah, or the Houthis, or violate other U.S. laws,' Rubio said.
Tricia McLaughlin, spokesperson for the Department of Homeland Security, described the lawsuit as 'baseless.'
'There is no room in the United States for the rest of the world's terrorist sympathizers, and we are under no obligation to admit them or let them stay here,' McLaughlin said in a statement.
In the lawsuit, the plaintiffs take aim at the Deportation Provision and Revocation Provision in the Immigration and Nationality Act. The first provision allows the secretary of state to deport noncitizens if the secretary 'personally determines that the alien's admission would compromise a compelling United States foreign policy interest.' The second gives the secretary the power to revoke a visa or documentation at their discretion.
As the lawsuit points out, the Trump administration has cited the Deportation Provision as the basis for attempting to deport Columbia University activist Mahmoud Khalil, who was arrested and detained for more than three months. Similarly, the administration used the Revocation Provision to detain Tufts student Rumeysa Ozturk, who's also since been released.
Due to the administration's use of the statutes, the lawsuit said, the Stanford Daily has received a number of requests from lawfully present noncitizens to have their names, quotes or photos removed from articles. Many international students have stopped speaking to the paper's journalists, and current and former writers have asked for their opinion editorials to be taken down, the lawsuit said.
'The First Amendment cements America's promise that the government may not subject a speaker to disfavored treatment because those in power do not like his or her message,' the lawsuit said. 'And when a federal statute collides with First Amendment rights, the Constitution prevails.'
One of the unnamed plaintiffs appeared on the Canary Mission, the suit said. The website, run by an anonymous group, has published a detailed database of students, professors and others who it says have shared anti-Israel and antisemitic viewpoints. It's been accused of doxxing and harassment, in addition to launching personal attacks that depict pro-Palestinian activists as being in 'support of terrorism,' the Middle East Studies Association of North America said. The plaintiff has stopped publishing and 'voicing her true opinions' on Palestine and Israel, the suit said.
Canary Mission previously told NBC News that it documents people and groups who 'promote hatred of the USA, Israel and Jews' across the political spectrum, but it did not respond to criticisms of its work.
The plaintiffs are asking the court to issue preliminary and permanent injunctions that block the officials from using the provisions against them based on engaging in what they consider protected speech.
'There's real fear on campus and it reaches into the newsroom,' said Greta Reich, editor-in-chief of The Stanford Daily, in a statement. 'The Daily is losing the voices of a significant portion of our student population.'
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