Ann Coulter cancels speech at Berkeley
amid safety dispute
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[April 27, 2017]
By Lisa Fernandez
BERKELEY, Calif. (Reuters) - Conservative
commentator Ann Coulter said she had scrapped plans to speak on Thursday
at the University of California at Berkeley in defiance of campus
officials, who had barred her original engagement this week out of
concerns about inciting violent protests.
Coulter, one America's best-known and most polarizing pundits on the
political right, cast blame on conservative student organizers who
withdrew their invitation following their dispute with university
officials.
"There will be no speech," Coulter wrote in an email to Reuters on
Wednesday. "I looked over my shoulder and my allies had joined the other
team.
"I have no sponsor, no lawyer, no court order," she said. "I can't
vindicate constitutional rights on my own."
Coulter is the second right-wing speaker whose Berkeley appearance was
scrubbed over security concerns. In February protesters started fires,
broke windows and clashed with police, forcing Milo Yiannopoulos, then a
senior editor for the conservative Breitbart News website, to call off
his appearance.
Coulter said she might still visit Berkeley, long a bastion of liberal
student activism, to meet with supporters on Thursday, the day she was
originally slated to speak, but would not deliver an address on campus.
Social media feeds of militant left-wing and right-wing activists
remained abuzz with vows to proceed with the demonstrations and
counter-demonstrations that had been expected to accompany a Coulter
appearance.
Campus officials said they were continuing to brace for unrest they see
as likely on Thursday.
"Many of the individuals and organizations which planned to protest Ann
Coulter's appearance or support it still intend to come to campus," UC
Berkeley spokesman Dan Mogulof said.
He said the Berkeley College Republicans erred by inviting Coulter
without notifying campus officials in advance, as is required of all
student groups, and failing to submit to a "security assessment" to
determine a suitable time and place for the event.
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Political commentator Ann Coulter speaks during the "Politicon"
convention in Pasadena, California, U.S. June 25, 2016.
REUTERS/Patrick T. Fallon
He denied that Coulter was unwelcome because of her political
positions.
University officials last week rejected the original Coulter date on
grounds they lacked a safe campus venue to host her speech on that
day, citing the violence by left-wing protesters over Yiannopoulos'
scheduled appearance.
The university later proposed that Coulter's speech be moved to next
Tuesday. Coulter said she could not make it then and accused the
school of trying to limit her audience by choosing a date that fell
in a study week ahead of final exams.
After insisting she would go through with her speech on Thursday,
with or without university approval, Coulter changed her mind as
support from student organizers collapsed.
College Republicans spokesman Naweed Thomas accused university
officials of "refusing to ensure the safety of all students" and
thus infringing on free-speech rights, as claimed in a lawsuit that
sponsors of the event filed in federal court on Tuesday.
(Additional reporting by Mark Hosenball in Washington and Jonathan
Allen in New York; Editing by Bill Trott and Peter Cooney)
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