Notre Dame graduates walk out on Pence as
he touts free speech
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[May 22, 2017]
By Frank McGurty
(Reuters) - Dozens of students walked out
of Notre Dame University's commencement exercise on Sunday to protest a
speech by U.S. Vice President Mike Pence, who warned graduates of the
prestigious Catholic school against suppressing free speech.
The protesters, among the thousands of graduates and guests assembled in
the university's football stadium, stood up when the conservative
Republican began his speech and streamed out of the ceremony, to the
jeers of some of those who remained.
A few of the students had messages of protest attached to their
traditional "mortarboard" graduation caps. One of them displayed an
inverted U.S. flag, a sign of protest popularized during the Vietnam War
era, and the words "Are we great again yet?," a reference to President
Donald Trump's campaign slogan.
In his speech at the Indiana school, Pence squarely addressed the
festering controversy of what constitutes free speech on campus, an
issue that has intensified at many universities since Trump's election
victory last year.
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"I would submit that the increasing intolerance and suppression of the
time-honored tradition of free expression on our campuses jeopardizes
the liberties of every American. This should not, and must not be met
with silence," Pence said, in an apparent reference to efforts to bar
him from speaking.
Protests, some of them violent, have erupted at schools across the
country in recent months to stop appearances by conservative
commentators such as Ann Coulter and Milo Yiannopoulos. In at least some
cases, schools have canceled the events, citing safety concerns.
Organizers of the Notre Dame protest said they wanted to voice their
objections to policies advocated by Pence as part of the Trump
administration and while he was governor, including a proposal to
suspend immigration from some Muslim-majority countries that has so far
been blocked in courts.
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Vice President Mike Pence addresses Chamber of Commerce "Invest in
America!" summit in Washington U.S., May 18, 2017. REUTERS/Mary F.
Calvert
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"The participation and degree-conferring of VP Pence stand as an
endorsement of policies and actions which directly contradict
Catholic social teachings and values," undergraduate Xitlaly Estrada
was quoted as saying in a statement from We Stand For ND, a group
that helped organize the walk-out.
Pence, who served as Indiana's governor before his election as vice
president, also took issue with efforts at some U.S. universities to
shelter students from what they consider objectionable points of
view or to recommend language to be used in classes or other school
functions.
"Far too many campuses across America have been characterized by
speech codes, safe zones, tone policing, administration-sanctioned
political correctness all of which amounts to nothing less than the
suppression of the freedom of speech," Pence told the audience at
the campus in South Bend.
Pence delivered his address as Trump completed the initial day of
the first overseas trip of his presidency. In a speech in Saudi
Arabia, Trump called on Middle Eastern leaders to do their fair
share to defeat Islamist extremists.
(Reporting By Frank McGurty in New York; Editing by Mary Milliken)
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