San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

MELENDEZ SEEKS TO ENHANCE FREE SPEECH PROTECTION­S

State senator offers bill to prevent discrimina­tion based on political beliefs

- CITY NEWS SERVICE

Sen. Melissa Melendez, R-lake Elsinore, has introduced legislatio­n proposing a series of protection­s to ensure California residents are not ostracized or otherwise treated unfairly because of their political beliefs.

“It is unfathomab­le to me that corporatio­ns and members of the public would ruin a person’s career, business and family because of their political ideology,” Melendez said Feb. 16. “A free society shouldn’t allow thoughts and ideas to be censored. Free speech covers all speech — not just that with which you agree.”

Melendez’s Senate Bills 238 and 249, collective­ly known as the Diversity of Thought Act, seek modificati­ons to the California Government Code, as well as the Education Code, with new provisions specifying that California­ns not be discrimina­ted against based on political affiliatio­n.

SB 238 would make it illegal under the Fair Employment & Housing Act to reject someone for a job expressly because of his or her party preference.

SB 249 would establish penalties for “harassment, intimidati­on and bullying” in schools at all grade levels based on an individual’s political alignment.

“Cancel culture and the efforts to silence differing opinions and voices should be a growing concern for all of us,” the senator said. “A climate of intoleranc­e has been establishe­d and has stifled healthy and normal debate. Anyone who values their own freedom of speech should be concerned. This cannot and should not be allowed to continue.”

“Cancel Culture” is a phrase that refers to the public censure of people who express unpopular opinions or those who have been accused of harassment or other misdeeds, but it has also been attached to acts of vandalism, including the desecratio­n of public statues of historical figures in the last year.

SB 249 bears similariti­es to Melendez’s Campus Free Speech Act, introduced when she was an assemblywo­man in 2017.

That bill sought a bundle of regulation­s that would have required public and private colleges and universiti­es to ensure advocates of diverse political philosophi­es receive equal treatment when holding rallies and sponsoring forums.

At the time, UC Berkeley had scrapped or placed heavy restrictio­ns on several functions hosted by the Berkeley College Republican­s.

The then-assemblywo­man’s proposal did not make it out of committee.

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