Lebanon Daily News

Pro-Palestinia­n students in Florida would lose state aid under new bill

- Douglas Soule

TALLAHASSE­E, Fla. – Republican Florida lawmakers have filed bills in the Senate and House that would yank state scholarshi­ps or tuition aid from college students promoting a foreign terrorist group.

If passed during the legislativ­e session starting in January, the bills filed Wednesday also would require universiti­es to report those students to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security if they’re in the country on a visa.

The identical bills spring from concerns about student-led protests across the state and country following Hamas’ surprise attack on Israel Oct. 7 and the subsequent war.

Last week, students interrupte­d a Florida State University board of trustees meeting with pro-Palestinia­n chants. This Tuesday, pro-Palestinia­n protesters, many of them college students, rallied and marched outside the Florida Capitol. They called for a ceasefire and an end to U.S. aid to Israel, accusing it of committing genocide against Palestinia­n people. Some present celebrated “Palestinia­n resistance,” and some defended Hamas’ action.

Senate Bill sponsor Blaise Ingoglia said in a press release that Florida taxpayers should not be “subsidizin­g the education of terrorist sympathize­rs.”

“The heinous terrorist attack on Oct. 7 have pulled back the curtain and exposed the rampant antisemiti­sm happening on the campuses of colleges and universiti­es throughout this country,” said Ingoglia, a former chair of the state’s Republican Party.

The other sponsor, Republican state Rep. John Temple said, “Florida’s commitment is to stand with Israel and not be complicit to foreign terrorist organizati­ons making postsecond­ary institutio­ns a place for activism.”

The legislatio­n says a student who promotes a “foreign terrorist organizati­on” must be given out- of-state student fees and is ineligible for fee waivers. It also says they can’t be awarded “institutio­nal or state grants, financial aid, scholarshi­ps or tuition assistance.”

The bill said such organizati­ons include those “designated by the United States Department of State as a foreign organizati­on that engages in or has the capability and intent to engage in terrorist activity and threatens the defense, foreign relations, or economic interests of the United States. The designatio­n includes, but is not limited to, Hamas and Palestine Islamic Jihad.”

The bill is likely to face opposition from First Amendment advocates, who’ve come out against other pushes by state officials the last month to penalize college students and groups accused of being pro-Hamas.

That was the case after Gov. Ron DeSantis and his top higher education official, Chancellor Ray Rodrigues, called for the deactivati­on of two National Students for Justice in Palestine chapters at Florida universiti­es, accusing the national organizati­on of providing “material support” to Hamas.

The governor went on to brag about the deactivati­on during the last Republican presidenti­al candidate debate, only for Rodrigues to announce the next morning that those chapters remained active.

He said universiti­es decided against it after finding evidence the groups were separate from the national one, and after attorneys warned them about legal consequenc­es.

Rep. Randy Fine, R-Palm Bay, called for students expressing support for Hamas to be expelled under an anti-discrimina­tion law he sponsored and DeSantis signed.

“This call is fueled by understand­able anger and grief, but that does not make it constituti­onal,” said Ken Paulson, director of the Free Speech Center at Middle Tennessee State University, at the time. “The First Amendment could not be more clear. Americans may not be punished by the government for their opinions. It could not be more clear, more basic or more essential to our democracy.”

While DeSantis said he supported Fine, the lawmaker publicly broke with him soon after and threw his support behind former President Donald Trump in the presidenti­al election. He accused DeSantis of not taking action to see the law used.

This reporting content is supported by a partnershi­p with Freedom Forum and Journalism Funding Partners.

 ?? ALICIA DEVINE/TALLAHASSE­E DEMOCRAT ?? Florida State University Students for a Democratic Society and other organizati­ons attend an FSU Board of Trustees meeting where they waived Palestinia­n flags and chanted before being escorted out by the FSU Police Department on Nov. 10.
ALICIA DEVINE/TALLAHASSE­E DEMOCRAT Florida State University Students for a Democratic Society and other organizati­ons attend an FSU Board of Trustees meeting where they waived Palestinia­n flags and chanted before being escorted out by the FSU Police Department on Nov. 10.

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