Los Angeles Times

Ann Coulter won’t speak at UC

Conservati­ve says she never planned to join Berkeley talks, despite being listed on lineup.

- By Javier Panzar and Benjamin Oreskes

A series of talks by controvers­ial conservati­ve speakers being planned at UC Berkeley by right-wing provocateu­r Milo Yiannopoul­os appears to be falling apart as the Sunday kickoff date approaches.

For starters, UC Berkeley officials say only four speakers have confirmed their visit with the university.

At least four other speakers whom Yiannopoul­os had touted in news releases have said they were blindsided by their inclusion on the schedule and never intended to come.

Yiannopoul­os insisted a bevy of high-profile speakers would be attending, but one of the most controvers­ial names on the list — Ann Coulter — told the Los Angeles Times on Friday that she was “never” coming. Coulter almost spoke on campus earlier this year, but that engagement was scrapped at the last minute.

“I never planned to speak,” she said in an email Friday. “My speakers bureau never booked me to speak at Berkeley. No contract for me to speak existed.”

Former White House strategist Stephen K. Bannon is another unconfirme­d speaker. He didn’t respond to repeated requests for comment.

Underscori­ng the tumultuous nature of the preparatio­ns was an email sent by Yiannopoul­os’ organizati­on Monday telling scheduled speakers that it would make all their travel arrangemen­ts for the planned four-day

event but wouldn’t book the flights and hotel rooms until 48 hours before their speaking dates to avoid disruption­s.

“We are doing this in order to prevent any more sabotage than we have already faced, especially with the University’s latest behavior,” the email from Yiannopoul­os’ event manager reads.

It was unclear what behavior the email was referring to, but Yiannopoul­os and student sponsors have created a video complainin­g of the school’s “bureaucrat­ic mission” to silence them.

Campus spokesman Dan Mogulof said that in order for a speaker to be confirmed, the hosting student organizati­on — in this case, the conservati­ve student publicatio­n Berkeley Patriot — must provide evidence that the speaker is actually coming.

That evidence could be an email, a contract, a copy of a plane ticket or even a voicemail, Mogulof said.

“Something other than a press release,” he said

For weeks leading up to the event, the university and Yiannopoul­os’ organizati­on, Milo Inc., have been arguing in the press as student organizers missed numerous planning deadlines.

The student group missed the deadline to reserve two of the largest indoor venues on campus for the event last weekend.

Mogulof said Friday that the university had not heard from the student group since Tuesday.

In response, the campus said the event would occur largely on Sproul Plaza, the large outdoor gathering place that served as the birthplace of the free speech movement that swept U.S. campuses in the 1960s.

Mike Wright, the student organizati­on’s president, said that although it was “frustratin­g” to see highprofil­e speakers drop out, the event will go on. “We are pressing forward,” he said.

Wright said Yiannopoul­os and his organizati­on were in charge of the logistics for the event including coordinati­ng and booking speakers.

Even though the event looks shaky, campus officials say they are prepared to spend more than $1 million on security for the fourday series — regardless of who actually shows up.

“We cannot play any games or take any chances. We are proceeding on the assumption that all of the speakers who are supposedly coming are in fact coming,” said Mogulof, the Berkeley spokesman.

Yiannopoul­os, conservati­ve author David Horowitz, activist Lisa De Pasquale and Breitbart News contributo­r Ariana Rowlands are the four confirmed speakers, according to the campus.

Lucian Wintrich, a writer for Gateway Pundit, a website that has published conspiracy theories on such topics as Hillary Clinton’s health, was on the university’s list of confirmed speakers released Wednesday. However, Wintrich also pulled out of the event, citing in a blog post “the seemingly likely chance that something impedes the event.”

Wintrich said in an interview with The Times that he didn’t want college students to “waste their money” coming to the event.

“When it became clear to me this event was being mismanaged on all sides, I really didn’t want people who were flying out and booking hotels to see me to be disappoint­ed,” he said.

Right-wing media personalit­y Mike Cernovich initially was listed by organizers as speaking on Wednesday, but he pulled out this week.

Cernovich said he believed Yiannopoul­os “sincerely” wanted to attend, but there was mounting confusion among the proposed speakers.

“After the lineup was announced, speakers began asking me for details,” he said in a text message. “This seemed odd as I wasn’t an organizer. To pull off an event like Free Speech Week would require a huge staff.”

He said he will be in the Bay Area on Saturday to hold a news conference with Yiannopoul­os about plans for the event.

UC Berkeley has incurred at least $1.4 million in security costs since February, when Yiannopoul­os’ last appearance sparked violent protests. The campus spent $200,000 on security for that event, $600,000 for conservati­ve commentato­r Coulter, whose event ultimately was canceled by the sponsoring campus groups, and an estimated $600,000 for the talk last week by conservati­ve writer Ben Shapiro, according to the university.

Officials shut down a large portion of Berkeley’s campus as well as three city blocks to prevent the kind of rioting that happened when Yiannopoul­os’ February event was canceled. The protests outside Shapiro’s talk were relatively subdued with no widespread violence and nine arrests.

Berkeley has become a favorite spot for far-right activists to speak out, knowing they can get attention and push emotional buttons in what is essentiall­y enemy territory.

Mogulof said security costs for Free Speech Week would not be known until the program was finalized but could top $1 million. The UC system will chip in $300,000 for the Shapiro event and help pay for security costs through Free Speech Week, UC spokeswoma­n Dianne Klein said.

“Milo and his cast of speakers will be on Sproul Plaza, which is a public space … and we will underwrite the safety and security expenses associated with that,” UC President Janet Napolitano told the Times’ Washington bureau on Wednesday. “At a certain point, that position — i.e. that we will have these speakers and pay for the security costs associated with that — may not be sustainabl­e.”

The mounting costs to the campus — which is struggling to reduce a crippling budget deficit from $150 million last year to $56 million by June — are sparking growing concern.

More than 200 UC Berkeley instructor­s and faculty members called for a shutdown of classes and activities during the event, saying it would protect their students from potentiall­y deadly violence.

The letter cited shootings, stabbings and beatings during confrontat­ions between the right and left in Seattle, Portland, Ore., Charlottes­ville, Va., and elsewhere.

A counter-demonstrat­ion is scheduled in Berkeley on Saturday, the day before the free speech week events are set to begin. The event, dubbed “No Hate in the Bay: March Against White Supremacy,” is sponsored by an array of groups including labor unions and human rights organizati­ons.

Shapiro, a far less controvers­ial figure than many on next week’s schedule, whose speaking engagement in Berkeley went off without a hitch, said that regardless of whether the event happens, Yiannopoul­os has gotten what he wants — headlines.

“Milo makes his living being a provocateu­r and him going to Berkeley, I think it’s not a shock,” he said in an interview last week. “If Milo is not in the headlines then he’s not doing what Milo exists to do, which is his raison d’etre.”

Shapiro said if the event is canceled it would be all the better for Yiannopoul­os.

“That’s what they want,” he said. “That’s what they’re dreaming of. If the event goes off without a hitch, then the saddest people in America are Milo and Bannon, presumably.”

When asked for an update on the week’s events, Yiannopoul­os would only say in a text message that he had a news conference scheduled for Saturday in San Francisco and that he would be arriving via speedboat wearing a “$15,000” fur coat.

‘We cannot play any games or take any chances. We are proceeding on the assumption that all of the speakers ... are in fact coming.’ — Dan Mogulof, UC Berkeley spokesman, on security preparatio­ns

 ?? Joshua Blanchard Getty Images ?? CONSERVATI­VE commentato­r Ann Coulter, seen at left during a July panel discussion, was among the high-profile speakers listed for an upcoming series at UC Berkeley. However, she said Friday that she never planned to go. “No contract for me to speak existed,” she said.
Joshua Blanchard Getty Images CONSERVATI­VE commentato­r Ann Coulter, seen at left during a July panel discussion, was among the high-profile speakers listed for an upcoming series at UC Berkeley. However, she said Friday that she never planned to go. “No contract for me to speak existed,” she said.
 ?? Drew Angerer Getty Images ?? RIGHT-WING provocateu­r Milo Yiannopoul­os is one of four conservati­ve speakers currently confirmed for the series at Berkeley, which is set to begin Sunday.
Drew Angerer Getty Images RIGHT-WING provocateu­r Milo Yiannopoul­os is one of four conservati­ve speakers currently confirmed for the series at Berkeley, which is set to begin Sunday.

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