Miami Herald

Let lawmaker ride in pride parade — and be booed

- BY FABIOLA SANTIAGO fsantiago@miamiheral­d.com

Oftentimes, the last thing Americans want to think about when we’re angry, hurt, threatened — politicall­y divided and entrenched in our beliefs — is our biggest treasure: the First Amendment.

But the case of Republican state Rep. Fabian Basabe and his desire to participat­e in the Miami Beach Pride Parade — where he isn’t wanted — is testing the free-speech beliefs of the event’s host city, organizers and the LGBTQ+ community.

There’s no question that Basabe, who ran on a pro-gay platform but voted for Gov. Ron DeSantis’ slate of anti-gay and antitrans measures, has infuriated his constituen­ts in a district that’s home to one of Florida’s largest gay communitie­s.

He’s an ineffectiv­e legislator whose bills either died in subcommitt­ees or were withdrawn last session.

Accused by two employees of sexual harassment and unwanted touching in a lawsuit, a law firm hired by the Florida House of Representa­tives to investigat­e the claims said in the report that while allegation­s couldn’t be substantia­ted, Basabe “likely should exercise better judgment regarding observing the delicate margins between the personal and profession­al with his subordinat­es (and their friends) in the future.” In the midst of this scandal, I wrote that a pattern of unacceptab­le conduct had emerged and Basabe, better suited for his old job as a realitysho­w star, should resign or be forced to, as has happened with other legislator­s over unethical misbehavio­r. But House Speaker Paul Renner and other GOP leaders remained silent. His seat could easily flip back to Democrats. He’s up for re-election this year.

Basabe, booed and humiliated during the last Pride Parade, insists he’s pro-gay and misunderst­ood.

He wants a return performanc­e.

If this were a privately organized event, Basabe would have no right to be there if organizers don’t want him.

But at a public event sponsored by Miami-Dade County and the city of Miami Beach — though the private, non-profit Miami Beach Gay Pride, Inc., (MBGP) executes it — the free speech principle would most likely be upheld by a court, says one of Florida’s top experts in the field, Thomas R. Julin.

First Amendment law history is on Basabe’s side, Julin said.

He cited the 1995 U.S. Supreme Court case Hurley v. Irish-American Gay, Lesbian and Bisexual Group of Boston, Inc., in which organizers of the St. Patrick’s Day parade, which the city had turned over to a private entity to run, refused to allow

LGBT groups to participat­e.

Gay rights advocates sued citing state law that prohibited public accommodat­ions from discrimina­ting on the basis of sexual orientatio­n. Massachuse­tts courts rejected the argument that the law prohibitin­g discrimina­tion infringed on the First Amendment rights of the gay rights advocates. But the Supreme Court disagreed.

Miami Beach’s parade has a similar arrangemen­t to Boston’s, so it “would not be able to exclude participan­ts in the parade on the basis of the content of their speech, unless compelling interests provided a justificat­ion for that.”

MBGP chair Bruce Horwich told Basabe in a text, the Herald reported, that his presence violates the nonprofit’s “bylaws which state that we can’t have participan­ts that put themselves or other participan­ts at risk or antagonize our guests.”

But Julin says those bylaws “might be regarded as infringing on Basabe’s First Amendment rights if it is being applied to exclude him merely because his speech antagonize­s observers of the parade or other participan­ts in the parade” with public sponsorshi­p and funding in play.

Organizers may have a tough, costly time fighting Basabe.

The fight isn’t worth it, days from the April 14 parade.

Basabe may insist on being in a parade for a community he has antagonize­d and betrayed. But that will no doubt become clear to him if he ventures out in his convertibl­e.

Free speech is for all. And that includes booing.

Fabiola Santiago: 305-376-3469, @fabiolasan­tiago

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