HOUSTON (AP) 鈥 The State Bar of Texas rescinded a speaking invitation to the NAACP鈥檚 president after the civil rights group challenged the Trump administration鈥檚 dismantling of the Education Department, citing new rules over speaking topics the bar says could be deemed political.
Derrick Johnson, the NAACP鈥檚 president and CEO, had been set to speak during the state bar鈥檚 annual meeting in June in San Antonio. He said Wednesday he was shocked his invitation to speak was taken away.
鈥淭hey have decided to censure free speech on notions of being political when it鈥檚 not political,鈥 Johnson told The Associated Press. 鈥淭his is the State Bar of Texas. These are lawyers who are sworn to uphold the Constitution of the United States. And nothing about our actions is contrary to the very principles that they have sworn to uphold. And so, I find it ironic to say the least that a lawsuit would generate a rescission of the invitation.鈥
Johnson was set to speak on the holiday, which marks the day in 1865 when the last enslaved people in the U.S. learned they were free.
At issue is the NAACP and other civil rights and education groups filed in March against President Donald Trump鈥檚 executive order to . The lawsuit argues the administration鈥檚 cuts will hobble mandated functions like protecting students from discrimination or funding educational programs.
Trey Apffel, the executive director of the state bar, said his organization rescinded the speaking invitation because the NAACP's lawsuit violated state bar rules that call for it to be politically neutral. He said the bar had been unaware of the lawsuit until learning about it in the press.
The bar is required by law, including a November 2023 ruling by the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, to limit what information it can communicate to issues related to the practice of law.
The bar, which regulates the legal profession in Texas, is also mandated by the Texas Supreme Court, which has administrative control over the group, to stay clear of anything 鈥渆ven having the perception of being political or ideological,鈥 Apffel said.
The bar views the NAACP鈥檚 lawsuit as 鈥減olitical because it is taking on the federal government on an executive order of the president,鈥 Apffel said.
Johnson said he disagrees with Apffel鈥檚 view of the lawsuit.
鈥淚t is a case questioning whether or not there is constitutional authority for the president to take a certain action. That鈥檚 not political. That鈥檚 the job of lawyers. That is the job of the NAACP,鈥 Johnson said.
During a phone call in February with Apffel and other state bar leaders, Johnson said, he was asked to not make his speech political in any way and he agreed.
In a letter sent to Apffel and the bar earlier Wednesday, Johnson said there was a 鈥済laring inconsistency鈥 in the group鈥檚 decision to rescind his invitation but to allow former U.S. Attorney General William Barr to speak at the 2023 annual meeting.
The bar was criticized by some of its members for inviting Barr to speak, citing his actions during the first Trump administration, including authorizing federal prosecutors across the U.S. before the 2020 presidential election had been certified despite no evidence of widespread fraud.
Apffel said when Barr spoke in 2023 he was a former officeholder 鈥渨hose role as the attorney general and thoughts on legal matters, both pro- and anti-Trump, were relevant to a legal audience.鈥
In a before Barr鈥檚 appearance, Laura Gibson, a former president of the state bar, defended the decision to have Barr speak.
鈥淚t is easy to defend the rights of speakers we agree with, but it is essential to the rule of law that we also defend the rights of speakers with whom we disagree,鈥 Gibson said. 鈥淚n these polarized times, it seems we鈥檙e in danger of losing that. As lawyers, we should be in the forefront of protecting unpopular or controversial speech.鈥
With tighter restrictions in place today by the bar on what can be said, Barr would not have been allowed to speak, Apffel said.
鈥淚 have great respect for Derrick Johnson and his position as president of the NAACP," Apffel said. "And I have great respect for the NAACP and what they do and what they stand for.鈥
He said Johnson's replacement, former Texas Supreme Court Chief Justice Wallace B. Jefferson, who is Black, will speak on the significance of Juneteenth.
鈥淲e are in an intersection point in our democracy," Johnson said. "Are we going to uphold the Constitution and ensure that this speech is something that we value, or are we going to take a different approach?鈥
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