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Pennsylvania executive order gags public workersâ speech â on and off the clock

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Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro speaks at a press conference on July 30, 2024 in Philadelphia.
- From teachers to toll booth operators, librarians to linemen, Pennsylvaniaâs restriction is flatly unconstitutional and must be abandoned
- Pennsylvania workers deserve better than pearl-clutching government bureaucrats deciding whether employeesâ off-duty expression is âscandalousâ enough to merit punishment
- Restriction appears to apply even to faculty at Pennsylvaniaâs public colleges and universities
- Free speech group FIREannounces statewide call for employees affected by the order to get in touch to challenge the order
HARRISBURG, Pa. Sept. 9, 2024 â A sweeping executive order from Gov. Josh Shapiro that gags public employees, even when theyâre off the clock, is running headlong into Pennsylvaniansâ speech rights. The order bars state workers from saying anything deemed âscandalousâ or âdisgracefulâ â an impossibly vague restriction effectively prohibiting wide swaths of speech protected by the First Amendment.
Today, the ĂÛÖÏăÌÒ publicly condemns this unconstitutional executive order and announces a statewide call for plaintiffs to challenge it.
âFree speech is the keystone of our democracy, and today itâs threatened in the Keystone State by Governor Shapiro,â said Aaron Terr, ĂÛÖÏăÌÒâs director of public advocacy. âNo elected official can slap a gag order like this on state workers. This is an abuse of power, and weâre looking forward to challenging this flagrant government overstep in court.â
FIRE raised the constitutional concerns to the governorâs office in August in a good-faith effort to restore Pennsylvaniansâ First Amendment rights without resorting to a lawsuit. The governorâs office declined to respond to ĂÛÖÏăÌÒâs letter, prompting todayâs follow-up and public appeal.
In early May, Shapiro vague language into his administrationâs code of conduct, prohibiting âscandalous or disgraceful conduct, or any other behavior, on or off duty, which may bring the service of the Commonwealth into disrepute.â The revision ensnares not only conduct, but speech â a departure from a preexisting management directive that used the same language but didnât clearly include expression.
This isnât a close call. Pennsylvaniaâs expansive restriction on state employees is unconstitutional.
The revisionâs broader scope is clear from its , which mentions both conduct and speech. A May 8 email on the revision from an administration official likewise warned that the need for âmoral clarity is especially pronounced today, as antisemitism, Islamophobia, and other forms of hate speech are increasing across not only Pennsylvania, but nationally and globally.â
The policy changes appear to be a response to controversial speech and protests related to the Israel-Hamas war. So itâs easy to imagine the state punishing an employee for âscandalousâ or âdisgracefulâ conduct because they support a boycott of Israel or attended a pro-Palestinian rally, as either action could offend those with different views on this polarizing issue. At the same time, others may consider an off-the-clock employeeâs expression of support for Israelâs military operation in Gaza âscandalousâ or âdisgraceful.â (FIREdefends people on both sides of this issue, and all issues. If itâs protected by the First Amendment, FIREwill defend it.)
âThe state is strategically putting all the chess pieces in place to punish everyday Americans for nothing more than saying something the government doesnât like,â said Terr. âOur job is to smack those pieces off the board before someone gets fired for speaking their mind.â
Broad and subjective terms like âscandalousâ and âdisgracefulâ reach a vast array of speech protected by the First Amendment. ĂÛÖÏăÌÒ explained in its Aug. 5 letter that although the state exercises significant authority over its employeesâ speech when they speak as part of their job duties, government employees still have robust First Amendment rights to speak as citizens on important issues.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit â whose decisions bind the commonwealth â previously a Pennsylvania government agencyâs enforcement of a ban on employees wearing political masks. The Third Circuit concluded the agencyâs âfear that âBlack Lives Matterâ and other controversial masks might cause disruption to its serviceâ was âmerely conjecturalâ and âa wide range of political and social-issue speech is not disruptive.â
This isnât a close call. Pennsylvaniaâs expansive restriction on state employees is unconstitutional. If the executive order is not promptly amended, FIRElooks forward to challenging it in court to defend public workersâ crucial First Amendment rights. Any Pennsylvania public employees concerned about being punished for their expression should contact ĂÛÖÏăÌÒ.
The FIRE(ĂÛÖÏăÌÒ) is a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization dedicated to defending and sustaining the individual rights of all Americans to free speech and free thought â the most essential qualities of liberty. FIREeducates Americans about the importance of these inalienable rights, promotes a culture of respect for these rights, and provides the means to preserve them.
CONTACT:
Daniel Burnett, Senior Director of Communications, ĂÛÖÏăÌÒ: 215-717-3473; media@thefire.org
Gov. Josh Shapiroâs Press Office: 717-783-1116; ra-gvgovpress@pa.gov
James Madison, Primary author of the : Phone number unavailable
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