The U.S. Supreme Court has declined to hear a case that sought to challenge the constitutionality of bias response teams on college campuses — a decision that leaves an ongoing First Amendment controversy unresolved.
The petition, brought by the advocacy group Speech First, targeted Indiana University’s bias response system, which allows students and faculty to report incidents of alleged bias — including through anonymous submissions — for review and potential disciplinary referral. The organization argued that such programs have a chilling effect on free expression, pressuring students to avoid controversial or politically sensitive speech to prevent being reported.
By refusing to take up the appeal, the Supreme Court allowed lower-court rulings to remain in place, effectively granting universities continued authority to operate bias response systems without further scrutiny from the nation’s highest court. The denial also prolongs uncertainty over the limits of administrative oversight on speech at public institutions.
Not all members of the Court agreed with the decision to pass on the case. Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito dissented, warning that the Court’s inaction leaves a critical constitutional question unresolved. They emphasized that without clear guidance from the Supreme Court, the legality of bias response programs will continue to vary across jurisdictions — a situation Justice Alito described as an “uneven patchwork” of student speech protections.
Speech First had urged the Court to step in, arguing that bias-monitoring initiatives act as informal censorship tools that suppress open debate on campuses under the guise of promoting inclusion. The group claimed that universities have replaced overt “speech codes” — often struck down in past cases — with subtler enforcement systems that still discourage dissenting viewpoints.
The Court’s refusal to weigh in marks a significant moment in the evolving conflict between campus climate policies and free-speech rights, an issue that has increasingly divided courts, lawmakers, and educators alike.