Ruling That Colleges Can Bar Military Recruiters Faces Fight
Monday, February 7, 2005 at 06:04AM
TheSpook
The House has approved a measure calling for the government to contest
a federal court decision that educational institutions have a First
Amendment right to keep military recruiters off their campuses to
protest the policy of excluding gays from military service. "Congress
encourages the executive branch to follow the doctrine of
non-acquiescence and not find a decision affecting one jurisdiction to
be binding on other jurisdictions," said the resolution, which was
approved on Wednesday. The Justice Department said Friday that it
planned to ask the Supreme Court to hear an appeal on the recruitment
issue, allowing military officials to visit law schools, in particular,
to find lawyers for the Judge Advocate General's Corps. Lawmakers who
supported the bill said recruiting on college campuses afforded the
military, like any corporate enterprise, access to highly qualified
prospective employees. The nation's security interests, they said,
demand such effective recruitment. But critics of the measure
said the military's policy of discharging personnel who are discovered
to be gay runs counter to any effort to expand a military that has
shrunk since the cold war and remains stressed by overseas deployment.
The measure, a nonbinding resolution, passed by a vote of 327 to 84.
While some gay rights groups have said momentum is building for
Congress to consider changing the military's policy toward gays, the
overwhelming support for the measure raises questions about such a
shift. The federal court decision, handed down in November by a
three-judge panel of the United States Court of Appeals for the Third
Circuit in Philadelphia, found that universities may bar military
recruiters from their campuses without risking the loss of federal
money. [more]
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
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