The Southern Poverty Law Center (501(c)(3)) and SPLC Action Fund (reportedly processing 501(c)(4) application) potentially comprise America’s most powerful and well-resourced public interest and advocacy operation. SPLC describes its mission as “fighting hate and bigotry and seeking justice for the most vulnerable members of our society.” SPLC distributes materials for public school educators that emphasize “anti-bias and social justice.” But a current op-ed in USA Today claims, to the contrary, that the SPLC operates to selectively target groups based upon agendized hate-naming and public shaming. SPLC has singled out 1020 “hate” groups and this labeling has been relied upon by government bodies, social media platforms, and non-governmental groups to act based upon ostensibly constitutionally protected expressive rights, rights of conscience, and association practices. Robert Muise, a presenter for this teleforum, is suing the Michigan Attorney General and Department of Civil Rights for utilizing SPLC characterizations to oversee activities of identified groups, including the one he co-founded, American Freedom Law Center.
Featuring:
Mat Staver, Liberty Counsel, sued Guidestar for branding LC an anti-LGBTQ hate group based upon SPLC designation; lost appeal in 4th Circuit based on Lanham Act analysis.
Robert Muise, American Freedom Law Center, currently suing State of Michigan attorney general office for establishing hate unit to target SPLC-named groups, including AFLC
Muhammud Rahim, Quilliam, settled with SPLC for 3.4M after threatened defamation suit for falsely naming Maajid Nawaz (reformist Muslim) a hater.
Justin Danhof, National Center for Public Policy Research, responding to SPLC in the corporate context
Moderator: Jeremy Tedesco, Alliance Defending Freedom, attorney on the Masterpiece Cakeshop litigation team -- and many other freedom of conscience matters.