Students ask Supreme Court to allow campus drag show at West Texas A&M
CNN —
A student group seeking to host a drag show at a Texas university asked the Supreme Court on Wednesday to overrule a decision by the school’s president to prohibit the performance, which he described as “derisive, divisive and demoralizing.”
Spectrum WT and two student leaders of the LGBTQ group filed an emergency petition with the high court asking that it be allowed to put on the show at West Texas A&M University. The ban, the group claims, violates the First Amendment.
President Donald Trump talks with Chief Justice John Roberts as Justice Elena Kagan looks on before the State of the Union address in the House chamber on February 4, 2020 in Washington, DC.Related article Trump’s on the ballot, but the Supreme Court left key constitutional questions unanswered
The university’s president, Walter Wendler, declined the group’s request to host the event. According to court records, Wendler at the time described the performances as “exaggerating aspects of womanhood (sexuality, femininity, gender),” that, he said, “stereotype women in cartoon-like extremes for the amusement of others.”
The litigation has been pending for nearly a year and was originally filed ahead of a scheduled drag performance last year, which was later moved off campus. This year, the group has scheduled the show for March 22.
The court asked West Texas A&M to respond by March 13.
The group has described the event as “PG-13,” allowing minors to attend if accompanied by a parent.
US District Judge Matthew Kacsmaryk, who was nominated to the bench by former President Donald Trump, ruled in September that the group did not have a First Amendment right to hold the performance on campus.
“When children are involved,” Kacsmaryk wrote,