She’s a strong, outspoken conservative woman — the exact kind of person liberals love to hate.
So they’re trying to strip her of her free speech rights. But this time, they may have bitten off more than they can chew.
Ann Coulter is now at the center of a civil rights lawsuit filed Monday against the University of California, Berkeley by students who say the school is violating their right to free speech by canceling the conservative pundit’s speaking event on campus this week.
The lawsuit marks the latest twist in a high-profile debate over whether Coulter will be allowed to speak Thursday at UC Berkeley, which has been known for decades as a bastion of free speech and tolerance and the birthplace of the 1960s Free Speech Movement.
A legal team led by Harmeet Dhillon, a San Francisco attorney who is also a prominent California Republican, filed the case on behalf of the Berkeley College Republicans, who invited Coulter, and the Young America’s Foundation, which is helping to organize and finance the event.
“Berkeley is well known as a place where ideas used to be welcome. At least on the conservative side. At least until this recent election,” Dhillon told a news conference after filing the lawsuit at the U.S. District Court in San Francisco. “The university is required to give equal access to speakers of different viewpoints.”
The lawsuit says that Berkeley is trying “to restrict and stifle the speech of conservative students whose voices fall beyond the campus political orthodoxy.”
Dhillon is also a committeewoman to the Republican National Convention for California and former vice chairwoman of the California Republican Party.
Campus Republicans invited Coulter to speak at Berkeley this Thursday, but Berkeley officials informed the group last week that the event was being called off.
College officials cited security concerns, then backtracked and invited Coulter to return…. but only when class was not in session and the campus would be largely empty.
Coulter has insisted that she plans to still come Thursday.
Coulter is not a plaintiff on the lawsuit. But she voiced support for it on Twitter, posting Monday —
Our lawsuit against Berkeley was just filed. Demands appropriate & safe venue for my speech THIS THURSDAY + damages https://t.co/I9fvYdDwBU
— Ann Coulter (@AnnCoulter) April 24, 2017
The university’s attempt to call off the event came after a series of violent attacks this year by so-called “Anti-Fascist” liberals against conservatives on campus and in downtown Berkeley.
The lawsuit demands unstated damages and compensation for attorney fees, a trial by jury and an injunction against Berkeley officials from “restricting the exercise of political expression on the UC Berkeley campus.”
It names four university officials as defendants, including University of California President Janet Napolitano and Berkeley Chancellor Nicholas B. Dirks, and three police officials, including university police chief Margo Bennett.
The Associated Press contributed to this article