Republican Party of Texas v. Dietz
Texas Supreme Court
940 S.W.2d 86 (1997)
- Written by Philip Glass, JD
Facts
The Log Cabin Republicans of Texas and the Texas Log Cabin Republicans, Inc. (LCR) (plaintiffs) sought a booth at the 1996 Republican Party of Texas Convention. LCR concerned itself with promoting LGBT civil rights. At first, the Republican Party of Texas (Republican Party) (defendants) greenlit an LCR convention booth. Later, the Republican Party withdrew its permission from LCR. The Republican Party based its denial on an advertisement sent to them by LCR as sample booth material. This material conflicted with its party platform. A convention rule establishing content-based restrictions appeared to allow the Republican Party's action. Thereafter, LCR sought an injunction against the Republican Party. LCR maintained that the Republican Party's decision violated its freedom of speech. The district court issued a preliminary injunction for reapproval of LCR's convention booth.
Rule of Law
Issue
Holding and Reasoning (Abbott, J.)
Concurrence (Spector, J.)
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