Fellow journalists, free speech defenders, and racial justice advocates are jumping to the defense of sports anchor Jemele Hill on Tuesday, after she was suspended for two weeks for “a second violation” of ESPN’s social media policy.
Hill posted a series of tweets about Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones’ demand that his players stand for the national anthem. Jones’s move sparked outrage as many NFL players have chosen to kneel during the anthem to draw attention to police brutality and other forms of injustice experienced disproportionately by black Americans.
Rashad Robinson, executive director of the advocacy group Color of Change, slammed ESPN’s decision as he called it “a flagrant suppression of Black voices in sports. ESPN is happy to stand with enablers of racism and sexism, but dare speak out against these issues and you’re in trouble.”
Hill suggested NFL fans who disagree with Jones should show their disapproval by refusing to support his team’s sponsors.
Hill previously called President Donald Trump a white supremacist last month. White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders told reporters Hill should be fired for her comments.
While President Donald Trump tweeted an attack on Hill Tuesday morning (blaming her for their ratings, which he incorrectly said have “tanked”), journalist John Nichols was among those who defended Hill’s statement as social commentary on the over-arching issue of racial injustice—one that ESPN can’t simply ignore when many in the sports world are publicly speaking out against it.
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