Judge calls mistrial in U. Iowa liberal bias trial

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Others in higher education warned that, if Wagner was successful, it would give the courts a bigger role in second-guessing decisions best left to the judgment of universities and likely lead to more litigation. Some also raised the prospect that universities could face government-mandated quotas requiring them to hire a certain percentage of professors of differing political beliefs.

The trial exposed tension among the Iowa faculty and questionable hiring practices, including the law school's decision to erase a videotape of Wagner's job interview shortly after she was turned down. The university also could not produce any written documents showing criticism of her interview at the time; the only documents made public were from professors praising her.

Fieweger said the trial had showed how hiring decisions were made by faculty vote with no clear rationale.

"It did shed light on that so that people can see that there has to be some type of reform," he said. "There's really a complete lack of transparency here."

University spokesman Tom Moore said the school respected the trial's outcome and will "continue to review our policies to ensure that all hiring and promotion practices at the university comply with the law."

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