SAN MARCOS – Texas State University’s Student Government Supreme Court decided not to impeach Student Government President Connor Clegg. 

Clegg is under fire for racially-charged Instagram posts from 2014 depicting Asian stereotypes. Students also wanted Clegg held accountable for his calls to defund the campus newspaper after an opinion piece entitled “Your DNA is an abomination.”

"It was very visible that students were very upset at the end of it," student Alex Molina said. "Some students were crying, some students were expressing their anger towards this university still not taking action towards racism.”

The University said it is committed to maintaining a diverse student body. However, many minority students don’t believe Clegg is the person for the job.

"Minority students on this campus and students in general just feel that it’s just time's up," Molina said. "It’s just getting to a point where it’s disgusting to watch. It’s unbearable and students are so upset and to that point to where they don’t know what to do next."

Students in the Pan African Action Committee are trying to figure out the next steps. PAAC pushed for Clegg's impeachment. Now the student group's focus is moving on.

"The campus keeps showing us, no matter what we do you know what I’m saying, we going to take a hard L," PAAC member Nicholas Prejean said. "I’ve been here for four years now and it’s always the same thing."

As some around campus call for a boycott of Texas State, involved minority students say they're not done fighting yet.

"We didn’t get the results we wanted, but that’s politics sometimes," Prejean said. "That happens when you’re 11 percent of the campus."

Texas State University President Denise Trauth is holding an open forum for students March 1, from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. at the LBJ Student Center.