Trump freezes $2.2b in grants to Harvard University over 'anti-Semitic' campus activism
15 hours ago
People walk through Harvard Yard at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts. File/Agence France-Presse
The federal government says it’s freezing more than $2.2 billion in grants and $60 million in contracts to Harvard University. The administration also has paused federal funding for the University of Pennsylvania, Brown, Princeton, Cornell and Northwestern.
The move came after the institution said it would defy the Trump administration’s demands to limit activism on campus.
The hold on Harvard's funding marks the seventh time President Donald Trump's administration has taken the step at one of the nation’s most elite colleges, in an attempt to force compliance with Trump's political agenda. Six of the seven schools are in the Ivy League.
In a letter to Harvard on Friday, Trump's administration had called for broad government and leadership reforms at the university, as well as changes to its admissions policies. It also demanded the university audit views of diversity on campus, and stop recognising some student clubs.
Karl Molden, an international student at Harvard, speaks at a protest on Cambridge Common organised by the City of Cambridge on Saturday.
Reuters
The federal government said almost $9 billion in grants and contracts in total were at risk if Harvard did not comply.
'No government should dictate what we can teach'
On Monday, Harvard President Alan Garber said the university would not bend to the government's demands.
"The University will not surrender its independence or relinquish its constitutional rights,” Garber said in a letter to the Harvard community. "No government – regardless of which party is in power – should dictate what private universities can teach, whom they can admit and hire, and which areas of study and inquiry they can pursue.”
Hours later, the government froze billions in Harvard's federal funding.
The first university targeted by the Trump administration was Columbia, which acquiesced to the government’s demands under the threat of billions of dollars in cuts.
In March, Columbia agreed to a sweeping, unprecedented set of demands, including creating a new campus police force to remove student protesters and putting a Middle East studies department under outside control to win back potential access to $400 million in imperilled federal funds, the same month its second president in the span of 12 months stepped down.
According to the Independent, at least 60 universities were warned they could soon be the next to potentially lose hundreds of millions or even billions in federal funding if they didn’t fall in line with the president’s vision of campus civil rights, which has categorised all of those who engaged in campus pro-Palestine protests, which included scores of Jewish student leaders, as anti-Semitic Hamas sympathisers.
Attempts to 'regulate intellectual conditions'
Trump's administration has normalised the extraordinary step of withholding federal money to pressure major academic institutions to comply with the president's political agenda and to influence campus policy. The administration has argued universities allowed anti-Semitism to go unchecked at campus protests last year against Israel's war in Gaza.
Demonstrators at a protest organised on Saturday by the City of Cambridge calling on Harvard leadership to resist interference by the federal government. Reuters
Harvard, Garber said, already has made extensive reforms to address anti-Semitism. He said many of the government's demands don't relate to anti-Semitism, but instead are an attempt to regulate the "intellectual conditions” at Harvard.
Withholding federal funding from Harvard, one of the nation's top research universities in science and medicine, "risks not only the health and well-being of millions of individuals but also the economic security and vitality of our nation.”
It also violates the university's First Amendment rights and exceeds the government's authority under Title VI, which prohibits discrimination against students based on their race, colour or national origin, Garber said.
Diversity, ban on face masks
The government's demands included that Harvard institute what it called "merit-based” admissions and hiring policies and conduct an audit of the study body, faculty and leadership on their views about diversity.
The administration also called for a ban on face masks at Harvard – an apparent target of pro-Palestinian campus protesters – and pressured the university to stop recognising or funding "any student group or club that endorses or promotes criminal activity, illegal violence, or illegal harassment.”
Harvard's defiance, the federal anti-Semitism task force said on Monday, "reinforces the troubling entitlement mindset that is endemic in our nation’s most prestigious universities and colleges – that federal investment does not come with the responsibility to uphold civil rights laws.
"The disruption of learning that has plagued campuses in recent years is unacceptable. The harassment of Jewish students is intolerable.”
New investigations at colleges
Trump has promised a more aggressive approach against anti-Semitism on campus, accusing former President Joe Biden of letting schools off the hook. Trump's administration has opened new investigations at colleges and detained and deported several foreign students with ties to pro-Palestinian protests.
The demands from the Trump administration had prompted a group of Harvard alumni to write to university leaders calling for it to "legally contest and refuse to comply with unlawful demands that threaten academic freedom and university self-governance.”
Learning will not yield to bullying, says alumna Anurima Bhargava
"Harvard stood up today for the integrity, values, and freedoms that serve as the foundation of higher education,” said Anurima Bhargava, one of the alumni behind the letter. "Harvard reminded the world that learning, innovation and transformative growth will not yield to bullying and authoritarian whims.”
The government's pressure on Harvard also sparked a protest over the weekend from the campus community and residents of Cambridge and a lawsuit from the American Association of University Professors on Friday challenging the cuts.
In their lawsuit, plaintiffs argue that the Trump administration has failed to follow steps required under Title VI before it starts cutting funds, including giving notice of the cuts to both the university and Congress.
"These sweeping yet indeterminate demands are not remedies targeting the causes of any determination of noncompliance with federal law. Instead, they overtly seek to impose on Harvard University political views and policy preferences advanced by the Trump administration and commit the University to punishing disfavoured speech,” plaintiffs wrote.