Inside Trump’s Pressure Campaign on Universities
The opaque
process, part of a strategy by conservatives to realign the liberal tilt of
elite universities, has upended higher education.
University
leaders have been stunned by the swift assault, which many see as an attack on
academic freedom aimed at crushing the influence of the elite institutions.
Michael C.
BenderAlan BlinderJonathan Swan
By Michael
C. BenderAlan Blinder and Jonathan Swan
April 14,
2025
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/14/us/politics/trump-pressure-universities.html
As he
finished lunch in the private dining room outside the Oval Office on April 1,
President Trump floated an astounding proposal: What if the government simply
canceled every dollar of the nearly $9 billion promised to Harvard University?
The
administration’s campaign to expunge “woke” ideology from college campuses had
already forced Columbia University to strike a deal. Now, the White House was
eyeing the nation’s oldest and wealthiest university.
“What if we
never pay them?” Mr. Trump casually asked, according to a person familiar with
the conversation, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe the
private discussion. “Wouldn’t that be cool?”
The moment
underscored the aggressive, ad hoc approach continuing to shape one of the new
administration’s most consequential policies.
Mr. Trump
and his top aides are exerting control of huge sums of federal research money
to shift the ideological tilt of the higher education system, which they see as
hostile to conservatives and intent on perpetuating liberalism.
Their effort
was energized by the campus protests against Israel’s response to the October
2023 terrorist attack by Hamas, demonstrations during which Jewish students
were sometimes harassed. Soon after taking office, Mr. Trump formed the Task
Force to Combat Antisemitism, which is scrutinizing leading universities for
potential civil rights violations and serving as an entry point to pressure
schools to reassess their policies.
It is backed
by the influence of Stephen Miller, who is Mr. Trump’s deputy chief of staff
for policy and the architect of much of the president’s domestic agenda.
The opaque
process is upending campuses nationwide, leaving elite institutions, long
accustomed to operating with relative freedom from Washington, reeling from a
blunt-force political attack that is at the leading edge of a bigger cultural
battle.
The task
force includes about 20 administration officials, most of whom the government
has not publicly identified, citing potential security risks. They meet each
week inside a rotating list of federal agency headquarters in Washington to
discuss reports of discrimination on college campuses, review grants to
universities and write up discoveries and recommendations for Mr. Trump.
On a
parallel track, a few powerful aides in the West Wing, including Mr. Miller,
have separately moved to stymie funding for major institutions without formally
going through the task force.
These aides
have spoken privately of toppling a high-profile university to signal their
seriousness, said two people familiar with the conversations. And they have
already partially suspended research funding for more than twice as many
schools as has the task force, according to those familiar with their work.
This account
of the inner workings of the higher education pressure campaign is based on
interviews with more than two dozen senior administration officials, university
leaders and outside advisers for both sides. Many spoke on the condition of
anonymity to discuss private conversations or because they feared retribution
against their campuses.
The White
House scored an early win with Columbia’s capitulation last month to a list of
demands that included tightening disciplinary policies and installing new
oversight of the university’s Middle Eastern, South Asian and African studies
department.
Since then,
the Trump administration expanded its focus to six more of the nation’s most
exclusive universities, including Harvard.
By the time
Mr. Trump privately discussed stopping all payments to Harvard, the task force
had opened a funding review. That led the administration to send the university
a list of demands on Friday, including that it bring in an outsider “to audit
those programs and departments that most fuel antisemitic harassment or reflect
ideological capture.” The government also insisted that Harvard change hiring
and admissions in departments that “lack viewpoint diversity” and “immediately
shutter” any programs related to diversity, equity and inclusion.
Harvard said
on Monday that it would not acquiesce. The university’s president, Alan M.
Garber, wrote in an open letter that most of the administration’s demands
“represent direct governmental regulation of the ‘intellectual conditions’ at
Harvard.” The university, Dr. Garber added, “will not surrender its
independence or relinquish its constitutional rights.”
In a
separate letter, two outside lawyers representing Harvard told administration
officials that the university “is not prepared to agree to demands that go
beyond the lawful authority of this or any administration.”
Hours later,
the task force announced a freeze of more than $2.2 billion in grants and
contracts for Harvard.
The scope of
the administration’s campaign is now poised to widen. The Education Department
has warned 60 universities that they could face repercussions from pending
investigations into accusations of antisemitism.
The push
comes as public confidence in higher education has plummeted in the past
decade, according to a Gallup poll in July. The decline was driven mostly by
concerns of colleges pushing political agendas, not teaching relevant skills,
and the costs, the survey showed.
Still,
university leaders have been stunned by the swift assault, with no clear sense
of how the Trump administration chooses its targets, on what basis it is
formulating penalties, or how to push back. Many see the effort as a widespread
attack on academic freedom aimed at crushing the influence of higher education.
“I’ve never
seen this degree of government intrusion, encroachment into academic
decision-making — nothing like this,” said Lee C. Bollinger, who spent 21 years
as Columbia’s president and more than five years leading the University of
Michigan.
For their
part, Trump administration officials and their allies say they are trying to
hold accountable a system that each year receives about $60 billion in federal
research funds while educating about 15 million undergraduates.
“We’re not
looking to just file lawsuits — we want to compel a cultural change in how
Jewish Americans are treated on college campuses,” Attorney General Pam Bondi,
a member of the task force, said in an interview.
But the
effort has gone beyond addressing antisemitism, with schools targeted for
diversity programs and supporting transgender athletes. In the view of some of
Mr. Trump’s closest advisers and key donors, leftists have seized control of
America’s most powerful institutions, including pillars of higher education,
and wresting back power is key to the future of Western civilization.
“The
universities seem all powerful and they have acted as if they were all
powerful, and we’re finally revealing that we can hit that where it hurts,”
Christopher F. Rufo, a conservative activist who has championed the strategy,
said in an interview.
‘Vanquish
the Radicals’
During last
year’s presidential campaign, Mr. Trump looked out from his rally stages and
described a nation he viewed as rife with discrimination against conservatives.
And for him,
nowhere was political injustice as pervasive as on college campuses run by
“Marxist maniacs and lunatics.”
Weeks after
opening his third presidential bid, Mr. Trump had announced a “free speech
policy initiative,” promising to strip federal research dollars and student
loan support from universities involved in what he generalized as “censorship
activities or election interferences.”
Six months
later, he complained about “racial discrimination” in higher education,
suggesting universities were increasingly hostile to white students. He vowed
to open civil rights investigations into schools that promoted diversity, and
he doubled down on those threats when the Supreme Court rejected affirmative
action in college admissions.
At the same
time, Mr. Miller, the longtime Trump adviser, was working on similar issues at
America First Legal, the nonprofit he started during the Biden administration.
The group has sued New York University and Northwestern University, accusing
them of discriminating against white men.
Mr. Trump
turned more forcefully to combating antisemitism as a political rallying cry
after Oct. 7, 2023, when Hamas militants led an attack that killed more than
1,200 people in Israel in what was the deadliest day for Jews since the
Holocaust. War in Gaza followed, and so did months of protests, particularly
among pro-Palestinian students on college campuses. Thousands were arrested as
they occupied presidents’ offices, harassed Jewish students, erected makeshift
encampments and disrupted graduation ceremonies.
From the
campaign trail, Mr. Trump cast the protests in personal terms, claiming that
“raging lunatics” were demonstrating on campuses to distract from immigration
issues central to his campaign.
“To every
college president,” Mr. Trump said at a rally in Waukesha, Wis., “vanquish the
radicals and take back our campuses for all of the normal students.”
The task
force to combat antisemitism was announced on Feb. 1, with the stated goal to
“eradicate antisemitic harassment in schools and on college campuses.” The
exact metrics to measure that progress remain unclear.
The
administration has declined to identify all members of the group, but its
titular head is Leo Terrell, the senior counsel in the Justice Department’s
civil rights division. A fixture on social media and Fox News’s “Hannity” show,
Mr. Terrell is a Trump favorite.
The public
face of the task force has largely been Linda McMahon, the education secretary.
Other identified members include Josh Gruenbaum, a top official at the General
Services Administration, and Sean Keveney, the acting general counsel at the
health department.
Coordinated
through the Justice Department’s civil rights division, the task force also
includes officials from the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. The
commission is investigating “dozens” of antisemitism complaints on college
campuses that could become part of the task force’s investigation, according to
two task force members. The group also includes data specialists, civil rights
lawyers and former academics in the government.
In February,
task force members announced a special focus on 10 universities: Columbia;
George Washington University; Harvard; Johns Hopkins University; N.Y.U.;
Northwestern; the University of California, Berkeley; the University of
California, Los Angeles; the University of Minnesota; and the University of
Southern California.
The task
force said it planned to visit each school and hold meetings with
administrators, students, local law enforcement officials and community
members.
By going
after Columbia and Harvard early, the task force set the tone.
The goal,
one senior administration official said, was to make examples of elite schools
to intimidate other universities.
The White
House also zeroed in on another five schools — Brown University, Cornell
University, Northwestern, the University of Pennsylvania and Princeton
University, according to people familiar with the process.
All have had
millions in federal funding suspended, threatening projects, laboratories and
jobs, and upending a multigenerational pact between the government and
universities. Since around World War II, colleges have been at the heart of the
American research system.
The amount
of research funding that has been targeted at each university has varied
widely, and there have been few indications of how officials are landing on
specific dollar amounts.
One task
force member said the figures were determined as part of the group’s
deliberations, which weighed the volume of grants and contracts promised to a
school, the disparities in disciplinary policies, and the institution’s
willingness to adopt changes and progress toward those goals.
Ultimately,
the group recommends to Mr. Trump whether the government should cut funding, as
it did before canceling contracts with Columbia last month, according to people
familiar with the process.
In that
case, the task force notified the school on March 3 that it was reviewing
grants. Four days later, on March 7, it cited Columbia’s “continued failure to
end the persistent harassment of Jewish students” and canceled $400 million in
contracts and grants.
Ms. McMahon
delivered the news in person that day to Katrina Armstrong, who has since left
her post as Columbia’s interim president. Soon after, Ms. McMahon said, leaders
of schools such as Harvard and Yale scheduled meetings with her.
“They wanted
to make sure we knew they were reviewing their policies,” Ms. McMahon said in
an interview. “The presidents that I’ve spoken to have been very cordial, but
very sincere in their effort to make sure that they were doing everything that
they needed on their campus to protect students.”
Some
universities got wind that their institutions were under scrutiny only when
stop-work orders for federally funded research trickled in. On one campus, a
faculty member heard from a government program officer that a cut to research
money was imminent — a warning that sent campus leaders scrambling.
J. Larry
Jameson, Penn’s president, said last month that the university learned “through
various news outlets” that the Trump administration was suspending about $175
million for research projects. Brown’s provost sent a memo about “troubling
rumors” shortly before White House officials said, with little fanfare, that
the administration planned to stop $510 million in funding.
After The
Daily Caller, a conservative media outlet, reported that $210 million in
research funding to Princeton was suspended, the university’s president,
Christopher L. Eisgruber, wrote in a campus email that “the full rationale for
this action is not yet clear.” When The New York Times asked the White House
for comment, a spokeswoman replied with a link to a Daily Caller reporter’s
social media post and only three words: “This is accurate.”
Some school
administrators have said that murkiness has complicated considerations of court
challenges.
They are
left feeling in the dark, one university official said.
Mr.
Eisgruber wrote in The Atlantic last month that the Trump administration’s
moves against Columbia were creating “the greatest threat to American
universities since the Red Scare of the 1950s.”
“There is a
pattern here of intrusions in academic freedom of strong universities that
should be of concern to every American,” he said in an interview on “The
Daily,” a podcast from The Times.
In the
scramble for self-defense, some university leaders have reached out to Jewish
activists to push back on what they view as the administration’s overly broad
definition of antisemitism.
Other
schools have focused on outreach to Mr. Trump through his allies. Harvard hired
as a lobbyist Brian Ballard, a former Trump campaign finance chairman whose
firm once employed Susie Wiles, Mr. Trump’s chief of staff, and Ms. Bondi, the
attorney general. Dartmouth installed a former chief counsel at the Republican
National Committee as the college’s top lawyer.
But it is
unclear how much these connections will help. The key staff members on the
issue inside the West Wing are Mr. Miller; Vince Haley, the head of the
domestic policy council; and May Mailman, senior policy strategist — all three
of whom are seen as hard-line culture warriors resistant to lobbying.
In the long
run, the goal of Mr. Trump and his allies is to permanently disrupt the elite
world of higher education.
“We want to
set them back a generation or two,” Mr. Rufo said.
The
administration’s zeal has flummoxed even some close Trump allies concerned that
the pressure campaign could set a troubling precedent for future
administrations that, for example, decide to “eradicate” sexism from college
campuses or bigots from the faculty. Who gets to decide which people fall into
what category and when?
Inside the
White House, such worries are dismissed. That kind of thinking held back the
first Trump administration, officials said. They are not concerned about what
the political left might do in the future, they said, but instead are focused
on setting in motion long-term change.
Michael C.
Bender is a Times political correspondent covering Donald J. Trump, the Make
America Great Again movement and other federal and state elections.
Alan Blinder
is a national correspondent for The Times, covering education.
Jonathan
Swan is a White House reporter for The Times, covering the administration of
Donald J. Trump.
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