Trump
Officials Blame Mistake for Setting Off Confrontation With Harvard
An official
on the administration’s antisemitism task force told the university that a
letter of demands had been sent without authorization.
Michael S.
SchmidtMichael C. Bender
By Michael
S. Schmidt and Michael C. Bender
April 18,
2025
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/18/business/trump-harvard-letter-mistake.html
Harvard
University received an emailed letter from the Trump administration last Friday
that included a series of demands about hiring, admissions and curriculum so
onerous that school officials decided they had no choice but to take on the
White House.
The
university announced its intentions on Monday, setting off a tectonic battle
between one of the country’s most prestigious universities and a U.S.
president. Then, almost immediately, came a frantic call from a Trump official.
The April 11
letter from the White House’s task force on antisemitism, this official told
Harvard, should not have been sent and was “unauthorized,” two people familiar
with the matter said.
The letter
was sent by the acting general counsel of the Department of Health and Human
Services, Sean Keveney, according to three other people, who were briefed on
the matter. Mr. Keveney is a member of the antisemitism task force.
It is
unclear what prompted the letter to be sent last Friday. Its content was
authentic, the three people said, but there were differing accounts inside the
administration of how it had been mishandled. Some people at the White House
believed it had been sent prematurely, according to the three people, who
requested anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly about
internal discussions. Others in the administration thought it had been meant to
be circulated among the task force members rather than sent to Harvard.
But its
timing was consequential. The letter arrived when Harvard officials believed
they could still avert a confrontation with President Trump. Over the previous
two weeks, Harvard and the task force had engaged in a dialogue. But the
letter’s demands were so extreme that Harvard concluded that a deal would
ultimately be impossible.
After
Harvard publicly repudiated the demands, the Trump administration raised the
pressure, freezing billions in federal funding to the school and warning that
its tax-exempt status was in jeopardy.
A senior
White House official said the administration stood by the letter, calling the
university’s decision to publicly rebuff the administration overblown and
blaming Harvard for not continuing discussions.
“It was
malpractice on the side of Harvard’s lawyers not to pick up the phone and call
the members of the antisemitism task force who they had been talking to for
weeks,” said May Mailman, the White House senior policy strategist. “Instead,
Harvard went on a victimhood campaign.”
Still, Ms.
Mailman said, there is a potential pathway to resume discussions if the
university, among other measures, follows through on what Mr. Trump wants and
apologizes to its students for fostering a campus where there was antisemitism.
Mr. Keveney
could not be reached for comment. In a statement, a spokesman for the
antisemitism task force said, “The task force, and the entire Trump
administration, is in lock step on ensuring that entities who receive taxpayer
dollars are following all civil rights laws.”
Harvard
pushed back on the White House’s claim that it should have checked with the
administration lawyers after receiving the letter.
The letter
“was signed by three federal officials, placed on official letterhead, was sent
from the email inbox of a senior federal official and was sent on April 11 as
promised,” Harvard said in a statement on Friday. “Recipients of such
correspondence from the U.S. government — even when it contains sweeping
demands that are astonishing in their overreach — do not question its
authenticity or seriousness.”
The
statement added: “It remains unclear to us exactly what, among the government’s
recent words and deeds, were mistakes or what the government actually meant to
do and say. But even if the letter was a mistake, the actions the government
took this week have real-life consequences” on students and employees and “the
standing of American higher education in the world.”
The letter
shocked Harvard not only because of the nature of the demands but because it
was sent when the university’s leadership and the lawyers it hired to deal with
the administration thought they could head off a full-bore conflict with Mr.
Trump.
For two
weeks, Harvard’s lawyers, William Burck and Robert Hur, listened as Trump
officials, in fairly broad strokes, laid out the administration’s concerns
about how the school dealt with antisemitism and other issues.
On the
administration’s side of this dialogue were three lawyers: Josh Gruenbaum, a
top official at the General Services Administration; Thomas Wheeler, the acting
general counsel for the Department of Education; and Mr. Keveney.
The back and
forth lacked specifics on what the administration wanted Harvard to do. The
Trump administration lawyers said they would send Harvard a letter last Friday
that laid out more specifics.
By the end
of the workday on Friday, the letter had not arrived. Instead, overnight, the
lawyers from Harvard received a letter, sent from Mr. Keveney in an email, that
was far different from the one the school had expected.
It listed a
series of demands that would reshape student and academic life in ways Harvard
could never agree to. On Monday, Harvard said publicly that it could not accede
to them.
Shortly
thereafter, Mr. Gruenbaum called one of Harvard’s lawyers, according to two
people with knowledge of the calls. At first he said he and Mr. Wheeler had not
authorized the sending of the letter. Mr. Gruenbaum then slightly changed his
story, saying the letter was supposed to be sent at some point, just not on
Friday when the dialogue between the two sides was still constructive, one of
the people said.
A lawyer for
Columbia University received a similar call from Mr. Gruenbaum around the same
time, two people with knowledge of the call said. He, Mr. Wheeler and Mr.
Keveney had also been engaged with Columbia about changes the task force wanted
that university to adopt, and Mr. Gruenbaum wanted the Columbia lawyer to know
that the letter to Harvard was “unauthorized,” the two people with knowledge of
the call said.
Mr.
Gruenbaum did not respond to a message seeking comment.
Later
Monday, Harvard’s corporation and senior leaders were briefed on Mr.
Gruenbaum’s assertion that the letter should not have been sent. The briefing
left many on Harvard’s side convinced that the letter had been a mistake, three
people familiar with the matter said.
Harvard
officials, including several who worked in government earlier in their careers,
were shocked that such an important letter — bearing the logos of three
government agencies, with signatures of three top officials at the bottom —
could be sent by a mistake.
But at that
point, there was no way for Harvard to undo what had already been set in
motion. The university had already declared that it would rebuff the letter’s
demands. And despite claiming that the letter should not have been sent, the
Trump administration did not withdraw it.
In response
to Harvard’s decision to fight, the White House announced that Mr. Trump was
freezing $2.2 billion in grants to the school. Within a day, he was threatening
to revoke Harvard’s tax-exempt status.
Maureen
Farrell contributed reporting.
Michael S.
Schmidt is an investigative reporter for The Times covering Washington. His
work focuses on tracking and explaining high-profile federal investigations.
Michael C.
Bender is a Times political correspondent covering Donald J. Trump, the Make
America Great Again movement and other federal and state elections.
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