Summers,
‘Ashamed’ Over Epstein Ties, Steps Back From Public Commitments
New
emails showed that Lawrence H. Summers, a former Harvard president, had stayed
in touch with Jeffrey Epstein for years after Mr. Epstein faced sex trafficking
charges.
Vimal
Patel
By Vimal
Patel
Published
Nov. 17, 2025
Updated
Nov. 18, 2025, 12:23 a.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/17/us/harvard-larry-summers-epstein.html
Lawrence
H. Summers, Harvard’s former president and a former Treasury secretary, said
Monday that he would be stepping back from public commitments following the
release of emails between him and Jeffrey Epstein, a convicted sex offender.
“I am
deeply ashamed of my actions and recognize the pain they have caused,” Mr. Summers said in a statement Monday. “I take
full responsibility for my misguided decision to continue communicating with
Mr. Epstein.”
Mr.
Summers added that he would continue teaching as an economics professor at
Harvard, though he did not specify which public commitments he would be
stepping back from. But the Yale Budget Lab said Mr. Summers has indicated he
would be withdrawing from his role in its advisory group. And a spokeswoman for
the Center for American Progress, a left-leaning think tank, said he would be
ending his fellowship there immediately.
The
relationship between Mr. Summers and Mr. Epstein was previously known. Mr.
Summers had sought money from Mr. Epstein for a poetry foundation led by his
wife, Elisa New, an emerita Harvard literature professor.
But
emails released last week showed a cozier relationship that included Mr.
Summers seeking romantic advice and trading banter with Mr. Epstein over
several years. The communications stretched to 2019, long after Mr. Epstein had
pleaded guilty in 2008 to charges related to soliciting a minor for
prostitution. In 2018, The Miami Herald published a deeply reported article
about Mr. Epstein’s abuse of young girls. Mr. Epstein died while in custody in
2019, which was ruled a suicide.
Harvard
did not respond to a request for comment.
Earlier
on Monday, Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts had called on Harvard and
other institutions to sever their relationship with Mr. Summers.
“For
decades, Larry Summers has demonstrated his attraction to serving the wealthy
and well connected, but his willingness to cozy up to a convicted sex offender
demonstrates monumentally bad judgment,” Ms. Warren, a former Harvard Law
School professor, said in a statement on Monday, which was first reported by
CNN.
“If he
had so little ability to distance himself from Jeffrey Epstein even after all
that was publicly known about Epstein’s sex offenses involving underage girls,
then Summers cannot be trusted to advise our nation’s politicians, policymakers
and institutions — or teach a generation of students at Harvard or anywhere
else.”
Others
also criticized the relationship. The Revolving Door Project, a watchdog group,
called on prominent institutions to cut their ties with Mr. Summers, including
Harvard, OpenAI, Bloomberg and The New York Times. (Mr. Summers is a
contributing writer for the Times Opinion section.)
On
Friday, President Trump, under fire for his own ties to Mr. Epstein, said he
would direct his administration to investigate the financier’s connections to
Democrats, including Bill Clinton and Mr. Summers, “to determine what was going
on with them.”
Mr.
Clinton has denied having a close relationship with Mr. Epstein. In 2019, his
office said Mr. Clinton had not spoken to Mr. Epstein in more than a decade.
Mr. Trump was friendly with Mr. Epstein for at least 15 years, but said they
later became rivals in a real estate battle.
The
latest emails were part of a trove of more than 20,000 pages of documents
released by House Republicans.
In one
exchange from 2019, Mr. Epstein provided a pep talk after Mr. Summers described
an exchange with a love interest who was seeing another man.
“I dint
want to be in a gift giving competition while being the friend without
benefits,” Mr. Summers wrote in the email.
“shes
smart. making you pay for past errors. ignore the daddy im going to go out with
the motorcycle guy, you reacted well.. annoyed shows caring., no whining showed
strentgh,” Mr. Epstein responded.
Mr.
Summers served a tumultuous run as Harvard’s president, resigning in 2006 as he
faced a vote of no-confidence among the faculty. The vote came after
controversy emerged over his suggestion that women were less represented than
men in the fields of math and science partially because of biological
differences, a topic he also discussed with Mr. Epstein, the newly released
emails show.
“I
observed that half the IQ in world was possessed by women without mentioning
they are more than 51 percent of population,” Mr. Summers wrote in a 2017
email.
Pooja
Salhotra and Ben Casselman contributed reporting.
Vimal
Patel writes about higher education for The Times with a focus on speech and
campus culture.


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