Harvard University sues to block Trump from slashing billions in research funding

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Harvard University on April 21 sued US President Donald Trump's administration in a sharp escalation of the fight between the  university and the Republican, who has threatened its funding and sought to impose outside political supervision.

The lawsuit is a major escalation of the ongoing fight between higher education and US President Donald Trump.

PHOTO: AFP

Stephanie Saul

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NEW YORK – Harvard, the world’s wealthiest university, sued the Trump administration on April 21, fighting back against

its threats to slash billions of dollars from the school’s research funding

as part of a crusade against the nation’s top colleges.

The lawsuit signalled a major escalation of

the ongoing fight between higher education and President Donald Trump,

who has vowed to “reclaim” elite universities. The administration has cast its campaign as a fight against anti-Semitism, but has also targeted programmes and teaching related to racial diversity and gender ideology.

Earlier this month, it sent Harvard a list of demands that included auditing professors for plagiarism, reporting to the federal government any international students accused of misconduct, and appointing an outside overseer to make sure that academic departments were “viewpoint diverse”.

Harvard University President Alan M. Garber accused the government in a statement on April 21 of trying to wield “unprecedented and improper control”. He said the consequences of the government’s actions would be “severe and long lasting”.

The Trump administration has claimed that Harvard and other schools have

allowed anti-Semitic language and harassment to remain unchecked

on their campuses. The April 21 lawsuit noted that the government had cited the university’s response to anti-Semitism as justification for its “unlawful action”.

Professor Garber, in his statement, said that “as a Jew and as an American, I know very well that there are valid concerns about rising anti-Semitism”. But he said that the government was legally required to engage with the university about the ways it was fighting anti-Semitism. Instead, he said, the government has sought to control “whom we hire and what we teach”.

The lawsuit, filed in federal court in Massachusetts, accuses the government of unleashing a broad attack as “leverage to gain control of academic decision-making at Harvard”. It also references other major universities that have faced abrupt funding cuts.

The lawsuit names as defendants Mr Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the health and human services secretary; Ms Linda M. McMahon, the education secretary; Mr Stephen Ehikian, acting administrator of the General Services Administration; Attorney General Pam Bondi; and several other administration officials.

White House officials did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

In the past week, the Trump administration has also threatened to eliminate visas for international students at Harvard after the university refused to accede to administration demands.

And government officials are planning to freeze an additional US$1 billion ($1.31 billion) in research funding to Harvard, according to two administration officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity. The officials said the funding was mainly from the National Institutes of Health, which is the nation’s primary agency for biomedical and public health research.

Harvard officials have said the funding freeze will have a significant impact on the T.H. Chan School of Public Health, which receives nearly half of its total budget from federal research grants. The school announced major budget cuts this past week.

Using claims of anti-Semitism as a cudgel, the Trump administration has threatened to investigate dozens of colleges, and has moved to withhold billions in federal funding from several of them, including

Columbia

,

Princeton

,

Cornell and Northwestern

.

Harvard notified the administration in a letter on April 14 that it would refuse to comply with demands that it said were unlawful. That prompted the Trump administration to impose a funding freeze. The freeze resulted in immediate stop-work orders, affecting the school’s federally funded research projects on tuberculosis, ALS or Lou Gehrig’s disease, and radiation poisoning.

“The university will not surrender its independence or relinquish its constitutional rights,” Prof Garber wrote in a message to the community this month.

Harvard’s letter on April 14 was in response to a list of demands that an anti-Semitism task force, appointed by the Trump administration, had submitted to Harvard three days earlier.

Some members of the administration had said that

the list of demands was sent by mistake,

but on April 21, Prof Garber said that “their actions suggest otherwise”. NYTIMES

  • Vimal Patel and Michael C. Bender contributed reporting.

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