
Columbia University grants President Trump's demands
Columbia also expelled students last week who had been involved with a building takeover during the protest movement, meeting another of the administration's demands. In the Friday announcement, the school said it has hired 36 'special officers' who will have the power to remove people from campus and make arrests.
Advertisement
Although the announcement never mentions Trump or last week's letter, the four-page document closely tracks the Trump administration's demands, responding to them point-by-point with only minor departures.
The demands and Columbia's capitulation mark an extraordinary intervention by the federal government in a private university's affairs, which may presage how the Trump administration pursue its wider crackdown on elite universities. Some academics and higher education leaders have seen the Trump-Columbia confrontation as a test case, giving an early indication of how other university leaders may weigh values, such as independence and academic freedom, against the threat of devastating financial cuts threatened by the Trump administration.
Trump and his allies are seeking to reshape American universities, purging them of diversity programs and rooting out what they regard as leftist ideology that radicalizes students and undermines the academic mission. Supporters see the administration's funding cuts, DEI bans, and focus on antisemitism as an overdue corrective.
Advertisement
'This is a smart, bold, forceful set of demands,' said Kenneth Marcus, a former Department of Education official in the first Trump administration who is now founder and chairman of the Brandeis Center, a Jewish advocacy group. Contrary to the department's usual bureaucratic approach to civil rights violations, he said, the Trump administration's methods have 'real teeth.'
But many academics, advocates, and higher education leaders — including those concerned about campus antisemitism or who are politically moderate or libertarian — see Trump's moves as abuses of federal power meant to punish institutions he views as hostile to his worldview.
'The major motivation for these measures I think is just raw punitive retribution,' said Steven Pinker, a Harvard psychology professor. 'It's not that there aren't problems with universities, including protecting Jewish students against intimidation and harassment, which is a legitimate goal. But it's completely irrational to pursue that goal by withholding funding from biomedical research.'
Days after the Trump administration announced the $400 million of funding cuts on March 7, Columbia scientists began receiving notice from the National Institutes of Health of specific grants that were terminated, said Jacqueline Gottlieb, a professor of neuroscience at Columbia University Medical School.
She lost funding for a PhD candidate who works in her lab. She has pulled funding from another grant so the student will be able to finish her degree, Gottlieb said. 'But that's not free. That's a cut' to her lab's overall funding, she said.
James Applegate, a Columbia professor of astronomy, said the Trump administration's punishments are disconnected from the protest movement or the university's handling of antisemitism.
'All of a sudden people who have been spending their lives and careers doing cutting-edge biomedical research discovered their grants had been suspended or canceled because of things...they know nothing about, had nothing to do with, and don't sympathize with,' he said.
Advertisement
Columbia was an epicenter of the nationwide student protest movement last year over the Israel-Hamas war.
Many protests were peaceful. Others involved vandalism and forceful entry into campus buildings resulting in injuries to Columbia workers. Protesters who set up an encampment on Columbia's quad said
After the encampment, Columbia revamped some of its disciplinary policies and suspended or expelled some students. Pro-Palestinian activists and their faculty allies said the university was repressing political expression, undermining the university's long tradition of student activism, and targeting pro-Palestinian speech as a matter of political expedience. Other professors, as well as Jewish students and advocates, said the university's leaders had allowed to protests to spiral out of control by failing to enforce existing rules. The school's president, Minouche Shafik, resigned in August.
A
Jewish and Israeli students 'were on the receiving end of ethnic slurs, stereotypes about supposedly dangerous Israeli [military] veterans, antisemitic tropes about Jewish wealth and hidden power, threats and physical assaults, exclusion of Zionists from student groups, and inconsistent standards,' the report said.
Mike Damiano can be reached at

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


E&E News
10 minutes ago
- E&E News
Wright, Burgum tout LNG deals with Japanese company
Leaders of the Trump administration's National Energy Dominance Council convened Wednesday to laud four deals between Japan's largest power generator and U.S. suppliers of liquefied natural gas. The agreements each involve JERA, which produces about 30 percent of Japan's electricity, and companies with LNG export projects in Texas and Louisiana. Through the new and pending deals, JERA plans to buy up to 5.5 million metric tons a year of the supercooled gas over 20 years. JERA is the 'single largest LNG buyer in the global market,' said Yukio Kani, the company's global CEO and chair, at the Department of Energy's James V. Forrestal Building. Advertisement There — before Energy Secretary Chris Wright and Interior Secretary Doug Burgum — Kani praised the leadership of President Donald Trump and said the various agreements mark an 'even deeper commitment to the U.S. energy sector.' The Trump administration said the new deals are projected to support over 50,000 U.S. jobs and add more than $200 billion to U.S. gross domestic product — though not all of the deals are final.


Fox News
10 minutes ago
- Fox News
National Guard authorized to detain ICE attackers, DHS says
National Guardsmen deployed to Los Angeles have the authority to temporarily detain anti-ICE rioters in Los Angeles, the Department of Homeland Security says. President Donald Trump has deployed some 4,000 National Guardsmen to the city as the riots continue, but Maj. Gen. Scott Sherman said on Wednesday that there have only been a small number of cases where they have detained civilians. DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin says the troops are on the ground to provide protection for ICE agents and other federal law enforcement groups. "If any rioters attack ICE law enforcement officers, military personnel have the authority to temporarily detain them until law enforcement makes the arrest," McLaughlin told Axios in a statement. Sherman told the Associated Press on Wednesday that about 500 National Guard troops have been trained so far to help agents carry out immigration operations in Los Angeles. Immigration officials have already circulated photos of soldiers from the National Guard providing security for Department of Homeland Security agents. He told the AP that over the past few days, National Guard soldiers have temporarily detained anti-ICE protesters, though there have not been many as of late because things have calmed down. Sherman also said the soldiers did not participate in the arrests or law enforcement activities. Instead, he added, they let the agitators go once police take them into custody. California Gov. Gavin Newsom has had a public feud with the Trump administration, accusing the president of having "commandeered" 2,000 of the state's National Guard members "illegally, for no reason" without consulting with California's law enforcement leaders. The Trump administration, meanwhile, said its ICE operations are aiming to get "criminal illegal immigrant killers, rapists, gangbangers, drug dealers, human traffickers and domestic abusers off the streets."


Hamilton Spectator
12 minutes ago
- Hamilton Spectator
Democratic governors will defend immigration policies before Republican-led House panel
WASHINGTON (AP) — As President Donald Trump spars with California's governor over immigration enforcement, Republicans in Congress are calling other Democratic governors to the Capitol on Thursday to question them over policies limiting cooperation with federal immigration authorities. The House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform posted a video ahead of the hearing highlighting crimes allegedly committed by immigrants in the U.S. illegally and pledging that 'sanctuary state governors will answer to the American people.' The hearing is to include testimony from Govs. JB Pritzker of Illinois, Tim Walz of Minnesota and Kathy Hochul of New York. There's no legal definition of a sanctuary jurisdiction , but the term generally refers to governments with policies limiting cooperation with federal immigration authorities. Courts previously have upheld the legality of such laws. But Trump's administration has sued Colorado, Illinois, New York and several cities — including Chicago and Rochester, New York — asserting their policies violate the U.S. Constitution or federal law. Illinois, Minnesota and New York also were among 14 states and hundreds of cities and counties recently listed by the Department of Homeland Security as 'sanctuary jurisdictions defying federal immigration law.' The list later was removed from the department's website after criticism that it errantly included some local governments that support Trump's immigration policies. As Trump steps up immigration enforcement, some Democratic-led states have intensified their resistance by strengthening state laws restricting cooperation with immigration agents. Following clashes between crowds of protesters and immigration agents in Los Angeles, Trump deployed the National Guard to protect federal buildings and agents, and California Gov. Gavin Newsom accused Trump of declaring 'a war' on the underpinnings of American democracy. The House Oversight Committee has long been a partisan battleground, and in recent months it has turned its focus to immigration policy. Thursday's hearing follows a similar one in March in which the Republican-led committee questioned the Democratic mayors of Chicago, Boston, Denver and New York about sanctuary policies. Heavily Democratic Chicago has been a sanctuary city for decades. In 2017, then-Illinois Gov. Bruce Rauner, a Republican, signed legislation creating statewide protections for immigrants. The Illinois Trust Act prohibits police from searching, arresting or detaining people solely because of their immigration status. But it allows local authorities to hold people for federal immigration authorities if there's a valid criminal warrant. Pritzker, who succeeded Rauner in 2019, said in remarks prepared for the House committee that violent criminals 'have no place on our streets, and if they are undocumented, I want them out of Illinois and out of our country.' 'But we will not divert our limited resources and officers to do the job of the federal government when it is not in the best interest of our state, our local communities, or the safety of our residents,' he said. Pritzker has been among Trump's most outspoken opponents and is considered a potential 2028 presidential candidate. He said Illinois has provided shelter and services to more than 50,000 immigrants who were sent there from other states. A Department of Justice lawsuit against New York challenges a 2019 law that allows immigrants illegally in the U.S. to receive New York driver's licenses and shields driver's license data from federal immigration authorities. That built upon a 2017 executive order by then-Gov. Andrew Cuomo that prohibited New York officials from inquiring about or disclosing a person's immigration status to federal authorities, unless required by law. Hochul's office said law enforcement officers still can cooperate with federal immigration authorities when people are convicted of or under investigation for crimes. Since Hochul took office in 2021, her office said, the state has transferred more than 1,300 incarcerated noncitizens to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement at the completion of their state sentences. Minnesota doesn't have a statewide sanctuary law protecting immigrants in the U.S. illegally, though Minneapolis and St. Paul both restrict the extent to which police and city employees can cooperate with immigration enforcement. Some laws signed by Walz have secured benefits for people regardless of immigration status. But at least one of those is getting rolled back. The Minnesota Legislature, meeting in a special session , passed legislation Monday to repeal a 2023 law that allowed adults in the U.S. illegally to be covered under a state-run health care program for the working poor. Walz insisted on maintaining eligibility for children who aren't in the country legally, ___ Lieb reported from Jefferson City, Mo. Also contributing were Associated Press writers Anthony Izaguirre in Albany, N.Y.; Steve Karnowski in St. Paul, Minn.; and Sophia Tareen in Chicago. Error! Sorry, there was an error processing your request. There was a problem with the recaptcha. Please try again. You may unsubscribe at any time. By signing up, you agree to our terms of use and privacy policy . This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google privacy policy and terms of service apply. Want more of the latest from us? Sign up for more at our newsletter page .