Why university professors say Texas Senate Bill 37 would be disastrous for higher education
A Texas House committee is proposing to eliminate several controversial measures targeting higher education from a Senate-approved bill that seeks to remove university faculty from shared governance and hiring decisions, while restricting required coursework for students.
As the Texas House Higher Education Committee took up Senate Bill 37 late Tuesday, with discussions stretching into early Wednesday, dozens of professors and students sat in stiff chairs urging lawmakers to reject the legislation.
The central debate between the bill's proponents and opponents focused on a key question: When does education shift into indoctrination, and does higher education in Texas require more regulation?
The House's version of SB 37, presented by Republican state Rep. Matt Shaheen of Plano, made significant changes to the Senate's proposal, notably keeping final authority on academic degrees and curriculum with universities. The Senate's version grants that authority to university boards of regents, which are political appointments. Shaheen said he met with university leaders three times before introducing his revisions, and many who testified before the committee thanked him for the changes.
'A lot of the changes that they requested are in this bill,' Shaheen said about university leaders.
The House version also restricted university system regents' hiring authority to presidents, vice presidents and deans. Texas A&M University System General Counsel Ray Bonilla testified that this revision would reduce the boards' legal liability for employment decisions. The House panel also cut the Senate-outlined process for ending degree programs with certain levels of associated debt, softening language to direct presidents to review programs and minors for low enrollment that "may require consolidation or elimination."
Most processes now are "at the institutional level," Shaheen said in allaying fears about political appointees ― such as boards of regents that are appointed by the governor ― overruling decisions made by faculty experts. The bill, however, kept in place the regents' "ultimate authority" over nearly all decisions, including on whether to allow faculty senates to exist at an institution and to annually review leaders who oversee curriculum.
Despite the House changes, professors, students and higher education advocates who testified against the bill argued that any version of SB 37 would crush institutions' ability to foster productive faculty governance and education.
SB 37 states that a university's core curriculum cannot 'advocate or promote the idea that any race, sex, or ethnicity or any religious belief is inherently superior to any other race, sex, or ethnicity or any other religious belief," and it creates a new Office of Ombudsman to investigate public accusations that a school's curriculum isn't following SB 37 or an anti-diversity, equity and inclusion bill that lawmakers passed in 2023. Professors from disciplines including medicine, history, social work, music and art testified that the bill would restrict their ability to address topics such as diversity, racial disparities or history.
"In the past, I have not shied away from exploring difficult aspects of American history, including racial segregation and Japanese internment. This would no longer be possible if SB 37 passes," said Lauren Gutterman, who testified as an individual but spoke from her experience as a UT associate professor who teaches history classes that count toward core requirements.
"How could I talk openly about history of immigration or LGBTQ rights movement when I know what could happen?" she asked.
'Pigeonholed': Why some lawmakers, students are backing Texas SB 37
Sen. Brandon Creighton, the Republican from Conroe who chairs the Senate Education K-16 Committee and authored SB 37, said his legislation provides a clear delineation of faculty senates' advisory role and tailors university curriculum and degrees to "credentials of value" at a time when trust in higher education institutions is shrinking among Republicans.
From 2012 to 2019, Republicans' views on colleges having a negative effect on the country jumped from 35% to 59%, while Democrats have remained largely stable in their positive view of higher education at 67% over the same period, according to the Pew Research Center.
"We're teaching courses that are not going to aid a student in their career and the like, we need to seriously ask why that's being offered," Shaheen said.
William Rodriguez, a senior at Texas A&M, testified that as a finance major to fulfill his requirement, he took a class in which he felt "pigeonholed" into only certain views, such as with global warming. Those who testified later said scientific facts and historical events do not need to be political, but they fear they will become partisan tools.
Paola Martinez, a senior at UT-El Paso, took a women studies course and said she read no politically conservative or moderate lessons, and she wished she had been exposed to more viewpoints.
Texas isn't alone in seeking to regulate higher education. In Indiana, lawmakers inserted a provision in its state budget that stripped faculty senate powers, allocated more authority to regents and established an enrollment threshold for degrees. Ohio and Utah have also passed laws limiting how and what faculty members may teach. But the Texas proposal has gained national attention for its scope and its implications for academic freedom.
Under SB 37, faculty members can't be involved in considerations over faculty grievances nor will they have final decision-making authority over someone's hiring, delivering on Gov. Greg Abbott's call during his State of the State address in February to keep faculty members from employment deliberations. The bill would also prohibit faculty members from electing their own faculty governance leader and from electing its membership. Instead, an institution's president would pick the faculty senate leadership, while retaining the power to remove any member who appears to advance a political agenda.
Caitilin Smith, who testified as an individual but teaches human sexuality and development, shared anonymized end of semester feedback from her students about critical thinking in her classes, including a conservative Christian who said they found "opportunities for greater education and understanding, especially with topics I'm not comfortable with." With SB 37, she said, students would not be pushed to learn in the same way, lowering the value of a university education that is supposed to prepare students not just for careers but for meaningful lives.
"Our society and our workforce need graduates who are able to have difficult conversations while remaining grounded in their values," Smith said. "SB 37 will transform our institutions of higher learning into mere degree mills, and many of us will not stand for that or even stay in Texas for that."
At 1 a.m. Wednesday, the bill was left pending in committee after about a half-hour of committee members quizzing Shaheen on officials' testimony. Shaheen said he has "high confidence" the Senate will accept the changes.
Wynne Chin, a distinguished professor at the University of Houston who is a past faculty senate president, advised the House panel that SB 37 is already depriving Texas of top talent.
"Regarding recruiting, this bill is already being raised as a point of concern from people I'm trying to hire. Conversely, several star professors at UH have told me they are seriously considering leaving Texas because of this bill," Chin said. "And personally, a number of universities have already reached out to me to consider joining their institutions explicitly mentioning their awareness of this bill.
"Overall, this bill's proposed structural changes will lead to increased costs and less effectiveness immediately and negative longer term economic impact on Texas due to inability to recruit top talent and brain drain of our world class researchers."
This article originally appeared on Austin American-Statesman: SB 37 risks Texas' higher education freedom, excellence: faculty
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Newsweek
7 minutes ago
- Newsweek
Donald Trump Is Losing Support With Hispanics
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. President Donald Trump is losing support among Hispanic and Latino voters, according to polling. Since at least the 1960s, Hispanic voters in the U.S. have generally supported Democratic candidates. For example, according to Pew Research Center, about 71 percent of Hispanic voters supported Barack Obama in 2012, and 66 percent backed Hillary Clinton in 2016. In 2020, 63 percent chose Joe Biden, according to AP VoteCast. In 2024, however, Trump made significant gains. His support among Hispanic voters rose to 43 percent—an 8-point increase from 2020 and the highest level for a Republican presidential candidate since such data has been tracked. Meanwhile, 55 percent supported Kamala Harris, narrowing the Democratic advantage. 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From his inauguration on January 20 through February, over 40 percent of deportees had no criminal history. Pew Research Center polling shows that only about one-third of Americans support mass deportations, with most preferring to prioritize violent criminals and showing far less support for deporting those with family ties or brought to the U.S. as children. President Donald Trump is losing support among Hispanic and Latino voters, according to polling. President Donald Trump is losing support among Hispanic and Latino voters, according to polling. Photo-illustration by Newsweek/Getty/Canva This sentiment is also shared by Hispanic voters, Martínez De Castro said. She warned: "Eight in ten Hispanic voters support deporting dangerous criminals, but President Trump and congressional Republicans should not target long-residing undocumented immigrants without criminal records. 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Polls throughout April showed sliding approval ratings. The president has also seen kinks in the rollout of his aggressive immigration agenda, which has attracted legal scrutiny. One high-profile case involves Kilmar Abrego Garcia, who was deported from Maryland in what the Department of Justice called an "administrative error." The Trump administration labeled Garcia a member of MS-13, now designated a terrorist group, but his family and lawyers deny any connection. Trump's mass deportation plan seeks to remove millions of undocumented immigrants through expanded ICE enforcement and National Guard involvement, focusing not only on criminals but also on many without criminal records. Early in his presidency, ICE arrested over 32,000 people, nearly half with no criminal history, and by February, over 40 percent of deportees had no criminal record. Despite this aggressive approach, public support is limited. 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But over half of Hispanic voters feel the economy is worse now than a year ago and nearly as many believe it will be worse a year from now," Janet Murguía, president and CEO of UnidosUS, said at the time. Martínez De Castro added that for many Latinos, economic issues like inflation, wages and housing affordability remain top priorities, yet "60 percent believe the President and Republicans are not focusing enough on lowering prices," and over half think the economy has worsened and will continue to decline under Trump's policies. Martínez De Castro noted bluntly, "The president owns the economy now, and Hispanic voters are not seeing the quick turnaround the President promised." Miranda also criticized the administration for "actively dismantling the asylum system for some of the most vulnerable and deserving applicants escaping violence and persecution from Latin America," while simultaneously easing restrictions for others. 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Politico
11 minutes ago
- Politico
Senate says SALT isn't settled
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Hamilton Spectator
29 minutes ago
- Hamilton Spectator
David Jolly, a Trump critic and former GOP congressman, to run for Florida governor as a Democrat
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) — A former Republican congressman and vocal critic of Donald Trump says he wants to become governor in the president's adopted home state of Florida, and that he's running as a Democrat. David Jolly formally announced his bid Thursday, becoming the latest party convert hoping to wrest back control of what had been the country's premier swing state that in recent years has made a hard shift to the right . Under state law, term-limited Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis can't run for reelection in 2026. Even as Florida serves as a place for the Trump administration to poach staff and test policies , Jolly says he's confident that issues such as affordability, funding public schools, and strengthening campaign finance and ethics laws will resonate with all voters in 2026. He predicts elections next year will herald nationwide change. 'I actually think Republicans in Tallahassee have gone too far in dividing us. I think we should get politicians out of the classrooms, out of the doctor's offices,' Jolly said. 'I think enough people in Florida, even some Republicans, now understand that. That the culture wars have gone too far,' he said. Jolly was first elected to his Tampa Bay-area congressional seat during a 2014 special election, and was reelected for one full term. The attorney and former lobbyist underwent a political evolution that spurred him to leave the Republican Party in 2018 to become an independent and then a registered Democrat. And he has built a national profile for himself as an anti-Trump political commentator on MSNBC. Jolly said he has considered himself 'part of the Democratic coalition' for five or so years, and believes in what he sees as the party's 'fundamental values' — that government can help people, that the economy should be 'fair' to all, and that immigrants should be celebrated. 'I struggled to exercise those values in the Republican Party,' Jolly said, continuing: 'The actual registration as a Democrat wasn't a pivot. It was a kind of a formality.' Jolly has broken from his old party on immigration, as Florida lawmakers race to help Trump fulfill his promise of mass deportations . Jolly skewered Republicans who he said have 'conflated immigration and crime,' which he described as wrong and immoral. 'If you were born here or if you immigrated here, or if you're a Tallahassee politician who steals Medicaid money, we're going to be tough on crime,' Jolly added, referring to a probe into the use of Medicaid settlement funds by a charity associated with first lady Casey DeSantis. Jolly's gubernatorial run as a Democrat draws comparisons to the failed bid of former Republican congressman-turned-independent-turned-Democrat Charlie Crist, who lost to DeSantis in 2022 by 19 points. It was Crist, running as a Democrat, who ousted Jolly from his congressional seat in 2016. Jolly joined the Florida Democratic Party at what is arguably one of its most vulnerable points in years. Florida currently has no Democrats elected to statewide office, and there are now 1.2 million more registered Republicans than Democrats, according to the state's active voter rolls. The GOP has made significant inroads in formerly Democratic strongholds in the state, such as Miami-Dade County . The day that Jolly announced his new affiliation, the-then top Democrat in the Florida Senate, Jason Pizzo, revealed he was leaving the party, declaring that 'the Democratic Party in Florida is dead.' Pizzo, a former prosecutor, has said he'll launch his own run for governor as a candidate with no party affiliation. On the Republican side , Jolly will face Trump-backed Rep. Byron Donalds , who is also a frequent presence on cable news as a surrogate for the president . Among the other names floated as potential GOP candidates are former Rep. Matt Gaetz and Casey DeSantis . ___ Kate Payne is a corps member for The Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues. 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 .