
Trump's multi-pronged attack on Harvard explained
May 30 (Reuters) - The administration of U.S. President Donald Trump is waging a campaign against Harvard University, the country's oldest and richest school, across multiple fronts, including funding freezes, investigations and threats to the school's tax-exempt status.
The president says he's trying to force change at Harvard - and other top-level universities across the U.S. - because they have been captured by leftist "woke" thought and become bastions of antisemitism.
The Trump administration has opened numerous investigations into Harvard. Some are looking at threats against Jewish students and faculty after pro-Palestinian protests broke out following the Oct. 7, 2023 Hamas attack on Israel and subsequent Israeli military actions in Gaza.
Others are probing if Harvard discriminates based on sex and gender, along with the school's ties to foreign governments and international students.
Harvard and other universities say Trump's attacks are threats to freedom of speech, freedom of academics and the schools' very existence.
Here are the main avenues Trump's administration is using to take on Harvard:
The Trump administration in April sent a letter to Harvard, opens new tab demanding it make far-reaching changes in how it operates. Harvard's President Alan Garber publicly rejected the demands, saying they amounted to ceding control of the university to the government.
Hours after Garber rejected the demands, the Trump administration announced it was freezing more than $2 billion in federal contracts and grants with Harvard, which mostly fund scientific and medical research.
A total of some $3 billion in funding has now been frozen by the Trump administration after more blocks were announced. Those were mainly through frozen National Institutes of Health grants along with blocked monies from eight different federal agencies and the Centers for Disease Control.
Harvard is fighting the funding cuts in court.
Trump in May said he's considering taking previously awarded grant money for scientific and engineering research away from Harvard and giving it to trade schools.
The Trump administration in May revoked Harvard's ability to enroll international students and said it was forcing current foreign students to transfer to other schools or lose their legal immigration status.
Harvard sued over that action, and a judge has temporarily blocked the administration's action.
More than a quarter of Harvard's students come from outside the U.S., and they serve as a vital revenue source at the Ivy League school and at hundreds of other colleges across the U.S.
In late May, Secretary of State Marco Rubio said the administration would start "aggressively" revoking visas issued to Chinese students attending Harvard and all U.S. schools. Republican concerns over Chinese students in the U.S. are not new - many have expressed worries China is manipulating Harvard and other universities to gain access to U.S. advanced technology.
The action on Chinese students is a direct blow to Harvard's strong links to China, and it has left Chinese students in a legal limbo as they contemplate their academic futures.
There are two main ways the Trump administration is using the tax system to attack Harvard.
First, they are threatening the university's tax-exempt status, which experts say likely saves the school hundreds of millions of dollars each year. It is unclear, however, if the Internal Revenue Service would rescind that tax exemption, or if it would hold up before courts.
Most universities, including Harvard, are exempt from federal income tax because they are deemed to be charitable organizations operated exclusively for public educational purposes. The exemption also allows people to make tax-deductible donations to such organizations, a valuable source of income for colleges with wealthy alumni.
The second prong on this front is language in Trump's massive spending bill that is before Congress.
It would drastically hike taxes that Harvard and other elite schools pay on the profits their massive endowment investments make. Critics say that would weaken the ability of Harvard and other rich schools to provide generous financial aid packages to poorer students.
Hashtags

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


Daily Mail
38 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE Riley Gaines' blistering takedown of California trans teen athlete's 'evil' mom
The mother of a trans track athlete competing in girls' sports has been branded 'evil' by conservative women's advocate Riley Gaines, in an explosive interview with Daily Mail. AB Hernandez, 16, who was born male but identifies as female, is crushing rival girl athletes in a two-day state competition this weekend amid howls of shock and protest. The controversial high school junior has also been the target of intense ire from President Donald Trump who is threatening to cut federal education funding from ' woke ' California over the issue. The U.S. Justice Department has also announced it is also investigating the Golden State for allowing trans people to participate in girls' sports. Meanwhile, Trump ally Gaines pulled no punches when she slammed 'progressives' including Democratic California Governor Gavin Newsom - who she dubbed a 'slimy car salesman' and 'spineless coward' - for enabling biologically born boys to participate in sports alongside girls. She also called out 'crazy unhinged trans activists' for creating chaos. Hernandez, who lives in Jurupa Valley, 60 miles east of Los Angeles, trounced her rivals during in sweltering heat on the first day of the California Interscholastic Federation games at Buchanan High School in Clovis, 13 miles north of Fresno. She competed in the long, triple and high jump events on Friday, May 30, at the California Interscholastic Federation (CIF) State Track & Field Championships and led all three events going into Saturday's schedule. Protestors were gathered outside the school stadium with some wearing 'Save Girls' Sports' T-shirts. A light aircraft buzzed overhead pulling a banner that read: 'No Boys in Girls' Sports!' CIF representatives at previous track meets have told girls to remove t-shirts with messages protesting the organization and have banned signs to quash protests. Gaines hit headlines in 2022 as a competitive swimmer for University of Kentucky in the 200-yard NCAA freestyle championship against University of Pennsylvania swimmer Lia Thomas, a biological male who lives as a woman. The 25-year-old quickly became an outspoken critic against transgender athletes competing in women's sport and has hailed Trump's 'Keeping Men Out of Women's Sport' executive order which he signed February. The Gaines for Girls podcast host gave a searing indictment of Hernandez's mother, Nereyda Hernandez, 43. 'His mom is a pretty evil person,' Gaines declared. 'I believe she is using her son to live out some fantasy or dream that maybe she had. 'She has lied to AB in affirming his identity - the total façade - and in the process has harmed real women. 'I have empathy for AB. He's a victim as well. But that doesn't give him the right to trample on women in the process to fulfill his happiness. 'AB Hernandez is of course not the first boy to compete in the state of California - whether it's track and field, whatever sport it may be,' commented Gaines. 'He is following the rules. So I don't have any animosity or hatred or wish any sort of ill will on the boy. Ultimately, it's the rules that are the problem. 'Harm [is] being done because of his acceptance into women's sports and women's spaces. 'That's what has been relayed to me by many of the girls who have competed against AB.' Hernandez's mother recently posted to social media: 'My child is not a threat; SHE IS LIGHT!!! As AB's mother, I will continue to stand by her, proudly fiercely, and unconditionally.' has reached out to her for further comment. But Gaines proclaimed: 'Sports are not about inclusion at the level he's competing. It's not about your feelings. It's about winning, to put it as bluntly as possible. 'Women aren't just a tool used to fulfill men's happiness. That's not what we are. Unfortunately, that's what women are being used for again. But we say enough. 'I'm not trying to rid anyone of opportunities. I believe every single person should play sports. But play in the categories that are safe and fair to everyone. 'We cannot prioritize inclusion over safety and fairness. That undermines the foundation of what sports were created to do. 'That's what we've seen a lot with this movement - women are just expected to roll over. Women are expected to be what they call inclusive and kind and allow these men into our spaces. 'You have men who are described as AGP - autogynephiliacs - who are just men who are sexually aroused dressing as a woman, and we're being forced to participate in that fetish. 'And we are reprimanded if we even dare to question it. Women have had enough. We say no. 'It's not just women like me. I've talked to many women who are lesbians who say 'We're being used here.' 'This seems like something that we see relatively often with this trans community, especially with minors who have transitioned. 'You have one parent, or both parents, who look like they are using their child as a prop.' She noted that so-called progressive states, most notably California, are in reality 'regressive because they are destructive and harmful to women and girls'. Donald Trump blasted high school athlete AB Hernandez in a blistering Truth Social post on May 27, calling the participation of transexuals in women's sports 'totally demeaning to women and girls' Gaines noted that girls feel threatened and parents fear they could lose their 'scared' they could lose their job if they speak out to much. She has spoken with some of the girls who have been competing against Hernandez and were pushed into second place. They 'would be the rightful champion had AB not been competing'. She added: 'It breaks my heart. Hearing from them and what they have to say is the reason why I keep pushing forward [and] keep fighting this fight.' One of the girls, who placed second behind Hernandez, told Gaines she felt 'betrayed' and 'belittled'. The distressed girl, she added, said the messaging from CIF and Newsom for not tackling the issue was 'very loud and clear' that she 'wasn't worthy of calling herself a champion.' 'How could any person with a fifth grade understanding of biology hear that and their heart not break?' asked Gaines. 'It's about the next generation. It's about protecting those girls. The girls are picking up on the discrimination that they are facing simply for being girls and participating in girls sports.' Gaines believes, though, that voters showed their disharmony with trans issues by voting Trump into office for a second time last November. 'People have had enough with the identity politics and with policies that harm women, with the harming of children, with the ridding of parental rights - California has been the nation's leader on all of those things,' declared Gaines. Former California Gov. Jerry Brown signed a law in 2013 allowing students to participate in sex-segregated school programs, including on sports teams, and use bathrooms and other facilities that align with their gender identity. A Republican-led effort to block that law failed recently in the Democratic-dominated state legislature. Another proposal that also failed would have required the federation to ban students whose sex was assigned male at birth from participating on a girls school sports team. A Trump-appointed federal prosecutor for the Central District of California, announced an investigation Wednesday into CIF and the Jurupa Unified School District, which includes Hernandez's high school, to determine whether federal sex discrimination law was violated by allowing trans girls to compete in girls' sports. Feeling the intense pressure from Trump, last Tuesday the CIF announced a temporary rule change to allow an extra girl to be in the medals in the three track events that include Hernandez. Riley slammed the CIF for 'indicating that they would [still] allow the boy to still compete with the girls'. 'It is common sense that boys and girls are different, that there are two sexes, that each sex is deserving of equal opportunities of privacy and of safety. 'But now we have sitting Supreme Court justices who can't even answer the question of what's in a woman because they claim to not be a biologist. She added: 'Fear is a large part of it.' She pointed to the 'crazy unhinged trans activists that I have found myself up against in many different scenarios. I've been attacked. I've had my life threatened by them.' A proud Christian, she recalled five students recently being arrested in Portland, Oregon, 'for wanting to end my life.' Critic's and trans proponents in Seattle threw human feces at her, she said.' She described her anti-trans collaborator Trump as 'the exact man you think he is. 'That's why people are drawn to him, especially young people. There's a sense of authenticity that you can feel, that you see on TV when you're watching him, or when you're reading his tweets. 'I can attest to the fact that that is real. There is no face that he puts on. There is no wall that he puts up. What you see is very much what you get. 'He has made it very clear his intention of protecting children, of protecting parental rights, of protecting the rights of women.' She pointed to the TAKE IT DOWN Act, proposed by Trump and First Lady Melania in May to protect women and children online exploitation. Although Gov. Newsom recently called transgender athletes competing against girls' 'deeply unfair' - a tougher tone than earlier comments - Gaines insisted he hasn't done anything so resolved the issue. 'Put your money where your mouth is,' she said of the governor. 'If you say it's deeply unfair, do something about it. If not, then you continue to be the spineless coward that we knew you to be. 'He's continued to sit on the fence, wink at both sides, like he's done on every topic over the past few years, including Covid. That's what he does best. He's like a slimy car salesman. 'This will be made very clear to the rest of the public - which matters if he plans to run in 2028 for president, which I believe he has angled himself to do.' Trump, however, is going to put Gavin Newsom in a position 'where he can no longer sit on the fence, which I think is really beneficial for the American people to see', she concluded.


NBC News
an hour ago
- NBC News
White House to replace Trump pick for NASA administrator
The White House has seemingly pulled the nomination of NASA administrator Jared Isaacman and said that President Donald Trump would soon name a replacement. The White House did not explain the move in a statement, but White House spokesperson Liz Huston said 'it's essential that the next leader of NASA is in complete alignment with President Trump's America First agenda.' Trump in December said he was nominating Isaacman, a billionaire entrepreneur who has never been in federal government, as NASA administrator. Isaacman has been to space twice, on commercial missions that he funded himself. "The Administrator of NASA will help lead humanity into space and execute President Trump's bold mission of planting the American flag on the planet Mars," Huston said in a statement. "It's essential that the next leader of NASA is in complete alignment with President Trump's America First agenda and a replacement will be announced directly by President Trump soon," she said. Saturday that the White House was expected to pull Isaacman's nomination. The move comes as the nomination vote for Isaacman could have been very near. A cloture motion on his nomination, which ends debate, is eligible for a vote on Monday, according to a the Congressional calendar.


The Herald Scotland
an hour ago
- The Herald Scotland
Hamas seeks amendments to Gaza ceasefire proposal
A separate Hamas statement said the proposal aims for a permanent ceasefire, a comprehensive Israeli withdrawal from Gaza and an ensured flow of aid. It said 10 living hostages and the bodies of 18 others would be released 'in exchange for an agreed-upon number of Palestinian prisoners'. Fifty-eight hostages remain and Israel believes 35 are dead. Mr Witkoff described a 60-day ceasefire deal that would free half the living hostages in Gaza and return half of those who have died. He urged Hamas to accept the framework proposal as the basis for talks that he said could begin next week. Senior Hamas official Bassem Naim accused Israel of disagreeing with agreed provisions and alleged a 'complete bias towards the other side' which he said violates the fairness of mediation. Israeli officials have approved the US proposal for a temporary ceasefire in the nearly 20-month war. US President Donald Trump has said negotiators were nearing a deal.