
Trump administration freezes $339M in UCLA grants and accuses the school of rights violations
The federal government has frozen or paused federal funding over similar allegations against private colleges but this is one of the rare cases it has targeted a public university.
Several federal agencies notified UCLA this week that they were suspending grants over civil rights concerns, including $240 million from the Department of Health and Human Services and the National Institutes of Health, according to the person, who spoke about internal deliberations on the condition of anonymity.
The Trump administration recently announced the U.S. Department of Justice's Civil Rights Division found UCLA violated the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment and Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 'by acting with deliberate indifference in creating a hostile educational environment for Jewish and Israeli students.'
Last week, Columbia agreed to pay $200 million as part of a settlement to resolve investigations into the government's allegations that the school violated federal antidiscrimination laws. The agreement also restores more than $400 million in research grants.
The Trump administration plans to use its deal with Columbia as a template for other universities, with financial penalties that are now seen as an expectation.
The National Science Foundation said in a statement it informed UCLA that it was suspending funding awards because the school isn't in line with the agency's priorities.
UCLA's chancellor Julio Frenk called the government's decision 'deeply disappointing.'
'With this decision, hundreds of grants may be lost, adversely affecting the lives and life-changing work of UCLA researchers, faculty and staff," he said in a statement.
The Department of Energy said in its letter it found several 'examples of noncompliance' and faulted UCLA for inviting applicants to disclose their race in personal statements and for considering factors including family income and ZIP code. Affirmative action in college admissions was outlawed in California in 1996 and struck down by the Supreme Court in 2023.
The letter said the school has taken steps that amount to 'a transparent attempt to engage in race-based admissions in all but name,' disadvantaging white, Jewish and Asian American applicants.
It also said UCLA fails to promote an environment free from antisemitism and discriminates against women by allowing transgender women to compete on women's teams.
Frenk said that in its letter the federal government "claims antisemitism and bias as the reasons' to freeze the funding but 'this far-reaching penalty of defunding life-saving research does nothing to address any alleged discrimination.'
Earlier this week, UCLA reached a $6 million settlement with three Jewish students and a Jewish professor who sued the university arguing it violated their civil rights by allowing pro-Palestinian protesters in 2024 to block their access to classes and other areas on campus.
UCLA initially had argued that it had no legal responsibility over the issue because protesters, not the university, blocked Jewish students' access to some areas. The university also worked with law enforcement to thwart attempts to set up new protest camps.
The university has said that it's committed to campus safety and inclusivity and will continue to implement recommendations.
___
Rodriguez reported from San Francisco and Binkley from Washington.
Hashtags

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


The Independent
6 minutes ago
- The Independent
Sydney Sweeney's voter registration emerges amid uproar over controversial American Eagle jeans ad
Sydney Sweeney registered as a Republican in Florida several months before President Donald Trump won his second term, it has been revealed, as the actor faces backlash over her provocative American Eagle campaign, which some critics have deemed 'racist.' The 27-year-old Euphoria actress has been a registered voter with the Republican Party in Florida since June 2024, according to public voting records. Sweeney's party affiliation was first confirmed by Buzzfeed News on Saturday, after a post on X claiming she was 'an actual registered member of the republican party' went viral. The post quickly gained traction as critics were already piling on the White Lotus and Madame Web actress for her American Eagle Outfitters campaign, which came with the tagline: ' Sydney Sweeney Has Great Jeans.' The ad starts with Sweeney saying, 'Genes are passed down from parents to offspring, often determining traits like hair color, personality and even eye color' before she adds: 'My jeans are blue.' While the ad appeared to be making a pun about denim – changing the word 'genes' to 'jeans' – it sparked outrage online over the phrases 'good genes' and 'great genes.' Critics say the two phrases, paired with Sweeney's references to her hair and eye color, echo the sentiments of eugenics, the discredited, racist belief once popularized by the Nazis that the human race can be improved genetically by selective breeding. In a statement, American Eagle spoke out about the campaign and defended Sweeney. ''Sydney Sweeney Has Great Jeans' is and always was about the jeans,' the company wrote in a statement on Instagram. 'Her jeans. Her story.' 'We'll continue to celebrate how everyone wears their AE jeans with confidence, their way,' the statement continued. 'Great jeans look good on everyone.' Meanwhile, the White House and conservative media jumped to Sweeney's defense, with President Trump's communications director Steven Cheung calling the negative reaction to the ad 'cancel culture run amok.' The controversy surrounding the advertisement has also been featured on Fox News 28 more times than the Jeffrey Epstein saga this past week. According to a study by liberal media watchdog Media Matters for America, the network has spent over 85 minutes across at least 20 segments through Thursday afternoon discussing the commercial and the discourse surrounding it. After right-wing media came to Sweeney's defense, Daily Show correspondent and guest host Desi Lydic called out conservatives for their apparent hypocrisy in gushing over the campaign. 'This is such bulls***. Blond women have had constant representation, OK? In entertainment, in fashion, in letter-turning,' Lydic said. 'It's not that they want to see more white women, it's that they want to see none of anyone else. For a story about boobs, it sure has a hell of a lot of assholes.' Lydic specifically called out former Fox News host Megyn Kelly for her sudden switch-up in attitude toward Sweeney, after Kelly suggested a month ago that Sweeney was the 'new toast of the town' only because of her 'amazing breasts,' HuffPost reported. 'Yeah, yeah! That's right, women, you listen to Megyn Kelly and hide your sexuality unless your body makes liberals mad, in which case it's a kickass body! Hell, yeah! Go, girl!' Lydic joked. 'You motorboat those liberals here but not so much that it threatens Megyn or, so help me God, she will destroy you, ho bags!'


Daily Mail
6 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
College basketball coach Bruce Pearl slams Barack Obama in brutal takedown of ex-president
Auburn basketball coach Bruce Pearl accused Barack Obama of 'dividing' America over race in a brutal verdict on the former president's legacy. Pearl has been in charge of the Tigers since 2014 and has won more games than any other Auburn coach in history. In recent months, however, he has been linked with a move into the Senate. During an appearance on Outkick with Dan Dakich, Pearl claimed that part of his job is to inspire his players to believe that they can achieve anything - both on and off the court. 'I'm trying to teach my guys: I don't want you working at Subway, I want you owning five of them,' he said. 'In many ways, Barack Obama told a different story.' Pearl suggested, in fact, that Obama - America's first African American president, who served between 2009 and 2017 - did more harm than good when it comes to race relations. 'I get so frustrated when I hear what a terrible country we are. How racist we are, how this is not the land of opportunity for everybody,' the Tigers coach said. Auburn Men's Basketball Coach Bruce Pearl on Barack Obama: "Rather than uniting us as a country... he divided us! Everything was black and white... everything was [about] the obstacles that were against my players from being successful!" @dandakich @coachbrucepearl — OutKick (@Outkick) August 1, 2025 'We have a lot to work on and there is racism that absolutely does exist and it's wrong. But it's a lot better for my players than it was for their fathers or their father's fathers. 'And so I want my guys to recognize there are going to be obstacles but not roadblocks. And that's what Barack Obama did... I disagree with so many of his policies. 'I thought in so many ways, rather than uniting us as a country, even by race, he divided us. Everything was black and white, everything was (about) the obstacles that were against my players from being successful.' Pearl knew that his comments were likely to spark a backlash from Obama supporters, claiming: 'It's hard to criticize him though because you get a lot of feedback that's really, really negative.' And tennis legend Martina Navratilova was among those who disagreed with the Auburn coach. 'This kind of logic is no different from men saying the woman who was raped asked for it because she wore a skirt,' she wrote on X. 'Racists need to stop being racist, black people cannot do that for them.'


The Guardian
6 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Senate confirms Trump ally Jeanine Pirro as top federal prosecutor for DC
The US Senate has confirmed Jeanine Pirro – a former Fox News host and staunch Donald Trump ally who boosted lies that he lost the 2020 presidential race because of electoral fraudsters – as the top federal prosecutor for the nation's capital. Pirro – a former New York state district attorney and county judge who joined Fox News in 2011 – was confirmed on Saturday in a 50-45 vote along party lines. In a statement issued by Pirro after the vote, the Republican said she was 'blessed' to have been confirmed as the US attorney for Washington DC. 'Get ready for a real crime fighter,' said Pirro's statement, which called the US attorney's office she had been confirmed to lead the largest in the country. Before her media career, Pirro spent over a decade as a Republican district attorney in Westchester county, New York, and also served as a county judge. She hosted her own Fox show Justice with Judge Jeanine. And more recently, she became a co-host on the Fox show The Five. Pirro used her time at Fox News in part to publicly support the baseless claims that Trump lost his first presidency to Joe Biden in 2020 because of voter fraud. In 2021, she was among several Fox News hosts named in the defamation lawsuit against Fox News by Dominion Voting Systems, which accused the network of knowingly airing false claims about the company's voting machines after the previous year's election. Fox ultimately settled the lawsuit for $787.5m and has acknowledged that the fraud claims were false. Pirro has been serving as the interim US attorney since May, when her fellow Republican Trump nominated her to the post months into his second presidency. She was nominated after Trump withdrew the nomination of conservative activist Ed Martin, his first choice for the role. A key Republican senator, North Carolina's Thom Tillis, had said he would not support Martin's nomination. In announcing Pirro's nomination in May, Trump praised her record, and said that she was a 'powerful crusader for victims of crime' and someone who 'excelled in all ways'. 'Jeanine is incredibly well qualified for this position,' the president added. The US attorney general, Pam Bondi, on Saturday published a statement exalting Pirro as 'a warrior for law and order'. At the end of his first presidency, Trump pardoned Pirro's former husband, Albert Pirro Jr, after he had been convicted in 2000 on federal charges of fraud and tax evasion. Pirro is one of a number of Trump loyalists with ties to Fox who have joined the president's administration. Other prominent ones include her fellow ex-Fox News host Pete Hegseth, the embattled defense secretary, and the former Fox Business personality Sean Duffy, the embattled transportation secretary. In June, US senator Adam Schiff accused Pirro of 'blind obedience to Donald Trump is nearly unrivaled among his ardent supporters'. 'For an important prosecutorial position like this one, the country has a right to demand a serious and principled public servant,' Schiff said. 'Jeanine Pirro is not it.' Despite Pirro's confirmation, the US Senate left Washington DC on Saturday night for its monthlong August recess without a deal to advance dozens of Trump nominees despite days of contentious, bipartisan negotiations. An irate Trump went on social media and told Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer to 'GO TO HELL!'