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These 16 states are supporting the Trump admin in lawsuit with Harvard
These 16 states are supporting the Trump admin in lawsuit with Harvard

Yahoo

time16 hours ago

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

These 16 states are supporting the Trump admin in lawsuit with Harvard

Sixteen Republican-led states are supporting the Trump administration in a lawsuit between the federal government and Harvard University over cuts to federal funding. 'There are apparently three constant truths in American life: death, taxes and Harvard University's discrimination against Jews,' the states' attorneys general said. The statement of support comes after reports that the Trump administration and Harvard were circling toward a deal after months of challenges. Read more: Alums urge Harvard to resist compromise with Trump as reports of deal emerge In April, the Trump administration demanded an overhaul of Harvard's leadership structure, admissions and hiring. If the university didn't comply, it risked losing $9 billion in funding, the federal government said. The actions were taken in the name of antisemitism, as the Trump administration claimed Harvard failed to protect Jewish students, particularly in the wake of the war in Gaza. Harvard rejected the administration's demands and set the stage for a historic showdown, leading to one lawsuit over the funding cuts and another centered on Harvard's ability to enroll international students. It also led to a series of other funding cuts and cuts to research funding. The university has so far largely prevailed in court in lawsuits against the Trump administration, with a federal judge granting a preliminary injunction on Friday, allowing Harvard University's international students to continue attending school until the legality of the case is decided. The attorneys general argue in the statement of support that the court should side with the Trump administration and allow it to continue with funding cuts because Harvard hasn't contended with issues of antisemitism on campus and is violating federal antidiscrimination law. 'The federal government need not continue to shower benefits on institutions that continue to practice illegal discrimination,' the amicus brief reads. The states included in the amicus brief are: Alaska Arkansas Florida Georgia Indiana Iowa Kansas Louisiana Missouri Montana Nebraska North Dakota Oklahoma South Carolina South Dakota Texas The attorneys general cited the university's published report from its Task Force to Combat Antisemitism as a basis for the hostile encounters Jewish people have faced. 'Harvard could easily enforce its own rules and policies to stop the virulent antisemitism on its campus. Doing so would protect the vital research, education, and more that, according to Harvard itself, relies on federal grants and subsidies. Yet it chooses to place that research and education at risk to instead protect virulent antisemitism,' the attorneys general said. Read more: Over 12,000 Harvard alums lend weight to court battle with Trump in new filing While the 16 states have sided with the federal administration, there has also been immense support for Harvard. Supporting Harvard in its lawsuit are over 12,000 alumni as well as other individuals and groups such as two dozen universities, Massachusetts Attorney General Andrea Campbell, the American Civil Liberties Union, the American Council on Education, the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression — also known as FIRE — and Columbia Alumni for Academic Freedom. Alums urge Harvard to resist compromise with Trump as reports of deal emerge 'Devastating': 10 Harvard researchers detail 'essential' work set to be cut by Trump Federal judge halts Trump's plans to keep Harvard from enrolling foreign students Harvard researcher's work gives 'hope' for Parkinson's. But the feds cut his funding These US colleges are among the top 100 best global universities, US News says Read the original article on MassLive.

Trump admin cracks down on pro-Palestinian protests at colleges
Trump admin cracks down on pro-Palestinian protests at colleges

Axios

time08-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Axios

Trump admin cracks down on pro-Palestinian protests at colleges

Secretary of State Marco Rubio said the State Department is "reviewing the visa status" of pro-Palestinian protesters who occupied Columbia University's main library in Manhattan on Wednesday evening. Why it matters: Rubio's announcement builds on President Trump's January order, titled "Additional Measures to Combat Anti-Semitism," to remove international students who've joined protests and direction for institutions to "monitor for and report activities by alien students and staff." The secretary of state's action comes as the Trump administration's Task Force to Combat Antisemitism reviews the University of Washington over a pro-Palestinian protest that saw some 30 students arrested on Monday after they occupied a Seattle campus building, Trump vowed in March to stop the federal funding of any schools or university that allows "illegal protests" and the White House said the president had promised to "Deport Hamas Sympathizers and Revoke Student Visas." The administration's action this week underscores that to enforce Trump's order, it will go after student protests at individual colleges. What they're saying: "We are reviewing the visa status of the trespassers and vandals who took over Columbia University's library," Rubio said on X.

Trump Is Selling Jews a Dangerous Lie
Trump Is Selling Jews a Dangerous Lie

New York Times

time07-04-2025

  • Politics
  • New York Times

Trump Is Selling Jews a Dangerous Lie

Taking a break from her work dismantling her own department, Secretary of Education Linda McMahon last week threatened roughly $9 billion of grants and contracts with Harvard because of 'the school's failure to protect students on campus from antisemitic discrimination.' As shocking as that threat was, it wasn't entirely a surprise: Since the Justice Department convened its Task Force to Combat Antisemitism, 60 universities have received notice that they are being monitored or investigated. With an administration seemingly determined to do everything, everywhere, all at once, discerning its true priorities can sometimes be challenging. But on this one point, Donald Trump wants no ambiguity: 'My promise to Jewish Americans is this,' he said on the campaign trail. 'With your vote, I will be your defender, your protector, and I will be the best friend Jewish Americans have ever had in the White House.' As the first Jewish president of a formerly Methodist university, I find no comfort in the Trump administration's embrace of my people, on college campuses or elsewhere. Jew hatred is real, but today's anti-antisemitism isn't a legitimate effort to fight it. It's a cover for a wide range of agendas that have nothing to do with the welfare of Jewish people. All of these agendas — from dismantling basic government functions to crushing the independence of cultural and educational organizations to criminalizing political speech to legitimating petty presidential vendettas — endanger the principles and institutions that have actually made this country great. For Jews, a number of these agendas do something more: They pose a direct threat to the very people they purport to help. Jews who applaud the administration's crackdown will soon find that they do so at their peril. Among the first high-profile targets of the anti-antisemitic push have been a recent Columbia graduate and a current Tufts University graduate student, one a lawful permanent resident of this country and the other one here on a student visa, who spoke out in favor of Palestinian rights. Both have been handcuffed, driven off and indefinitely detained. Neither has been charged with a crime. Abductions by government agents; unexplained, indefinite detentions; the targeting of allegedly dangerous ideas; lists of those under government scrutiny; official proclamations full of bluster and bile — Jews have been here before, many times, and it does not end well for us. The rule of law and the right to freedom of thought and expression are essential safeguards for everyone, but especially so for members of groups whose ideas or practices don't always align with the mainstream. As M. Gessen recently wrote in these pages, 'A country that has pushed one group out of its political community will eventually push out others.' What our government is doing now is wrong in itself, but beyond that, it poses a bigger threat to Jewish people's safety than all the campus protests ever could. I've received a trove of emails asking whether Jews are welcome at Wesleyan. In my (lucky) 18th year as Wesleyan's president, I am pleased to tell them that Shabbat dinners are well attended, the Israeli Film Festival is offering excellent cultural fare and Jewish studies courses — one on the archetype of the Jewish mother, taught by an Israeli — are oversubscribed. Of course we've had protests, with Jews on both sides of them. Some of the students having grown up in communities of like-mindedness are surprised there is more than one side of an issue. In some cases, that is enough to awaken their anxieties. The situation was different at Columbia. Protests became violent (both in the actions of the participants and those of the police who were called in to quell them). Tensions between supporters of Palestinians and Israelis were at times extreme. In the pages of The Atlantic, Franklin Foer recently documented some serious antisemitic activity. All of which is presumably why Columbia was the first to be singled out by the forces of anti-antisemitism. But in other ways, Columbia is an odd choice. It has the second highest percentage of Jewish students in the Ivy League. Secretary McMahon has said the government is cancelling $400 million of federal support for the school because of its failure to protect Jewish students. Federal cuts to Columbia, however, will disproportionately affect Jewish students. And when the White House announced the cuts, it did so with a tweet that said 'SHALOM COLUMBIA.' You don't have to be Jewish to hear a large measure of sarcasm in those words. That kind of tension — between championing Jews and ridiculing, reviling, or in some cases even threatening them — has been visible on the right for some time. Consider first the president: On the one hand, his daughter, son-in-law and grandchildren are Jewish. (Ivanka Trump converted to Judaism when she married Jared Kushner.) On the other hand, when neo-Nazis, Klansmen and others marched through Charlottesville, Va., carrying torches and shouting 'Jews will not replace us,' Mr. Trump condemned the most extreme elements of the rally but observed that there were 'some very fine people on both sides.' A 'Severance'-level disconnect between an image of Jews as both vulnerable people who must be protected and powerful people who must be defeated, is now widespread. Last year when Congress drew up a bill to oppose antisemitic speech on college campuses, many legislators raced to voice their support. But not some of MAGA's most prominent representatives, including Matt Gaetz and Marjorie Taylor Greene, who had no objection to fighting antisemitism but observed that the language of the bill would interfere with Christians' ability to accuse Jews of killing Christ. At other times, agreeing with Vladimir Putin, she has said that the Jewish president of Ukraine was running 'a Nazi army.' The prominent Trump supporter Candace Owens has said that Jeffrey Epstein was working for Israel, a nation that has gotten blackmail 'down to a science.' The MAGA hero (and subject of sex trafficking charges) Andrew Tate has encouraged people to 'question' their criticism of Hitler — and to bring back the Nazi salute, while they're at it — and said that 'the people who wrote the official story' of the Holocaust 'have used it to subvert the consciousness of Western populations into mass genetic suicide.' Elise Stefanik, the third-ranking House Republican, has ferociously defended Jews against antisemitism in higher education, leading intense questioning of three university presidents, two of whom soon after lost their positions. In other settings, however, she has used language similar to the 'great replacement theory,' the same xenophobic conspiracy theory that the Unite the Right participants in Charlottesville were chanting about. Nick Fuentes, who had dinner with Mr. Trump in 2022, lists 'the influence of Jews' as one of the two biggest problems in the world, and announced that 'Talmudic Jews' have to leave the country or be converted. As for Mr. Trump himself, he declared that Senator Chuck Schumer is 'not Jewish anymore,' which reminded me of Karl Lueger, a raging antisemite and fin-de-siècle mayor of Vienna, who declared, 'I decide who is a Jew.' Leo Terrell, the head of Mr. Trump's antisemitism task force, shared a tweet by a prominent white supremacist that lauded the president's 'ability to revoke someone's Jew card.' As Oscar Hammerstein II put it in 'The King and I': 'If allies are strong with power to protect me/Might they not protect me out of all I own?' These are our defenders? SHALOM, indeed. In the Long Island town where I grew up, Jews were a minority. My father taught me how to punch antisemites before getting hit — when I was in elementary school! And he emphasized to me that I should expect to encounter such people wherever I went, especially as I moved into unfamiliar professional or social settings. Today I encounter many young Jews who are shocked by anti-Israel attitudes (even from fellow Jews, part of the long history of Jewish antizionism). They are shocked by how many progressives decry ethnostates but somehow mention only Israel, or how readily people, when given half a chance, will express what the historian Deborah Lipstadt has called 'clueless' antisemitism. Political events seem to expand their license to do so. If you feel righteous about being an anti-colonialist, why worry about a little antisemitism? Like the white supremacists liberated by mainstream anti-D.E.I. language, these antisemites hear perfectly legitimate criticism of, say, the Israeli government, and regard it as an opportunity to unfurl the true extent of their prejudice. The novelist and scholar Dara Horn has speculated that as the memory of Nazis and the Holocaust dimmed, 'the public shame associated with expressing antisemitism was dying too — in other words, hating Jews was normal.' Which means we should expect things to get even worse. Given all this, there is a great temptation for Jews to embrace anyone who denounces antisemitism, regardless of the moral contradictions (or the dubious connection between protecting religious minorities and, say, cutting grants for cancer research). 'We appreciate the Trump Administration's broad, bold set of efforts to counter campus antisemitism,' the Anti-Defamation League said in response to the detention of Mahmoud Khalil, the legal permanent resident, 'and this action further illustrates that resolve by holding alleged perpetrators responsible for their actions.' As Sam Adler-Bell has recently noted, some American Jewish organizations have encouraged the erosion of rights and norms in exchange for support for Israel. The president hadn't been in office a full day before the ADL spoke up to defend Elon Musk for throwing what sure looked to me like a Sieg Heil. After weathering intense criticism over its support for Mr. Khalil's abduction, the organization's chief executive last week restated the need for due process. How did we get to the point where that's even in doubt? The ADL was founded in 1913, in the wake of the case of Leo Frank, a Jewish man accused of murdering a 13-year-old Christian girl. Most historians today agree that Frank, who was lynched in 1915, was wrongly convicted after a sham trial, but the MAGA folks on X can't help but celebrate the lynching of a Jew. 'He got exactly what he deserved,' exclaimed Lauren Witzke, a 2020 Republican Senate nominee 'and everyone in that crowd should have received medals for protecting their community.' Kingsley Wilson, the 20-something deputy press secretary at the Pentagon, praised the far-right party Alternative for Germany by invoking the Nazi slogan 'Ausländer raus!' ('Foreigners out!'). As the traditional conservatives at Bulwark put it, 'The 'vibe shift' is not necessarily that more people on the right are antisemites compared to eight years ago, but that much of the right now appears to reject the basic notion that there should be any stigma against even the vilest bigotry.' That's why the 'instrumentalization of Jewish fear' is so pernicious. Those who attack people like Mahmoud Khalil today will be breaking bread with the 'Ausländer raus!' folks tomorrow. They will seek new targets. Who's next? In the second and first century B.C., the Jewish kingdom of Judea aligned itself with Rome to protect itself from the domination of Greek culture. Rome obliged, and conquered Judea for itself. The enemy of our enemy was not our friend. There's a lesson there, if we can heed it. Here's another, from the Pirkei Avot, a compilation of rabbinical ethical teachings: 'Be cautious with governments, for they bring a person close to them only for their own needs. They appear as friends when it benefits them, but they do not stand by a person in his time of difficulty.' Some Jewish people feel gratified to hear the president say he'll defend us, but today's ruling authorities will not be good for the Jews.

Trump Gets Law Firm He Targeted With Executive Order to Do Free Work for Him
Trump Gets Law Firm He Targeted With Executive Order to Do Free Work for Him

Yahoo

time21-03-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Trump Gets Law Firm He Targeted With Executive Order to Do Free Work for Him

Donald Trump announced Thursday that he was rescinding his executive order against a law firm that sued alleged Jan. 6 rioters, but with several catches, among them that the firm must do $40 million of free work for the administration. Last Friday, Trump's order rescinded federal government contracts held by Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison. The order cited a pro bono suit against suspected Jan. 6 rioters and the re-hiring of Mark Pomerantz, who worked in the Manhattan's district attorney's office during its investigation of Trump, as cause for presidential action. The order also accused the Manhattan firm of race and gender discrimination. In addition to revoking contracts, Trump ordered the same for firm members' active security clearances. It was amid those drastic measures that Trump announced that he was able to extract considerable value from the firm in exchange for dropping the order. In his statement on Truth Social, Trump said in part that the firm 'will take on a wide range of pro bono matters that represent the full spectrum of political viewpoints of our society, whether 'conservative' or 'liberal.'' He continued that it will 'not adopt, use, or pursue any DEI policies,' and, most stunningly, 'will dedicate the equivalent of $40 million in pro bono legal services over the course of President Trump's term to support the Administration's initiatives, including: assisting our Nation's veterans, fairness in the Justice System, the President's Task Force to Combat Antisemitism, and other mutually agreed projects.' Earlier this month, Perkins Coie, another firm in Trump's crosshairs via executive order, sued the administration, claiming the presidential act was 'an affront to the Constitution and our adversarial system of justice.' 'Its plain purpose is to bully those who advocate points of view that the president perceives as adverse to the views of his administration, whether those views are presented on behalf of paying or pro bono clients,' the suit stated. 'Perkins Coie cannot allow its clients to be bullied.'

Leo Terrell, Trump's antisemitism chief, shares post by prominent neo-Nazi
Leo Terrell, Trump's antisemitism chief, shares post by prominent neo-Nazi

The Guardian

time17-03-2025

  • Politics
  • The Guardian

Leo Terrell, Trump's antisemitism chief, shares post by prominent neo-Nazi

The leader of a progressive Jewish group has condemned Leo Terrell, the head of Donald Trump's official antisemitism task force, for sharing a post by a prominent white supremacist. The post Terrell shared was written by Patrick Casey last Wednesday. It accompanied footage of the US president saying in the Oval Office that Chuck Schumer of New York, the Democratic Senate minority leader, 'used to be Jewish' and 'is not Jewish anymore, he's a Palestinian'. In the post Casey said Trump 'has the ability to revoke someone's Jew card'. Casey is a former head of Identity Evropa, a defunct racist group. In that role, in 2018, he told NBC News his mission was to 'take over' the Republican party 'as much as possible'. 'Trump's antisemitism chief shared an antisemitic, white supremacist post from a neo-Nazi involved in Charlottesville,' said Amy Spitalnick, the chief executive of the Jewish Council for Public Affairs, in reference to the march by neo-Nazis and other extremists in support of Trump in Virginia in 2017, during which a counter-protester was killed. 'This administration doesn't care about countering antisemitism,' Spitalnick said. 'They care about exploiting it to attack democracy.' Spitalnick previously led Integrity First for America, the group that steered a successful lawsuit against organizers of the Charlottesville march. 'We successfully sued [Casey's] now-defunct hate group,' Spitalnick said on Monday. Terrell, 70, is a civil rights attorney from California. A former Democrat but a Fox News contributor, he came out in support of Trump in 2020. In January, Terrell was nominated to serve in the civil rights division of the US justice department. In February, the Trump administration announced that Terrell would lead 'a multi-agency Task Force to Combat Antisemitism', focused on college protests over Israel's war in Gaza. Terrell said: 'Antisemitism in any environment is repugnant to this nation's ideals. The department takes seriously our responsibility to eradicate this hatred wherever it is found. The Task Force to Combat Antisemitism is the first step in giving life to President Trump's renewed commitment to ending antisemitism in our schools.' Now, attention to Terrell's social media habits comes amid controversy regarding the arrest and detention of Mahmoud Khalil, a Columbia student and protest organizer. Khalil is being held for deportation under an obscure immigration law but has not been charged with wrongdoing. Raw Story, a progressive site, first noted that after sharing Casey's tweet, Terrell shared another by Keith and Kevin Hodge, podcasters the advocacy group Stop Antisemitism said have 'taken a puzzling antisemitic turn', including 'admitting to listening to Hitler's speeches … wishing America had a leader like him'. Terrell has not commented. The Department of Justice did not immediately respond to a comment request.

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