Can Trump cut funds to UC Berkeley?
Experts say not really
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[February 03, 2017]
By Sharon Bernstein
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (Reuters) - U.S.
President Donald Trump does not have the authority to withhold funding
from the University of California at Berkeley where violent protests led
to the cancellation of a speech by a far-right editor, academics and
experts said on Thursday.
Trump threatened to cut funds for the university's flagship Berkeley
campus in a Twitter posting accusing the institution of failing to
support free speech and practicing violence against innocent people.
But academics and experts interviewed by Reuters said state universities
mostly receive federal funds in the form of research grants and
financial aid to students, and these cannot be revoked for reasons
related to freedom of speech.
"There is nothing in current legislation that would allow President
Trump to do that," said Don Heller, a provost at the University of San
Francisco and an expert in public education financing.
UC Berkeley receives between $400 million and $450 million annually in
federal funding for research, and about $216 million for student
financial aid, officials said.
Some of that can be withheld but only in very specific circumstances,
such as the publication of fraudulent research or the refusal of a
university to comply with the Title IX law that prohibits discrimination
on the basis of sex in educational programs.
To add freedom of speech to that list of offenses would take new
legislation in Congress, Heller and other experts said.
And even if such a law were passed, Berkeley's situation would be highly
unlikely to be affected, said Terry Hartle, vice president for
Government and Public Affairs at the American Council on Education.
That is because in Berkeley's case, the university had attempted to
facilitate the speech on Wednesday night, cancelling it only after
police became concerned about safety.
“Because the crowd had grown so violent and agitated, it was our
recommendation to the speaker that his public safety was in jeopardy,”
UC Berkeley police department spokeswoman Sergeant Sabrina Reich said in
a telephone interview.
"NO FEDERAL FUNDS?"
Milo Yiannopoulos, an editor at Breitbart News, was escorted by police
from the campus as a relatively small group among the 1500 protesters
smashed windows and set fires and the campus was put on lockdown. There
were no injuries.
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Two demonstrators hold signs as they face a police line after a
student protest turned violent at UC Berkeley during a demonstration
over right-wing speaker Milo Yiannopoulos, who was forced to cancel
his talk, in Berkeley, California, U.S., February 1, 2017.
REUTERS/Stephen Lam
Yiannopoulos has been a provocative figure on the internet for
years, and has been widely criticized for comments he has made about
Muslims, Black Lives Matter activists and feminists.
Trump, whose aide Steve Bannon previously ran the right-wing,
nationalist Breitbart site, tweeted his response shortly before dawn
in Washington on Thursday.
"If U.C. Berkeley does not allow free speech and practices violence
on innocent people with a different point of view - NO FEDERAL
FUNDS?" the President wrote.
His administration was not immediately available for further comment
on Thursday.
Longer-term, there were some steps a Trump administration could take
that would affect the university.
For instance, the Department of Energy could conceivably seek to
relocate the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, which is in the
hills above the campus and is managed by the University of
California, said Bob Shireman, a former deputy undersecretary for
education in the Obama administration.
“There are things that if a president really wanted to punish some
particular college they could influence those decisions but it would
take a long time and there would be a lot of reaction,” said
Shireman, a senior fellow at the Century Foundation.
(Reporting by Sharon Bernstein in Sacramento, Calif., and Alex
Dobuzinskis in Los Angeles; Editing by Andrew Hay)
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