Many colleges are settling antisemitism cases. Some Republicans blast
'toothless' agreements
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[January 16, 2025]
By COLLIN BINKLEY
WASHINGTON (AP) — Many colleges accused of tolerating antisemitism on
their campuses have been settling with federal civil rights
investigators in the weeks before the inauguration of President-elect
Donald Trump, who urged a tougher response to campus protests against
the war in Gaza.
By settling with the Education Department, the schools close the cases
against them as long as they meet the terms of the agreements, which
mostly have required training, policy updates and reviews of past
complaints.
But many colleges at the center of the highest-profile cases — including
Columbia and Cornell — face investigations that remain unresolved and
could run the risk of harsher penalties after Trump takes office. Trump
has not said what he would like to see come of the investigations, but
he has threatened to revoke federal money for schools that fall short of
his demands.
“Colleges will and must end the antisemitic propaganda or they will lose
their accreditation and federal support,” Trump said in a virtual
address to Jewish donors in September. “No money will go to them if they
don’t.”
Settlements with the Education Department’s civil rights branch have
piled up in recent weeks with the University of Washington, the
University of California, Johns Hopkins, Rutgers and the University of
Cincinnati. Those follow other voluntary agreements signed by Brown and
Temple universities, along with the University of Michigan.
The flurry of recent deals has drawn outrage from Republicans in
Congress who say the Biden administration is letting colleges off the
hook.
Rep. Tim Walberg, R-Mich., chair of the House Education and Workforce
Committee, said the settlements are “toothless” and fail to hold
colleges accountable for permitting antisemitism. In a statement, he
said the Trump administration should “examine these agreements and
explore options to impose real consequences on schools.”
One of the committee's priorities will be “calling out woke higher
education institutions — especially those that allow antisemitism to run
rampant,” Walberg said at a Wednesday meeting.
More than 100 U.S. colleges and school districts remain under
investigation over alleged antisemitism or Islamophobia following the
Oct. 7 attack by Hamas on Israel. That includes Columbia, Cornell, Yale,
Princeton and other prestigious schools targeted by a Republican
campaign against antisemitism.
The Department of Education investigations stem from complaints that
schools violated Title VI, which bars discrimination or harassment on
the basis of race, color and national origin at colleges and
universities that receive federal funding.
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Students with the Gaza Solidarity Encampment block the entrance of
Hamilton Hall at Columbia University after taking over it, April 30,
2024 in New York. (Marco Postigo Storel via AP, File)
Several colleges facing investigations declined to comment on their
status.
Presidents of several universities were called before Congress last
year over their handling of pro-Palestinian protests, contributing
to the resignations of Claudine Gay at Harvard, Liz Magill at Penn
and Minouche Shafik at Columbia.
The vast majority of Education Department civil rights
investigations end with voluntary deals negotiated with schools. If
they can’t reach a settlement, the agency can refer the case to the
Justice Department or move to cut off the school’s federal money —
an extreme sanction that has almost never been used.
Whether Trump pushes the Education Department to use the so-called
“nuclear option” is still in question. But without a deal before
Jan. 20, colleges raise the risk that they could become test cases
for Trump, who has been openly hostile to universities that he sees
as hotbeds of liberalism.
Losing access to federal money is usually seen as a death sentence
for colleges, though if there’s any exception it would be Harvard
and its $53 billion endowment, the wealthiest college in the world.
A total cutoff would also mean that students could not use federal
financial aid at the university.
It couldn’t happen instantly, however. The Education Department can
terminate federal money only if it fails to gain voluntary
compliance from the school and only if it’s approved by an
administrative law judge. There would have to be a hearing, and
there would be opportunities for the school to appeal the decision.
As Republicans take control of both chambers of Congress, there’s
also a renewed push for legislation on the subject. A December
report coordinated by House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., found that
colleges across the U.S. failed to stop antisemitism amid last
year’s demonstrations, highlighting cases at Harvard, Columbia and
UCLA.
The report called for new legislation “to support students and
ensure accountability,” and it endorsed legislation to cut off
federal money at schools that support divestment from Israel. It
called on the executive branch to “aggressively enforce” civil
rights laws, saying universities that fail to curb antisemitism “are
unfit stewards of taxpayer dollars should be treated accordingly.”
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