Harvard University says it will not accept demands made by the Trump administration – putting nearly $9bn (£6.8bn) in funding at risk.
The Ivy League university, in Cambridge, Massachusetts, has accused the federal government of trying “to control the Harvard community”, including calling on the student body, faculty and staff to be “audited” on their views about diversity.
Harvard president Alan Garber has accused the administration of attempting to “reduce the power” of certain students, academics, and administrators targeted because of their ideological views.
In a letter to the Harvard community on Monday, Mr Garber claimed the demands violated the university’s first amendment rights and “exceed the statutory limits of the government’s authority under Title VI”, which prohibits discrimination against students based on their race, colour or national origin.
He was responding after a letter from the Trump administration on Friday called for reforms and warned the university to comply if it wanted to “maintain Harvard’s financial relationship with the federal government”.
It said: “By August 2025, the university shall commission an external party, which shall satisfy the federal government as to its competence and good faith, to audit the student body, faculty, staff, and leadership for viewpoint diversity, such that each department, field, or teaching unit must be individually viewpoint diverse.”
The 10 demands, which the administration has said are aimed at addressing antisemitism on campus, include restricting acceptance of any international students who are “hostile to the American values and institutions”.
The administration also wants a third party to audit programmes offered at the university that it has said “fuel antisemitic harassment or reflect ideological capture”.
Demand to scrap DEI programmes
The federal government also demanded the immediate axing of all diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) programmes and initiatives.
The demands, which are an update from an earlier letter, also call for a ban on face masks – which appeared to target pro-Palestinian protesters.
The administration has argued that universities allowed what it considered to be antisemitism to go unchecked during campus protests last year against Israel’s war in Gaza. The schools deny it.
Harvard remains defiant
Mr Garber wrote: “No government – regardless of which party is in power – should dictate what private universities can teach, whom they can admit and hire, and which areas of study and inquiry they can pursue.”
He added that the university had carried out extensive reforms to address antisemitism.
“These ends will not be achieved by assertions of power, unmoored from the law, to control teaching and learning at Harvard and to dictate how we operate,” he wrote.
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In a letter issued to the administration, lawyers for the university say it is “committed to fighting antisemitism and other forms of bigotry in its community,” but that the Trump administration’s demands “invade university freedoms long recognised by the Supreme Court”.
Harvard is one of several Ivy League schools targeted in a pressure campaign by the administration, which has also paused federal funding for the University of Pennsylvania, Brown and Princeton to force compliance with its agenda.
Harvard’s demand letter is similar to the one that led to changes at Columbia University amid the threat of billions of dollars in cuts.