Skip to content

JOBUZO

  • News
  • Indonesia
  • Toggle search form
White House touts Columbia deal, critics see dangerous precedent

White House touts Columbia deal, critics see dangerous precedent

Posted on 25 July 2025 By jobuzo

Columbia University’s agreement to pay more than US$220 million (S$280 million) to the US government to resolve federal probes was not capitulation but a means to restore vital public funding, the university’s acting president said on Thursday (July 24).

But critics expressed concern about a harmful precedent in what they see as President Donald Trump’s push for greater control over elite US colleges.

Trump has targeted Columbia and other universities over the pro-Palestinian student protest movement that roiled college campuses last year.

Harvard University is fighting the Trump administration in court and critics have likened the Columbia deal to extortion.

Columbia faced the loss of billions of dollars in future federal funds and the potential revocation of the visa status of thousands of international students, said Acting President Claire Shipman.

“This was not capitulation,” Shipman told CNN, adding that the deal protected the university’s “academic integrity”.

News :<div>12 weeks' jail for school IT support technician who took upskirt videos of teachers</div>

[[nid:719812]]

Under the settlement, Columbia will pay US$200 million to the US Treasury and a further US$21 million to a fund to resolve alleged civil rights violations against Jewish employees following the Oct 7, 2023, Hamas attack on Israel, senior administration officials said.

In return, the university regained access to some US$1.7 billion in federal funding and grants, Shipman said.

The deal comes after the Trump administration in March penalised Columbia over how it handled last year’s protests by canceling US$400 million in federal funding. It contended that Columbia’s response to alleged antisemitism and harassment of Jewish and Israeli members of the university community was insufficient.

The school later acquiesced to a series of demands that included scrutiny of departments offering courses on the Middle East and other concessions that were widely condemned by US academics.

Wednesday’s deal formalised many of those concessions in what Education Secretary Linda McMahon called an “incredible win” for the government.

News :Migrant acquitted in first trial over US border military zones

[[nid:720061]]

“It is our hope this is going to be a template for other universities around the country,” McMahon told cable network NewsNation. “We’re already seeing other universities taking these measures before investigation.”

McMahon said Columbia agreed to discipline student offenders for severe disruptions of campus operations, bring viewpoint diversity to their Middle Eastern studies programs, eliminate race preferences from their hiring and admissions practices, and end DEI (diversity, equity and inclusion) programs.

Columbia law professor David Pozen called the agreement a “shakedown” and said it set a precedent for “pay-to-play” deals the Trump administration is seeking with other schools.

“The agreement gives legal form to an extortion scheme,” Pozen said in a blog post, calling it the first time antisemitism and DEI have been invoked as the basis for a government-enforced restructuring of a private university.

Shipman said the agreement contained no provisions that “shall be construed as giving the United States authority to dictate faculty hiring, university hiring, admissions decisions, or the content of academic speech.”

[[nid:720454]]

White House touts Columbia deal, critics see dangerous precedent


News

Post navigation

Previous Post: Authorities seize illegally imported fresh produce from Malaysia at Woodlands Checkpoint
Next Post: Grab rider in Thailand frantically tries to revive cat after saving it from burning building

Related Posts

China to hold 3rd press briefing on victory anniversary events China to hold 3rd press briefing on victory anniversary events News
Six US soldiers killed in refuelling plane incident identified; crash under probe Six US soldiers killed in refuelling plane incident identified; crash under probe News
Nvidia is reportedly investing up to B in Poolside  Nvidia is reportedly investing up to $1B in Poolside  News

Latest

  • Taxi driver in Bangkok returns S$12K cash left in his vehicle by Sri Lankan tourist
  • In public letter, Ukraine’s Zelenskyy calls on Putin for direct negotiations in a neutral country
  • ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ Actor James Handy Allegedly Stabbed to Death by Girlfriend’s Son
  • Mira Murati steps back into the spotlight, carefully
  • Founders Fund launches game show starring Sam Altman, Palmer Luckey, and other tech elites
  • Thongloun revisits his alma mater in Beijing
  • Tencent’s AI chief dismisses lag concerns, says race a ‘long-term game’
  • Iran’s IRGC says Israel must immediately stop attacks on Lebanon
  • Brunei’s ‘Instagrammer’ prince named foreign minister in cabinet reshuffle
  • Influencer offers ₹1.4 lakh for missing dog, finds out pet was sold for ₹2,400 and eaten

Copyright © 2025 JOBUZO. Disclaimers | Privacy Policies

Powered by PressBook Masonry Blogs