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What the Feds’ Fight With Columbia University Means for Other Schools – John McCormack

Following the October 7, 2023, Hamas massacre of more than 1,200 Israelis and the ensuing Israeli war against Hamas in Gaza, Columbia University became a hotbed of anti-Israel demonstrations. That activism boiled over in April 2024, when activists set up a Gaza Solidarity encampment on a university lawn; occupied a university building; and prompted the cancellation of in-person classes. A rabbi at Columbia urged Jewish students that month to go home for Passover and not return because “Columbia University’s Public Safety and the NYPD cannot guarantee Jewish students’ safety in the face of extreme antisemitism and anarchy.” 

Earlier this month, the Trump administration’s Joint Task Force to Combat Anti-Semitism announced that it was cutting $400 million in federal grants and contracts to Columbia University “due to the school’s continued inaction in the face of persistent harassment of Jewish students.” Secretary of Education Linda McMahon said in a statement that “universities must comply with all federal antidiscrimination laws if they are going to receive federal funding.” The National Institutes of Health announced it was cutting $250 million in grants to Columbia, but Inside Higher Ed reported last week that “neither the Trump administration nor the university have provided a comprehensive accounting of what’s being cut,” and it’s “hard to tell” whether the NIH were included in the $400 million cut or on top of it. One Columbia professor told The Dispatch: “The individual [Columbia] researcher knows if their grant has been pulled, but the public doesn’t know which researchers have been affected.” The task force made clear the $400 million in cuts were just the start, and “additional cancelations are expected to follow.”

“You take federal money, and you accept the strings that come with it. Those strings include civil rights laws,” Ilya Shapiro, a constitutional scholar with the conservative think tank the Manhattan Institute, told The Dispatch. Shapiro contends that Columbia has indeed violated Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, color, or national origin. Though the law does not mention religion, it has been interpreted by the federal government to protect Jewish and Muslim students, and universities can be held liable for violating the law if they permit a hostile discriminatory environment for students. “It’s not just speech,” Shapiro said. “It’s student programs being disrupted, classes being disrupted … blocking access, harassment, and intimidation. All of these things violate Title VI.”

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