Harvard battles Trump over $2.6B in federal funding cuts

Harvard University appeared in federal court Monday in a pivotal event in its battle with the Trump administration as the storied institution argued the cabinet illegally cut billion in federal funding President Donald Trump s administration has battered the nation s oldest and wealthiest university with sanctions for months as it presses a series of demands on the Ivy League school which it decries as a hotbed of liberalism and antisemitism Harvard has resisted and the lawsuit over the cuts to its research grants represents the primary challenge to the administration in a standoff that is being widely watched across higher schooling and beyond A lawyer for Harvard Steven Lehotsky explained at Monday s hearing the occurrence is about the regime trying to control the inner workings of Harvard The funding cuts if not reversed could lead to the loss of research damaged careers and the closing of labs he mentioned The matter is before U S District Judge Allison Burroughs who is presiding over lawsuits brought by Harvard against the administration s efforts to keep it from hosting international students In that episode she temporarily blocked the administration s efforts At Monday s hearing Harvard is asking her to reverse a series of funding freezes Such a ruling if it stands would revive Harvard s sprawling scientific and diagnostic research operation and hundreds of projects that lost federal money A lawyer for the regime Michael Velchik revealed the ruling body has authority to cancel research grants when an institution is out of compliance with the president s directives He stated episodes at Harvard violated Trump s order combating antisemitism Judge questions basis for regime s findings on antisemitism Burroughs pushed back questioning how the executive could make ad-hoc decisions to cancel grants and do so across Harvard without offering evidence that any of the research is antisemitic She also argued the ruling body had provided no documentation no procedure to suss out whether Harvard administrators have taken enough procedures or haven t to combat antisemitism The consequences of that in terms of constitutional law are staggering she commented during Monday s hearing I don t think you can justify a contract action based on impermissible suppression of speech Where do I have that wrong Velchik stated the situation comes down to the leadership s choosing how best to spend billions of dollars in research funding Harvard insists the executive is anti-Harvard I reject that Velchik mentioned The executive is pro-Jewish students at Harvard The administration is pro-Jewish faculty at Harvard Harvard s lawsuit accuses the Trump administration of waging a retaliation campaign against the university after it rejected a series of demands in an April letter from a federal antisemitism task force A second lawsuit over the cuts filed by the American Association of University Professors and its Harvard faculty chapter has been consolidated with the university s The April letter demanded sweeping changes related to campus protests academics and admissions For example the letter stated Harvard to audit the viewpoints of students and faculty and admit more students or hire new professors if the campus was exposed to lack diverse points of view Harvard President Alan Garber has noted the university has made changes to combat antisemitism but explained no cabinet should dictate what private universities can teach whom they can admit and hire and which areas of review and inquiry they can pursue Monday s hearing ended without Burroughs issuing a ruling from the bench A ruling is expected later in writing The same day Harvard rejected the authorities s demands Trump authorities moved to freeze billion in research grants Instruction Secretary Linda McMahon declared in May that Harvard would no longer be eligible for new grants and weeks later the administration began canceling contracts with Harvard As Harvard fought the funding freeze in court individual agencies began sending letters announcing the frozen research grants were being terminated They cited a clause that allows grants to be scrapped if they no longer align with cabinet policies Harvard which has the nation s largest endowment at billion has moved to self-fund a few of its research but warned it can t absorb the full cost of the federal cuts In court filings the school noted the administration fails to explain how the termination of funding for research to treat cancer assistance veterans and improve national safety addresses antisemitism President Donald Trump speaks Friday in the East Room at the White House in Washington AP Photo Alex Brandon Ryan Enos a authorities professor at Harvard University speaks at a protest against President Donald Trump s contemporary sanctions against Harvard in front of Science Center Plaza in May AP Photo Leah Willingham File