House lawmakers grill university leaders over response to campus encampments

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House Republicans grilled the leaders of Rutgers University, Northwestern University and the University of California, Los Angeles on Thursday, panning their responses to the pro-Palestinian encampments that have cropped up on campuses nationwide. 

The hearing, held by the House Committee on Education and the Workforce, marks the third time the panel has called top college leaders to testify about how they’ve handled campus unrest in the wake of the latest Israel-Hamas war. The committee has also brought in K-12 leaders to face similar lines of questioning, as well as heard from Jewish college students about their experiences facing antisemitism on campus. 

During Thursday’s inquiry, the higher education leaders stressed that they must protect free speech and the right to protest while ensuring that those actions don’t cross the line into harassment or violence. 

Other college presidents who have testified before the committee have stressed similar points, only to face widespread criticism afterward. 

Former University of Pennsylvania President Liz Magill, who testified before lawmakers in December, resigned a few days after going to Washington, D.C. Claudine Gay, then-president of Harvard University, stepped down from her post in January amid mounting plagiarism allegations and anger over her responses to lawmakers. 

However, some Democrats on the committee argued Thursday that the hearings failed to do anything to address the root issues of campus tension.

“Here we are for the fifth time in six months holding another hearing to complain about the problem of antisemitism, but no work is being done to find a meaningful solution to address the animus on college campuses,” Virginia Rep. Bobby Scott, the top Democrat on the committee, said. “Complaining about a problem is not a solution — it certainly riles people up, generates a lot of media coverage, but it doesn’t solve anything.” 

Scott also pointed out that House Republicans last year attempted — and failed — to slash funding by 25% for the U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights, which investigates whether colleges are protecting students from discrimination. 

That would have equated to a $35 million budget cut for the office — which received a record number of complaints in 2023. 

Rep. Haley Stevens, a Democrat from Michigan, didn’t mince words, arguing that lawmakers have only been performatively caring about protecting students equally. 

“When we don’t put our money where our mouth is,” Stevens said, “we are failing this nation. We are failing Muslim students, we are failing Jewish students, we are failing Christian students, and frankly, we are failing the future of this country.” 

Lawmakers grill Northwestern and Rutgers leaders

Republican lawmakers spent much of their time questioning the leaders of Northwestern and Rutgers, both of which struck deals with pro-Palestinian protesters to end encampments on their campuses. 

At Northwestern, campus officials announced an agreement in late April following five days of negotiations with the student activists. The protesters agreed to remove their encampment — save for one aid tent — and comply with the university’s rules for demonstrations. 

In exchange, Northwestern agreed to several steps, including providing information about its investments, funding two visiting Palestinian faculty members annually for two years, and covering the cost of attendance for five Palestinian undergraduates. 

Northwestern did not agree to two of the protesters’ key demands — to divest from companies with ties to Israel and to end a program “focused on Israeli innovation,” according to Schill’s written testimony

North Carolina Rep. Virginia Foxx, the Republican chair of the committee, described the agreement as “a disgraceful deal.” 

Foxx, along with other Republicans, also pointed out that seven members of a Northwestern advisory committee focused on preventing antisemitism and hate stepped down after the agreement was announced. 

Those members took issue with Northwestern President Michael Schill’s decision not to consult with the committee on the deal, according to The Daily Northwestern, the campus’ student newspaper. 

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