google.com, pub-8701563775261122, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0
UK

US politics live updates: Trump administration reportedly seeks fines from universities including Harvard | Trump administration

Trump administration reportedly sought a fine from universities including Harvard

Good morning and welcome to the US policy blog.

Today is a New report from The Wall Street Journal Columbia said that after accepting more than $ 220 million this week, Trump said that the Trump administration was looking for a fine from other universities.

According to Wall Street Journal’s reports, the White House aims to invest a few universities in which he accused of stopping anti -Semitism on campus, including Harvard University in exchange for access to federal finance.

The Trump administration meets various universities such as Cornell, Duke, Northwestern and Brown – but Harvard is seen as a key target.

Stay loyal to us today because we bring Washington and the latest lines from beyond.

To share

KEY EVENTS

Alice sperm

Columbia University’s agreement with the Trump administration after months of negotiations received both condemnation and praise from the faculties, students and graduates – the end of the negotiations will barely bring the harmony of a campus since the beginning of the Gaza war.

David Pozen, a professor at Columbia Faculty of Law, hit the agreement as a “legal form of the extortion plan”, O written.

“The vehicles used to overcome these reforms are as principles as they are unseen. Higher education policy, temporary agreements in the United States are developed not only to the ideal of the university as a critical field of critical thinking, but also with a form of arrangement of democratic order and law.

All Columbia subsidiaries were not so critical. Stand Columbia Society, a group of graduates, students and faculty members, defended some of the reforms requested by the Trump administration.

“Stand Columbia Society believes that it represents an excellent result that restore the research financing of this agreement, facilitates real structural reforms and protects the basic principles of academic freedom and institutional autonomy,” he wrote. “We are determined and consistent about what the right thing is, and today both the leaders of Columbia and the federal government deserve the loan because it has achieved this result.”

To share

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Back to top button