Trump vs Harvard: University nears $500M settlement to restore federal fundings; resolve months-long feud


Trump vs Harvard: University nears $500M settlement to restore federal fundings; resolve months-long feud

Harvard University and the Trump administration are close to reaching a deal that would require the Ivy League school to pay $500 million in order to regain access to federal funding and end ongoing investigations, according to media reports.The settlement framework is still being negotiated, with some details yet to be resolved, but both sides have agreed on the payment amount. A final agreement could be reached within weeks, as reported by the Associated Press. The potential deal would end a months-long dispute that began as an investigation into antisemitism on campus but quickly escalated into a broader clash. The Trump administration cut more than $2.6 billion in research funding, canceled federal contracts, and attempted to block Harvard from hosting international students.Harvard responded by filing two lawsuits accusing the administration of unlawful retaliation, claiming the government’s demands threatened academic freedom.A $500 million payment would be the largest financial settlement sought by the administration in its recent actions against elite universities. Columbia University agreed to pay $200 million to restore federal funding, while Brown University reached a $50 million settlement benefiting Rhode Island workforce programs. President Trump has made reshaping prestigious universities a political priority, often criticizing them as centers of liberal ideology. His administration has reduced funding for several Ivy League institutions, but none as heavily targeted as Harvard, which has a $53 billion endowment.The Trump administration has reduced funding for several Ivy League universities while making demands aligned with the president’s political agenda. Harvard, the wealthiest US university with a $53 billion endowment, has been the most frequent and heavily targeted.Some Democrats in Congress, many of them Harvard alumni, have warned against a settlement. In an August 1 letter, more than a dozen lawmakers cautioned that conceding to political pressure could set a dangerous precedent for higher education nationwide, calling for “rigorous Congressional oversight and inquiry” if a deal moves forward.



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