| Elite colleges are in crisis.
It started at Harvard in the aftermath of Hamas’ terrorist attack on Israel in early October, when more than 30 student groups responded by putting out a statement holding Israel’s government responsible for the violence.
The uproar was immediate, with billionaire alumni Bill Ackman playing a vocal role.
Then came the congressional testimony of Harvard president Claudine Gay, Penn president Elizabeth Magill, and MIT president Sally Kornbluth. The trio waffled on a question from Republican representative Elise Stefanik over whether calling for the genocide of Jews would be a violation of their schools’ code of conduct.
Ackman called for the three to “resign in disgrace,” while another Wall Street CEO said he’d pull a $100 million donation from Penn “absent a change in leadership and values.” Magill resigned over the weekend, after which Ackman renewed his calls for Gay and Kornbluth to go.
“One down, two to go,” Stefanik said in a statement. (Stefanik graduated from Harvard and later sat on an advisory committee at the college, but was removed in 2021 after she asserted voter fraud in the 2020 election.)
Gay, who is Harvard’s first Black president, has apologized for her remarks on antisemitism. The Harvard community has rallied around her, with more than 500 faculty members signing a letter defending her and the university’s alumni association also expressing support for her. But others outside the Ivy League college remain furious with Gay’s testimony.
The days ahead will determine whether Gay or any more university leaders will step down, voluntarily or otherwise. But the questions over college leadership and campus culture aren’t likely to go away anytime soon.
Larry Summers, the former president of Harvard, has described the current tension “as difficult a moment for elite higher education as any moment since the Vietnam War.”
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