
Columbia agrees to pay $332m settlement to restore US federal funding
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Columbia University agrees to $332m settlement with Trump administration to restore US federal funding
Columbia University has reached a deal with the Trump administration to pay more than $US220 million ($332.5 million) to restore federal research money. Under the agreement, the Ivy League school will pay a $US200 million settlement to the government over three years. It will also pay $US21 million to resolve alleged civil rights violations against Jewish employees. The administration pulled the funding because of what it described as the university’s failure to squelch antisemitism on campus during the Israel-Gaza war. President Donald Trump said Columbia had “committed to ending their ridiculous DEI policies, admitting students based ONLY on MERIT, and protecting the Civil Liberties of their students on campus” Columbia agreed to a series of changes previously announced in March, including reviewing its Middle East curriculum to make sure it was “comprehensive and balanced” and appointing new faculty to its Institute for Israel and Jewish Studies. It also promised to end programs “that promote unlawful efforts to achieve race-based outcomes, quotas, diversity targets or similar efforts”
Under the agreement, the Ivy League school will pay a $US200 million settlement to the government over three years, the university said.
Riot police enter Columbia University to end pro-Palestinian encampment as movement takes hold Australia Photo shows Demonstrators clash at UCLA. Student protests over the Israel-Gaza war expand to an increasing number of college campuses in the United States, with Australian students joining the camp-outs demanding that their educational institutions cut ties with Israel.
It will also pay $US21 million to resolve alleged civil rights violations against Jewish employees that occurred following the Israel-Gaza war that began on October 7, 2023, the White House said.
“This agreement marks an important step forward after a period of sustained federal scrutiny and institutional uncertainty,” acting university president Claire Shipman said.
The school, in New York City, had been threatened with the potential loss of billions of dollars in government support, including more than $US400 million in grants cancelled earlier this year.
The administration pulled the funding because of what it described as the university’s failure to squelch antisemitism on campus during the Israel-Gaza war.
Columbia has since agreed to a series of demands laid out by the Republican administration, including overhauling the university’s student disciplinary process and applying a contentious, federally endorsed definition of antisemitism not only to teaching but to a disciplinary committee that has been investigating students critical of Israel.
Members of the Columbia faculty and staff protest against the university’s policies at the Columbia University campus. (Reuters: Ryan Murphy)
The agreement — which does not include an admission of wrongdoing — codifies those reforms while preserving the university’s autonomy, Ms Shipman said.
‘Columbia’s reforms are a road map,’ says Trump
Education Secretary Linda McMahon called the deal “a seismic shift in our nation’s fight to hold institutions that accept American taxpayer dollars accountable for antisemitic discrimination and harassment.”
“Columbia’s reforms are a road map for elite universities that wish to regain the confidence of the American public by renewing their commitment to truth-seeking, merit, and civil debate,” Ms McMahon said in a statement.
Australian Columbia student denied entry to US after being grilled on Israel-Gaza views Photo shows Australian writer Alistair Kitchen stands holding a laptop he says he was denied entry to the United States Melbourne writer Alistair Kitchen was detained for 12 hours at Los Angeles International Airport, had his phone seized and was “interrogated” about his views on the conflict in the Middle East.
As part of the agreement, Columbia agreed to a series of changes previously announced in March, including reviewing its Middle East curriculum to make sure it was “comprehensive and balanced” and appointing new faculty to its Institute for Israel and Jewish Studies.
It also promised to end programs “that promote unlawful efforts to achieve race-based outcomes, quotas, diversity targets or similar efforts.”
The university will also have to issue a report to a monitor assuring that its programs “do not promote unlawful DEI goals.”
In a post on Wednesday night on his Truth Social platform, President Donald Trump said Columbia had “committed to ending their ridiculous DEI policies, admitting students based ONLY on MERIT, and protecting the Civil Liberties of their students on campus.”
He also warned, without being specific, “Numerous other Higher Education Institutions that have hurt so many, and been so unfair and unjust, and have wrongly spent federal money, much of it from our government, are upcoming.”
Crackdown follows Columbia protests
The pact comes after months of uncertainty and fraught negotiations at the 270-year-old university.
It was among the first targets of Mr Trump’s crackdown on pro-Palestinian campus protests and on colleges that he asserts have allowed Jewish students to be threatened and harassed.
Protesters gathered outside Columbia University to denounce the immigration arrest of Mahmoud Khalil, a pro-Palestinian activist who helped lead protests against Israel at Columbia. (Reuters: Kylie Cooper)
Columbia’s own antisemitism task force found last summer that Jewish students had faced verbal abuse, ostracism, and classroom humiliation during the spring 2024 demonstrations.
Other Jewish students took part in the protests, however, and protest leaders maintain they are not targeting Jews, but rather criticising the Israeli government and its war in Gaza.
Columbia’s leadership — a revolving door of three interim presidents in the past year — has declared that the campus climate needs to change.
Columbia agrees to question international students
Also in the settlement is an agreement to ask prospective international students “questions designed to elicit their reasons for wishing to study in the United States,” and establishes processes to make sure all students are committed to “civil discourse.”
In a move that would potentially make it easier for the Trump administration to deport students who participate in protests, Columbia promised to provide the government with information — upon request — of disciplinary actions involving student-visa holders resulting in expulsions or suspensions.
Palestinian activist Mahmoud Khalil, center, speaks after his release from federal immigration detention in Jena in LA. (AP: Matthew Hinton)
Columbia on Tuesday announced it would suspend, expel, or revoke degrees from more than 70 students who participated in a pro-Palestinian demonstration inside the main library in May and an encampment during alumni weekend last year.
The pressure on Columbia began with a series of funding cuts.
Then Mahmoud Khalil, a graduate student who had been a visible figure in the protests, became the first person detained in the Trump administration’s push to deport pro-Palestinian activists who are not US citizens.
Next came searches of some university residences amid a federal Justice Department investigation into whether Columbia concealed “illegal aliens” on campus.
The interim president at the time responded that the university was committed to upholding the law.
Columbia overshadowed by Harvard
Columbia was an early test case for the Trump administration as it sought closer oversight of universities that the Republican president views as bastions of liberalism.
Yet, it was soon overshadowed by Harvard University, which became the first higher education institution to defy Trump’s demands and fight back in court.
Why Harvard is suing Trump Photo shows A group of people in front of a brick building holding protest signs. One reads protect academic freedom. Harvard University’s fight to keep billions of dollars in US government funding has made its way to court. Here is what you need to know.
The Trump administration has used federal research funding as its primary lever in its campaign to reshape higher education.
More than $2 billion in total has also been frozen at Cornell, Northwestern, Brown, and Princeton universities.
Administration officials pulled $175 million from the University of Pennsylvania in March over a dispute around women’s sports. They restored it when school officials agreed to update records set by transgender swimmer Lia Thomas and change their policies.
The administration is also looking beyond private universities.
University of Virginia president James Ryan agreed to resign in June under pressure from a US Justice Department investigation into diversity, equity, and inclusion practices.
A similar investigation was opened this month at George Mason University.
AP