'From all sides': universities in red states face attacks from DC and at home
Source: The Guardian
Sat 10 May 2025 13.00 EDT
Last modified on Sat 10 May 2025 17.34 EDT
Days after the University of Michigan president, Santa Ono, announced that he was leaving his post to lead the University of Florida, his name was quietly removed on Wednesday from a letter signed by more than 600 university presidents denouncing the Trump administrations unprecedented government overreach and political interference with academic institutions.
As Ono is set to become the highest-paid public university president in the country, in a state that has often been at the forefront of the rightwing battle against higher education, the reversal, first reported on by Talking Points Memo, underscored the challenges of standing up against the governments sweeping attacks on education in solidly red states.
Many private colleges and universities have begun to push back against Donald Trumps federal funding cuts, bans on diversity initiatives, and targeting of foreign students, while faculty at more than 30 universities, most of them public, have passed resolutions calling for a mutual defence compact a largely symbolic pledge to support one another in the face of the governments repressive measures. But in conservative states, where local attacks on higher education were in vogue before the US president took office, faculty trying to fight back find themselves fighting on multiple fronts: against state legislators as well as against Trump.
Some have persevered, although for now that resistance has been limited to statements and resolutions calling on the universities themselves to put up a more muscular response. The faculty senate at Indiana University, Bloomington, voted in favor of a defence compact last month, days before Republican legislators passed a sweeping overhaul of the state schools governance. In Georgia, Kennesaw State University became the first and so far only school in the US south to join the call for the solidarity pact, in part to protest the state scrapping a decades-old initiative to increase the college enrollment of Black men, which was pulled as part of the broader Trump-led crackdown on diversity initiatives. This week, faculty at the University of Miami in Ohio and at the University of Arizona both states with Republican majority legislatures also passed resolutions in favor of mutual alliances among universities.
Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/may/10/republican-states-universities-attacks-trump