The faculty and national labor unions allege that the Trump
administration improperly canceled Columbia University’s federal funding
to compel speech restrictions on campus, damaging both vital scientific
research and academic discourse
NEW YORK– The American Association of University Professors (AAUP) and the AFT today sued the Trump administration
on behalf of their members for unlawfully cutting off $400 million in
federal funding for crucial public health research to force Columbia
University to surrender its academic independence. While the Trump
administration has been slashing funding since its first days in office,
this move represents a stunning new tactic: using cuts as a cudgel to
coerce a private institution to adopt restrictive speech codes and allow
government control over teaching and learning.
The plaintiffs,
who represent members of Columbia University faculty in both the
humanities and sciences, allege that this coercive tactic not only
undermines academic independence, but stops vital scientific research
that contributes to the health and prosperity of all Americans. The
terminated grants supported research on urgent issues, including
Alzheimer’s disease prevention, fetal health in pregnant women, and
cancer research.
The Trump administration’s unprecedented demands,
and threats of similar actions against 60 universities, have created
instability and a deep chilling effect on college campuses across the
country. Although the administration claims to be acting to combat
antisemitism under its authority to prevent discrimination, it has
completely disregarded the requirements of Title VI, the statute that
provides it with that authority–requirements that exist to prevent the
government from exercising too much unfettered control over funding
recipients. According to the complaint, the cancellation of federal
funds also violates the First Amendment, the separation of powers, and
other constitutional provisions.
“The Trump administration’s
threats and coercion at Columbia are part of a clear authoritarian
playbook meant to crush academic freedom and critical research in
American higher education. Faculty, students, and the American public
will not stand for it. The repercussions extend far beyond the walls of
the academy. Our constitutional rights, and the opportunity for our
children and grandchildren to live in a democracy are on the line,” said
Todd Wolfson, president of the AAUP.
“President
Trump has taken a hatchet to American ingenuity, imagination and
invention at Columbia to attack academic freedom and force compliance
with his political views,” said AFT President Randi Weingarten.
“Let’s be clear: the administration should tackle legitimate issues of
discrimination. But this modern-day McCarthyism is not just an illegal
attack on our nation’s deeply held free speech and due process rights,
it creates a chilling effect that hinders the pursuit of knowledge—the
core purpose of our colleges and universities. Today, we reject this
bullying and resolve to challenge the administration’s edicts until they
are rescinded.”
“We’re seeing university leadership across the
country failing to take any action to counter the Trump administration’s
unlawful assault on academic freedom,” said Reinhold Martin, president of Columbia-AAUP and professor of architecture.
“As faculty, we don’t have the luxury of inaction. The integrity of
civic discourse and the freedoms that form the basis of a democratic
society are under attack. We have to stand up.”
The complaint
alleges that the Trump administration’s broad punitive tactics are
indicative of an attempt to consolidate power over higher education
broadly. According to the complaint, the administration is
simultaneously threatening other universities with similar punishment in
order to chill dissent on specific topics and speech with which the
administration disagrees. Trump administration officials have spoken
publicly about their plans to “bankrupt these universities” if they
don’t “play ball.”
Universities have historically been engines of
innovation in critical fields like technology, national security, and
medical treatments. Cuts to that research will ultimately harm the
health, prosperity and security of all Americans.
“Columbia is the testing ground for the Trump administration’s tactic to force universities to yield to its control,” said Orion Danjuma, counsel at Protect Democracy. “We are bringing this lawsuit to protect higher education from unlawful government censorship and political repression.”
The
lawsuit was filed in the Southern District of New York and names as
defendants the government agencies that cut Columbia’s funding on March 7
and signed the March 13 letter to Columbia laying out the government's
demands required to restore the funding, including the Department of
Justice, Department of Education, Health and Human Services and General
Services Administration. The plaintiffs are represented by Protect
Democracy and Altshuler Berzon LLP.
The full complaint can be read here.