Harvard Pushes Back

The White House paused billions of dollars in federal funding to Harvard University after President Alan Garber refused to comply with a list of demands issued by the Trump administration, making Harvard the first university to openly defy the administration’s attempts to control higher education in the United States. Source: Caroline Engelmayer / The Harvard Crimson

 

On April 11, heads of the U.S. Department of Education, Department of Health and Human Services, and the General Services Administration co-signed a letter to Harvard requiring it to meet a list of demands including eliminating diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) efforts and making significant reforms to its policies to include mechanisms like establishing transparency with federal regulators, integrating external parties to monitor antisemitism on campus, and changing student discipline procedures. The university was ordered to fulfill these requirements by August 2025 or risk losing up to $9 billion dollars in federal funding. 

As of April 15, this letter was sent to six other elite universities—including the University of Pennsylvania and Columbia, Brown, Princeton, Cornell, and Northwestern universities— threatening them with a total of over $12.8 billion dollars in federal funding cuts. The letter served as an extension of President Donald Trump’s January 21 executive order that required universities across the nation to dismantle DEI initiatives, and the Department of Education’s Office of Civil Rights’s March 10 letters to over 60 universities notifying them of being investigated for antisemitic discrimination following a surge in pro-Palestine protests. 

On April 14, Harvard President Alan Garber informed the Trump administration through legal counsel that the university would not comply with the government’s demands. 

“The University will not surrender its independence or relinquish its constitutional rights,” Garber said in a campus-wide statement to the Harvard community published on the same day. “No government—regardless of which party is in power—should dictate what private universities can teach, whom they can admit and hire, and which areas of study and inquiry they can produce.” 

Hours later, the Trump administration froze $2.3 billion dollars in Harvard’s federal funding, leaving room for the possibility of more cuts in the future. Not only that, but the administration went on to threaten Harvard’s eligibility to admit and host international students, and is even considering revoking the university’s tax-exempt status.

With about 75% of its scientific and medical research being reliant on federal funding, Harvard Medical School leaders told employees on April 16 that the school was “preparing to make staffing reductions and cut programs” due to the funding freeze. That same week, professors received orders to stop their research, which primarily revolved around addressing the side effects of radiation therapy for cancer patients and developing vaccines for diseases like tuberculosis. 

 
 

During a town hall meeting on April 16, leaders of Harvard Medical School told employees the school was preparing to make program and staffing cuts in response to the $2.3 billion freeze in federal funding. Source: Jonathan Yuan / The Harvard Crimson

 
 

Harvard was the first university to openly defy the Trump administration, and saw a surge in alumni donations of at least $1.14 million dollars in the 48 hours following the funding freeze. With over 14,000 funds making up its $53-billion-dollar endowment—the largest in the nation—perhaps no university is better positioned to put up a fight against the federal government than Harvard itself. 

But tapping into Harvard’s famous endowment may not be that easy. An endowment, typically composed of donations and investments in stocks and bonds, among other kinds of investments, is set aside to financially support the institution’s mission in perpetuity. For Harvard, that means education and research—but most of the funds in an endowment come with specific requirements attached to how the money can be used. Alumni, for example, donate money meant specifically to support scholarships, or faculty positions, or specific areas of medical research. In such cases, the university is legally obligated to uphold that contract and agreement with its donors. At Harvard, donor terms direct 70% of its endowment’s annual distribution to specific programs or departments.

Furthermore, as Catharine Bond Hill, former president of Vassar College, told NBC News, most of the money in an endowment is not to be used immediately: “[Donors] give it as an endowment, so that the earnings can be used over time to support the thing that the donor is interested in the university doing in perpetuity.” 

This leaves about 25% of its endowment for discretionary spending, according to Hill. Despite it summing up to a relatively large amount, the 25% is hardly enough for the university to sustain itself for long, and administrators may have to consider making financial trade-offs for long-term stability.  

Complicating matters even further is the Endowment Accountability Act introduced by Republican Mike Lawler (NY-17) in late 2024 that would raise the tax rate of endowment income from 1.4% to 10%. Should the legislation pass, Harvard would have no choice but to make significant cuts to its resources and programs, especially in light of its current $2.3 billion dollar federal funding freeze. 

Harvard administrators now face a strategic crossroads: to preserve institutional independence or make compromises for the sake of operational continuity. The university’s resistance indicates a broader defense of academic autonomy at a time when universities are being asked to choose between federal funding and core educational values. But with a partially constrained endowment and the potential of new legislation threatening to further squeeze discretionary resources, Harvard’s ability to withstand a prolonged freeze remains rather uncertain. 

Although Harvard may reinforce its identity as a thought leader among elite institutions in standing firm, it also risks becoming a political target in a polarized nation, which could influence everything from congressional funding priorities to public trust in higher education at large. 

What’s more, Harvard’s funding freeze signals to faculty and students—particularly those involved in federally supported research—that their work at private, nonprofit institutions can be subject to the tumultuous political winds of Washington. Graduate students relying on research assistantships may lose income or lab access. International students, who are vital to Harvard’s academic fabric, will be subject to the actions of an administration actively attacking their civil liberties. For faculty, federal funding remains the backbone of their innovation and research. Losing that support could, and already has, started to jeopardize both long-term projects and recruitment. 

Despite this uncertainty, Harvard’s decision has generated national attention, and appears to be emboldening other institutions to stand up to the federal government. When the Trump administration first attacked Columbia with a $400 million dollar federal funding freeze in March, the university acquiesced to the government’s demands. But on April 14, Columbia’s acting president Claire Shipman took a more defiant stance in a letter to the Columbia community, stating the university administrators “would reject any agreement in which the government dictates what we teach, research, or who we hire.” On the other hand, coalitions at universities like Stanford have circulated open letters urging institutions to defend academic autonomy, and leaders at Northwestern University recently announced the institution will self-fund any research subject to stop-work orders. 

Harvard’s resistance also raises legal questions. By conditioning federal funding on compliance with executive directives, the administration may be expanding the scope of federal influence without legislative oversight. Legal and constitutional scholars suggest that this approach could test the boundaries of constitutional limits on executive power and the independence of private educational institutions. 

The Trump administration’s crackdown on campus policies and overt attempts at controlling the higher education landscape raises several concerns for universities across the nation. While Harvard’s wealth offers it some room to adapt, the vast majority of American colleges do not have comparable resources. Public universities, especially those in Republican-led states, are especially likely to face compounding pressures from both federal and state directives. These schools may be, and in many cases already have been, forced to dismantle DEI initiatives or restructure academic programs at the cost of undermining their own institutional missions. 

More importantly, the growing politicization of federal funding in education raises precedent-setting concerns. If the executive branch can unilaterally make such sweeping demands tied to funding, it may embolden future administrations of either party to leverage financial coercion for ideological conformity. In the long-term, this could affect not just DEI, but also research agendas, faculty appointments, and campus expression.  

At a time when universities are contending with shifting public perceptions, legal challenges to race-conscious admissions, and debates over academic freedom, Harvard’s case has the potential to shape how institutions understand and respond to the limits of federal oversight. If Harvard withstands the pressure and is able to sustain operations, it could establish a tried-and-tested roadmap for institutional resistance. If Harvard succumbs to these pressures, it may mark a turning point where universities are forced to recalibrate priorities to align with federal mandates to survive. 

The impacts of this $2.3 billion-dollar gamble stretch far beyond Cambridge, Massachusetts. Harvard’s confrontation with the Trump administration is more than a single university’s defiance—its outcome is a test case for the future of higher education in America with the potential to redefine the power balance between federal authority and institutional independence.