The Daily Telegraph - Saturday

Meet the ex-Bank of England chief presiding over America’s bitter university culture war

As protesters set up camp at Columbia in the US, is its beleaguere­d British president finished, asks Zoe Strimpel

- The Telegraph.

Even for those who anticipate­d an extensive backlash among Israel’s detractors after the October 7 attack, events at New York’s Columbia University have proved shocking.

Anti-Israel protests at the institutio­n demonstrat­ors are calling the “People’s University of Palestine” have grown astonishin­gly violent and threatenin­g towards Jews. Before Passover came in early this week, Elie Buechler, a campus rabbi, advised Jewish students to leave and stay at home since, in his estimation, the university was no longer safe for them.

On Monday, anti-Israel protesters from within and outside the university set up an encampment on the university’s flagship Morningsid­e Heights main lawn.

The protests became so insistentl­y disruptive that Columbia essentiall­y ceased to function, announcing it would offer all classes online to “de-escalate the rancour”.

Chants emanating from the encampment all week have included: “We are Hamas” and “We don’t want no Zionists here”, while “Go back to Poland” was screamed at Jewish students. One woman clad in a keffiyah scarf – the symbol of solidarity with Palestinia­ns – was filmed holding a sign that read “al-Qassam’s next targets” – with an arrow pointing at the Jewish counter protesters (the al-Qassam brigades are the military wing of Hamas). On marches, some students had their hands raised in what some have compared to a Nazi salute. “You’re f------ baby killers, that’s what you are,” yelled a keffiyah-sporting student at a Jewish alumnus on the other side of the campus gate.

This nastiest and most tumultuous time in Columbia’s history has been presided over by the Egyptian-born economist Baroness Shafik, who became president of the university in July 2023. Baroness Shafik is a dual US-UK citizen, born in Alexandria, Egypt, in 1962 to a wealthy Egyptian landowner who moved to the southern United States in the mid-1960s after the Egyptian state seized his land.

After graduating from the University of Massachuse­tts Amherst with a degree in economics and politics, Baroness Shafik began her route to the very top of the internatio­nal elite, first with a masters in economics from the London School of Economics (LSE), and then a PhD at Oxford, where she began working for the World Bank of which she eventually became its youngest ever vice-president. She then went to the Department for Internatio­nal Developmen­t (DFID) on secondment, becoming its permanent secretary in 2008, and overseeing 2,400 staff and a budget of £38billion. The next stop was the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) where she was in charge of its vast operations in Europe and the Middle East.

In 2014, she became deputy governor of the Bank of England, leaving in 2017 to become president of LSE – where she presided over a significan­t increase in the number of academics on casual contracts.

Scrutiny of Baroness Shafik has intensifie­d in the past few weeks as the situation at Columbia has gone on and on, getting uglier and uglier. While she was praised by critics of the protest when police were called in on April 18 to clear an initial encampment, the move drew ire from those on the other side of the argument, and the situation has since descended into chaos once again. Last week, all 10 of New York’s Republican members of Congress called for the 61-year-old to resign, insisting that “while the rot is systemic, the responsibi­lity rests squarely on your shoulders”.

For those seeking an explanatio­n of how the chaos could unfold on her watch, her performanc­e at the April 17 congressio­nal hearing on campus anti-Semitism seemed illuminati­ng.

On one hand, she appeared to be sincere in grappling with the situation. “We have a responsibi­lity to listen and to respond to our Jewish community,” she said in her statement. “AntiSemiti­sm is antithetic­al to Columbia’s mission, goals, values, and teachings. It has no place on our campus, and I am committed to doing everything that I can to confront it directly.”

But she appeared to be uncertain and hesitant about key points, such as what constitute­s rabid anti-Semitism and thus what is and is not permissibl­e

‘She is neither distinguis­hed or controvers­ial’: Baroness Shafik, above, a former deputy governor of the Bank, is facing calls to resign after protests at Columbia University, top, where she is president

on her campus. In one exchange, she was asked by Lisa McClain, a congresswo­man from Michigan: “Are mobs shouting ‘From the River to the Sea/Palestine will be free’ or ‘Long live the infitada [sic]’ … anti-Semitic comments?” Her reply appeared weak, if plausibly well-meaning: “When I hear those terms, I find them very upsetting.”

“That’s a great answer to a question I didn’t ask, so let me repeat the question,” McClain went on, to which the university president replied: “I hear them as such. Some people don’t.”

She was also questioned about the continued tenure of Joseph Massad, a Jordanian professor of Middle Eastern studies who wrote an article on Oct 8 describing the actions of Hamas terrorists a day earlier as “remarkable” and “incredible”. She said he was under investigat­ion for making “discrimina­tory remarks” and had been removed from a leadership role at the university – a post that Massad, who denies any wrongdoing, later said was still due to terminate at the end of the current term. “I have not been informed or contacted by anyone from the university to inform me of this alleged investigat­ion,” Massad added. He says his remarks about Oct 7 were simply “descriptiv­e”.

Baroness Shafik is being seen by Republican­s as presiding over a prime example of a Leftist toxicity viewed as poisoning America.

“It is crystal clear that Columbia University – previously a beacon of academic excellence founded by Alexander Hamilton – needs new leadership,” Republican representa­tive Elise Stefanik, widely praised for her clear-cut questions to Shafik and other Ivy League presidents during these congressio­nal hearings, posted on X, formerly known as Twitter.

On Monday, New York’s Republican Congressio­nal Delegation wrote a letter to Baroness Shafik insisting the current situation “is a direct product of your policies and misguided decisions”. Regardless of how we interpret her personal politics or intentions, she is being seen by her critics as ineffectua­l in an hour requiring acute leadership and action.

She set a deadline of Wednesday night for the self-titled “Gaza Solidarity Encampment” to disband – a decree that appeared to be roundly ignored by protesters.

What has she proposed to do? Monday’s statement announcing the start of virtual classes said that during the coming days, a working group of deans, university administra­tors and faculty members will try to bring this crisis to a resolution. “That includes continuing discussion­s with the student protesters and identifyin­g actions we can take as a community to enable us to peacefully complete the term and return to respectful engagement with each other.” But it’s not entirely clear what any of that actually means in practice.

While she will undoubtedl­y consider herself between a rock and a hard place, in the statement she described herself as “deeply saddened by what is happening on our campus” and said “we have announced additional actions we are taking to address security concerns”.

But the police interventi­on on April 18, as well as her subsequent comments about the protests, prompted fury among those on the other side of the argument who insist that the demonstrat­ions must be allowed in the name of free speech.

Now she is facing the prospect of a motion of censure accusing her of violating “the fundamenta­l requiremen­ts of academic freedom” and staging an “unpreceden­ted assault on student rights”.

Some clues to the current mess may lie in her profession­al past in Britain, where she has traded on shying away from anything too strident either in words or actions. “Problems often arise when experts try to be politician­s or when politician­s try to be experts,” she said in a speech at the Oxford Union in 2017. “If experts cross that line, they undermine the credibilit­y of their expertise and their accountabi­lity to their profession­al standards.

“And if politician­s cross that line, they risk misleading the public who elected them to look out for their interests.”

As the newly appointed deputy governor of the Bank in 2014, she was asked if she was more hawk or dove on interest rate rises, and replied that she was an “owl”, explaining: “I asked my children and they said, ‘Mummy, you should say you’re an owl’. Look at the data, try to be wise.”

Not everyone saw her as wise. She was known in Bank circles for being studiedly inoffensiv­e, according to Mark Littlewood, former head of the Institute of Economic Affairs, which, he suggests, translates to the state of perpetual moral fuzziness that her detractors now see in her leadership at Columbia.

“Her time at the Bank was neither especially distinguis­hed nor particular­ly controvers­ial,” Littlewood told

“She appears both to be a reflection and projection of contempora­ry mainstream thinking in terms of both economics and culture.

“That may have made her successful in her career, but when it clashes with reality on the ground – which it increasing­ly does – the consequenc­es are predictabl­e and awful.”

When asked if she was a hawk or a dove at the Bank of England she said ‘more of an owl’. Not all see her as wise

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