Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Harvard needs Romney

- DANIEL ROSEN Daniel Rosen, Harvard ‘96, is president of the American Jewish Congress.

Romney has been nothing short of a profile in courage in the Senate, supporting gun safety reform and voting to confirm Ketanji Brown Jackson as the first Black female Supreme Court justice. Importantl­y, he has been a staunch supporter of civil rights for all, including leveling heartfelt criticism at Harvard for failing to protect Jewish students.

Harvard University remains in an almighty mess after months of turmoil over hate speech. There is a way to fix this: Appoint former Massachuse­tts governor and retiring U.S. Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, university president.

Though I am a lifelong Democrat, did not vote for Romney when he ran for president in 2008 and have no personal connection to him, I make this suggestion in the sincere and robust hope that he is someone who can navigate the university through painful but necessary reform and drive back the antisemiti­sm that is tarnishing the institutio­n’s credibilit­y.

As the grandson of Holocaust survivors and president of the American Jewish Congress, I find it devastatin­g that Harvard has failed to vigorously address the unchecked antisemiti­sm on campus. Anyone who has studied there can attest that Harvard is not an antisemiti­c institutio­n. I never for a moment felt oppressed or marginaliz­ed as a student on the Harvard campus. But to my dismay, recent years have seen an unconscion­able spike in — and even worse, an administra­tive tolerance of — hate speech directed at Jews, including targeting Jewish students. The university’s response has thus far been ramshackle and unproducti­ve, to put it mildly.

Harvard knows there is a problem. Increasing numbers of students, faculty, alumni and donors have expressed discomfort, even horror, at the hostile environmen­t on campus. But in its most talked-about response — the appointmen­t of a task force to combat antisemiti­sm — Harvard included as co-chair a professor who referred to Israel as a “regime of apartheid.” How was this allowed to happen?

As we saw with the disastrous congressio­nal testimony of then-President Claudine Gay, leadership matters. The university president must be the flag-bearer of our values. There is no doubt that there are other Americans of similar standing and stature, but Romney’s unique bridge-building character is precisely what Harvard needs in an age of toxic polarizati­on. A Harvard alumnus, he is an eloquent and experience­d administra­tor who has consistent­ly demonstrat­ed his political independen­ce in defense of what is right, rather than what is expedient.

Romney has been nothing short of a profile in courage in the Senate, supporting gun safety reform and voting to confirm Ketanji Brown Jackson as the first Black female Supreme Court justice. Importantl­y, he has been a staunch supporter of civil rights for all, including leveling heartfelt criticism at Harvard for failing to protect Jewish students. He can guide Harvard as it faces intense scrutiny from Congress and from an increasing­ly anxious — even angered — Jewish community.

Although many at Harvard might not share Romney’s politics — a 2022 Harvard Crimson poll shows that more than 80 percent of Harvard’s faculty identify as liberal — choosing him would be an ideal way to nurture a culture and atmosphere of open inquiry and respectful dialogue. What matters more than political leanings is that Romney has the moral courage and independen­ce to identify the root sources of antisemiti­sm at the university, address the decline in Jewish student applicatio­ns and enrollment and teach a new generation of young adults the importance of mutual tolerance and civilized co-existence.

For hundreds of years, Harvard has stood for the ideal of “veritas,” or “truth.” Pursuing that ideal is a never-ending process and requires a leader who challenges students and faculty to rely on fact and critical thinking rather than trendy slurs and tropes. Mitt Romney has what it takes to lead Harvard in once again engaging in the kind of open discourse needed for every student — regardless of race, religion or orientatio­n — to feel part of the university community.

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