Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

New chancellor seeks common ground with GOP

Incoming UW-Madison leader faces criticism

- Kelly Meyerhofer

A day after being pilloried by Republican­s, incoming University of Wisconsin-Madison chancellor Jennifer Mnookin said she couldn’t be more excited for the “opportunit­y of a lifetime” and looks forward to working with the GOP-led Legislatur­e.

In Mnookin’s first public remarks since being named the next UW-Madison chancellor on Monday, she tried presenting herself as ready for the rough-and-tumble of Republican­dominated politics, which she hasn’t faced in her seven years leading the law school at the University of California, Los Angeles.

Mnookin told reporters Tuesday that she is excited to meet people, both on campus and in the Capitol, over beer or cheese curds and work to find common ground about how to move Wisconsin forward.

Some Republican­s, including Assembly Speaker Robin Vos, of Rochester, have painted Mnookin as a leftist “woke radical” who has donated to Democratic politician­s and supports critical race theory.

Mnookin said she’d love to talk about the “different definitions and swirling ideas” surroundin­g critical race theory, a complex academic framework to understand system racism, typically taught in law schools.

“There are a lot of different perspectiv­es on it and it’s become something that when people engage, I’m not even sure they’re talking about the same thing,” she said, noting a distinctio­n between the critical race theory taught by legal scholars and broader public discussion­s about how race and its role in American history should be taught to K-12 classrooms.

“I think free speech is incredibly important and we need to create spaces for all different kinds to be part of the dialogue within universiti­es,” she said. “I think those ideas do include, they include critical race theory, sure, and lots of other ideas, too, and part of how we move forward is through those conversati­ons and dialogues.”

Some Republican­s have urged the UW Board of Regents to reconsider hiring Mnookin. Longtime UW critic State Sen. Steve Nass, R-Whitewater, has linked moving forward with her hire to funding cuts for UW in the next budget.

The potential funding threat doesn’t weigh too heavily on Regent Vice President Karen Walsh, who spearheade­d the search committee that selected Mnookin over four other finalists.

“It’s a free country and people can say what they want and honestly I don’t take those comments very seriously,” Walsh said. “I would like for those folks to meet Chancellor Mnookin before they threaten our funding. I don’t think they really intend to do that. I think they’re much more interested in sitting in a room with us and talking about our differences.”

The Regents’ Monday vote to hire Mnookin was unanimous, supported by board members appointed by Democratic Gov. Tony Evers and by former Republican Gov. Scott Walker.

Other high-profile hires the board has recently made include former fourterm Republican governor Tommy Thompson, who led the UW System from mid-2020 through March, and Milwaukee attorney Jay Rothman, who has given more than $77,000 in campaign donations to primarily Republican state office candidates and is taking over as UW System president next month.

“We hire based on leadership qualities,” Walsh said. “We don’t have a political litmus test.”

Another concern for Republican­s stemmed from an article published in the conservati­ve Daily Caller that reported Hunter Biden, son of Democratic President Joe Biden, tried teaching a course on drug policy at UCLA’s law school. Biden emailed Mnookin in 2019 about the possibilit­y and may have even met with her in person, but emails showed school staff “were slow to embrace Hunter’s proposal,” according to the report.

UW System spokespers­on Mark Pitsch said Biden made an inquiry, Mnookin handled the matter appropriat­ely and he never taught at UCLA.

The statewide chapter of the American Associatio­n of University Professors dismissed Republican­s’ objections as being “grounded in corrosive rightwing conspiracy theories” and condemned lawmakers’ calls to rethink the appointmen­t.

“These threats are beyond the pale,” the group said in a Tuesday statement. “They constitute unacceptab­le political interferen­ce in the administra­tion of the UW System, of a sort that has led to severe problems in the state university systems of Georgia and North Carolina, among others. They are deeply inappropri­ate, and an embarrassm­ent to the entire state. We call on these elected officials and candidates to retract their statements and apologize.”

The group noted Republican pressure on the Regents comes at a time in which half of the board’s members, all Evers appointees, have not been confirmed by the Republican-controlled state Senate, leaving open the possibilit­y that they will be replaced if a Republican wins the governor’s race this fall.

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