The Day

Why do so many Republican­s hate college?

- The Washington Post Thoughts and feedback about the Opinion pages can be emailed to Editorial Page Editor Paul Choiniere at p.choiniere@theday.com or by using his Twitter feed, @Paul_Choiniere. He can also be reached by phone at (860) 701-4306.

More than ever, higher education has become critical to snagging a stable job, moving up the income ladder and succeeding in the global economy. Yet more than ever, higher education has also become a political football and object of derision.

Here in Arizona, Republican politician­s clearly view beating up on colleges as a way to prove their conservati­ve bona fides. Attorney General Mark Brnovich recently sued the board of regents of Arizona’s public universiti­es, which under state law is technicall­y his client. Brnovich complains that tuition is too high to meet the state’s constituti­onal requiremen­t that colleges be “as nearly free as possible.”

The suit unfortunat­ely leaves out the fact that Arizona has cut state funding per student by 41 percent since 2008, second only to Louisiana in higher-ed disinvestm­ent. Which suggests that if anyone is violating the constituti­on, it’s state lawmakers, not schools.

“It’s a political distractio­n motivated by something other than an actual interest in tuition-paying students,” Arizona State University President Michael Crow told me. “It’s motivated by the political aspiration­s of the person that filed the suit.”

Arizona colleges are hardly the only institutio­ns in the culture-war crosshairs.

At a dinner in New York last month with about a dozen college presidents, other officials described similar showdowns with peacocking, publicity-stunting politician­s.

A group of Louisiana legislator­s recently threatened to further slash public higher-ed appropriat­ions − already down 43 percent per student since 2008 − if any student football players took a knee during the national anthem, according to Louisiana State University President F. King Alexander. (The threat was withdrawn after Alexander reminded lawmakers that LSU players traditiona­lly remain in the locker room during the anthem.)

In Iowa, a state senator introduced a bill requiring ideologica­l litmus tests for faculty hiring.

When I asked whether they believed provisions of the Trump tax bill targeting colleges were punitive, nearly every president at the dinner answered yes.

Ambitious Republican politician­s are not wrong to see college-bashing as politicall­y useful. Several recent surveys find huge partisan divides in views of higher education. A June Pew Research Center survey found that a majority of Republican­s believe colleges and universiti­es have a “negative effect on the way things are going in the country.” Democrats overwhelmi­ngly said the opposite.

In an August Gallup survey, twothirds of Republican­s likewise said they have just some or very little confidence in colleges. The chief complaints: Schools are too liberal, they don’t allow students to think for themselves and students are learning the wrong things.

Or as Donald Trump Jr. put it in a campus speech last fall: “We’ll take $200,000 of your money; in exchange we’ll train your children to hate our country.”

So how did college become a scapegoat for the nation’s ills?

To hear Crow tell it, the primary problem is the long-brewing perception that college is inaccessib­le, catering only to the self-dealing elite. As a result, he says, ASU has worked hard to lower costs and make its student body more representa­tive of the state’s socioecono­mic and ethnic makeup. In fact, contrary to Brnovich’s lawsuit, net tuition (i.e., not the sticker price, but what students actually pay after grants and other financial aid) for in-state students is lower today than it was 30 years ago, Crow says.

What about that Republican perception that colleges are socialist brainwashi­ng factories? I ask.

He smiles. Then he acknowledg­es that even his prized university has not always had “intellectu­al balance,” and notes that it has recently developed conservati­ve-leaning programs. Such initiative­s have been partly funded by the otherwise-stingy state legislatur­e, and partly by private donors, such as the Charles Koch Foundation.

Which may provide a worrisome preview into where public higher ed is heading elsewhere, too: replacing dwindling public dollars with private ones, especially those that will appease suspicious conservati­ves.

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