Baltimore Sun

DeSantis allies plot college takeover

- By Michelle Goldberg This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

New College of Florida has a reputation for being the most progressiv­e public college in the state.

X González — a survivor of the Parkland school shooting who, as Emma González, became a prominent gun control activist — recently wrote of their alma mater, “In the queer space of New College, changing your pronouns, name or presentati­on is a nonevent.”

In The Princeton Review’s ranking of the best public colleges and universiti­es for “making an impact” — measured by things like student engagement, community service and sustainabi­lity efforts — New College comes in third.

Naturally, Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida wants to demolish it, at least as it currently exists. On Friday, he announced six new appointmen­ts to New College’s 13-member board of trustees, including Chris Rufo, who orchestrat­ed the right’s attack on critical race theory, and Matthew Spalding, a professor and dean at Hillsdale College, a conservati­ve Christian school in Michigan with close ties to Donald Trump. (A seventh member will soon be appointed by Florida’s Board of Governors, which is full of DeSantis allies.)

The new majority’s plan, Rufo told me just after his appointmen­t was announced, is to transform New College into a public version of Hillsdale. “We want to provide an alternativ­e for conservati­ve families in the state of Florida to say there is a public university that reflects your values,” he said.

The fight over the future of New College is about more than just the fate of this small school in Sarasota. For DeSantis, it’s part of a broader quest to crush any hint of progressiv­ism in public education, a quest he’d likely take national if he ever became president. For Rufo, a reconstruc­ted New

College would serve as a model for conservati­ves to copy all over the country. “If we can take this high-risk, high-reward gambit and turn it into a victory, we’re going to see conservati­ve state legislator­s starting to reconquer public institutio­ns all over the United States,” he said. Should he prevail, it will set the stage for an even broader assault on the academic freedom of every instructor whose worldview is at odds with the Republican Party.

Rufo often talks about the “long march through the institutio­ns,” a phrase coined by German socialist Rudi Dutschke in

1967 but frequently attributed to Italian communist Antonio Gramsci. Thwarted in their hope of imminent revolution, the new left of Dutschke’s generation sought instead to bore into political and cultural institutio­ns, working within the system to change the basic assumption­s of Western society. Rufo’s trying, he said, to “steal the strategies and the principles of the Gramscian left, and then to organize a kind of counterrev­olutionary response to the long march through the institutio­ns.”

This grandiose project has several parts. Rufo has been unparallel­ed in fanning public education culture wars, whipping up anger first against critical race theory and then against teaching on LGBTQ issues. This year, he is turning his attention to diversity, equity and inclusion programs, and, with his colleagues at the Manhattan Institute, will soon unveil model legislatio­n to abolish such programs at state schools. In New College, he sees a chance to create a new type of educationa­l institutio­n to replace those he’s trying to destroy. When we spoke, he compared his plans to Elon Musk’s takeover of Twitter.

Later this month, Rufo said, he’ll travel to New College with a “landing team” of board members, lawyers, consultant­s and political allies. “We’re going to be conducting a top-down restructur­ing,” he said, with plans to “design a new core curriculum from scratch” and “encode it in a new academic master plan.” Given that Hillsdale, the template for this reimagined New College, worked closely with the Trump administra­tion to create a “patriotic education” curriculum, this master plan will likely be heavy on American triumphali­sm. Rufo hopes to move fast, saying that the school’s academic department­s “are going to look very different in the next 120 days.”

The values of the people who are already at New College are of little concern to Rufo, who, like several other new trustees, doesn’t live in Florida. Speaking of current New College students who chose it precisely for its progressiv­e culture, Rufo said: “We’re happy to work with them to make New College a great place to continue their education. Or we’d be happy to work with them to help them find something that suits them better.”

Of course, as both leftist revolution­aries and colonialis­ts have learned over the years, replacing one culture with another can be harder than anticipate­d. New College students may not go quietly. Steve Shipman, a professor of physical chemistry and president of the faculty union, points out that tenured professors are covered by a collective bargaining agreement, which makes it hard to fire them unless there’s cause. People like Rufo “are making statements to make impact,” Shipman said. “And I really don’t know how viable some of those statements are on the ground.”

We’ll soon find out. “We anticipate that this is going to be a process that involves conflict,” Rufo said.

 ?? IAN ALLEN/ FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Chris Rufo, an opponent of critical race theory, is one of six new appointmen­ts to the board of trustees of the New College of Florida made by Gov. Ron DeSantis.
IAN ALLEN/ FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Chris Rufo, an opponent of critical race theory, is one of six new appointmen­ts to the board of trustees of the New College of Florida made by Gov. Ron DeSantis.

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