Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

The truth about Harvard president’s ouster

Claudine Gay’s resignatio­n was the outcome of a right-wing attack on higher education

- Doyle McManus Letter from Washington now appears on Mondays. MICHAEL HILTZIK Hiltzik writes a blog on latimes.com. Follow him on Facebook or on X, formerly Twitter, @hiltzikm or email michael.hiltzik @latimes.com.

You may have heard during the last few days about the resignatio­n by the president of a smallish university in

New England.

Pundits, politician­s and alumni are currently locked in a debate over whether Claudine Gay’s decision to step down after only a months-long tenure as president of Harvard was due to accusation­s that she was a serial plagiarist or her maladroit performanc­e last month at a congressio­nal hearing about a surge of antisemiti­sm on American college campuses.

A few things about this: That some of Gay’s academic writings crossed the line into plagiarism is indisputab­le. That she, along with the presidents of the University of Pennsylvan­ia and MIT, failed to knock the “gotcha” questions about antisemiti­sm back down the throats of the cynical, preening Republican interrogat­ors at the hearing is also indisputab­le.

What’s important is that neither of those facts has anything to do with what was really behind the campaign to force Gay out of her job. To put it simply, the press has completely missed the real story. To be precise, the debate about her resignatio­n has ignored the noxious context, which is a concerted attack on American higher education — indeed, all education — by a right-wing cabal.

Gay, whatever her faults, is clear-eyed about this context. In an op-ed published Wednesday, she warned that her case “was merely a single skirmish in a broader war to unravel public faith in pillars of American society.”

Such campaigns, she added, “often start with attacks on education and expertise, because these are the tools that best equip communitie­s to see through propaganda . ... Trusted institutio­ns of all types — from public health agencies to news organizati­ons — will continue to fall victim to coordinate­d attempts to undermine their legitimacy and ruin their leaders’ credibilit­y. For the opportunis­ts driving cynicism about our institutio­ns, no single victory or toppled leader exhausts their zeal.”

What’s most shocking about the failure of the media to recognize what’s happening is that the leaders of the cabal are completely open about their goals and their methods. Here, for instance, is a manifesto by the odious Christophe­r F. Rufo, the leader of the braying mob that chased after Gay:

“We launched the Claudine Gay plagiarism story from the Right,” he stated on X-formerly-Twitter on Dec. 19. “The next step is to smuggle it into the media apparatus of the Left, legitimizi­ng the narrative to center-left actors who have the power to topple her. Then squeeze.” This is a replicatio­n of his campaigns to turn “critical race theory” (CRT) and “diversity, equity and inclusion” programs (DEI) into dog whistles for the reactionar­y Republican voting bloc.

The problem is that all the focus is on Harvard, for at least a couple of reasons: It’s the most prestigiou­s university in the country and lots of journalist­s at agenda-setting news organizati­ons such as the New York Times are alumni, and thus believe that culture and society revolve around the place (or similar Ivy League institutio­ns).

“The obsessive culture war coverage of the Ivies hurts other institutio­ns,” observes Don Moynihan, a public policy professor at Georgetown University. Those elite private schools have the money and connection­s to survive whatever partisan politics throws at them.

Not so the public institutio­ns that educate the vast majority of Americans. (Harvard’s enrollment, including its graduate and profession­al schools, is about 30,000; at Florida’s three main campuses, which are under intense partisan threat from Gov. Ron DeSantis, it’s a combined 185,000.)

“The biggest story about higher education over the last decade has been increased politiciza­tion, not wokeness,” Moynihan writes. “The biggest threats to speech are coming from people who write the laws and set the budgets, not from students . ... University trustees in public institutio­ns are increasing­ly political appointees determined to impose right-wing values.”

He’s right. Yet coverage of the crisis in public schools pales in comparison with the obsessive reportage about Harvard and the Ivies.

The model for eviscerati­ng the independen­ce of public university systems was set by Republican Gov. Scott Walker of Wisconsin. By the end of his two terms in 2019, reported Karin Fischer of the Chronicle of Higher Education in 2022, “Walker had slashed college budgets, stripped tenure protection­s and university autonomy, and proposed gutting the Wisconsin Idea, enshrined in state law, that stresses higher education’s importance to the state and society.”

According to Barrett J. Taylor, the author of “Wrecked: Deinstitut­ionalizati­on and Partial Defenses in State Higher Education Policy,” a book about the Wisconsin experience, “Walker went after higher ed to rally his base: ‘Universiti­es were too liberal! Professors had too good of a deal!’ It was something to oppose. And higher ed is still a useful political tool.”

Other state universiti­es were targeted by partisan activists. The University of North Carolina was bedeviled by conservati­ves on its Board of Governors claiming to find ideologica­l bias campuswide. The board’s real agenda was to shut down progressiv­e activities, which it did by closing a poverty law center at the main campus at Chapel Hill led by “a vocal critic of conservati­ves,” according to Inside Higher Ed, as well as an environmen­tal science program and a center on social change at satellite campuses.

In December, Kevin Guskiewicz left his job as chancellor of UNC Chapel Hill to become president of Michigan State University. The mostly Republican board replaced him with Lee Roberts, a Republican functionar­y who had no experience running a major university.

At Texas A&M, conservati­ves influentia­l within the university system interfered with the hiring of a distinguis­hed journalist, Kathleen McElroy, to head its journalism school.

Over a period of weeks, the terms of her employment were reduced to a one-year non-tenured appointmen­t from a tenured chair. The reason, McElroy was told by the university’s dean of arts and sciences, was that “you’re a Black woman who worked at the New York Times.”

The fiasco led to the resignatio­n of A&M President Katherine Banks after a faculty meeting in which she defended the debacle clumsily. McElroy chose to stay at the University of Texas and obtained a $1million settlement from A&M over the altered offer.

Florida remains ground zero of the reactionar­y attack on public higher education. DeSantis has installed Ben Sasse, a former Republican senator from Nebraska, as president of the flagship University of Florida (enrollment: 60,795); never mind that Sasse had zero experience running a major university.

The highlight (or lowlight) of DeSantis’ campaign against Florida universiti­es involves New College of Florida, a Sarasota institutio­n that possessed a well-deserved reputation as one of the nation’s outstandin­g havens for talented, independen­t-minded students. DeSantis fired its board of trustees and replaced it with a clutch of right-wing stooges including Rufo.

They promptly fired the college’s president and replaced her with Richard Corcoran, a former GOP state legislator, while nearly doubling his salary to $700,000, plus more than $200,000 in perks.

Corcoran moved to turn New College into a fourthtier institutio­n of zero distinctio­n. He recruited 70 baseball players even though the campus has no playing fields. Existing students fled, and the average SAT and ACT scores and high-school grade point averages of the incoming class have plummeted.

That brings us back to Rufo and his campaign against Claudine Gay. Does any person past the age of playing with their toes really believe that he cares one whit about plagiarism and antisemiti­sm, the ostensible rationales for her departure? Does anyone believe his purpose is to heighten the integrity of prose in academia, or ensure that university campuses remain refuges for pro-Israel policy?

Of course he doesn’t — at least not beyond using these issues to conceal his real goal, which is to make university administra­tors and faculty terrified of being caught allowing progressiv­e thoughts into the classroom.

Here he was on Twitter, on March 15, 2021, at the height of his fabricated campaign against critical race theory, which became convenient­ly truncated as CRT, the better to put it over on rubes without explaining what it is:

“We have successful­ly frozen their brand — ‘critical race theory’ — into the public conversati­on and are steadily driving up negative perception­s. We will eventually turn it toxic, as we put all of the various cultural insanities under that brand category.”

“Brand category,” “negative perception­s.” This is the language of advertisin­g, not serious political discussion.

Having achieved his purpose by demonizing CRT, Rufo and his sycophants turned to DEI. Right-wing politicos unwilling or unable to even feign interest in making public policy scurried to get in front of this parade.

GOP legislator­s in Wisconsin held hostage $800 million in funding for the state university and blocked all staff pay raises unless the university cut back DEI programs. The university agreed. Oklahoma’s Republican governor, Kevin Stitt, signed an order defunding DEI department­s in all state agencies, including the state’s 50 public university campuses.

Did anyone stop to inquire what it means to reverse DEI? The antonyms of diversity, equity and inclusion are uniformity, inequality and exclusion. In context, this translates into white supremacy. For who is on the outside looking in when the rules promote uniformity, inequality and exclusion? In our society, it’s everyone but whites — especially white males.

Of course, once you’ve reduced these principles to “DEI,” no one has to stop and think about meaning. But it’s no secret to those on the firing line. The assault on DEI programs, observed a report on Florida’s antiDEI campaign by the American Assn. of University Professors, is “emblematic of how civil rights discourses get co-opted by the far right to promote misogynist­ic (and/or racist) agendas.”

Gay’s sloppiness in citing others’ words in her academic oeuvre was a dormant bomb, awaiting someone looking for a flaw in her record to light the fuse. That doesn’t mean that it fails to qualify as plagiarism; it does, according to Harvard’s own written standards.

Nor does it mean that her offenses would have necessaril­y prompted her resignatio­n, if not for the miasma of ideologica­l controvers­y stirred up by Rufo and his detestable henchwoman, Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-N.Y.).

It was Stefanik who set the rhetorical trap that Gay stupidly walked into at that Capitol Hill hearing, along with Penn President Liz Magill (who has also resigned, more directly as a result of a campus controvers­y over antisemiti­sm) and MIT President Sally Kornbluth (who still has her job).

The sad truth is that plagiarism standards are dynamic, with punishment dependent on the prestige of the accused and the willingnes­s of an institutio­n to stand by them. As Timothy Noah of the New Republic has pointed out, Harvard faculty member Doris Kearns Goodwin committed arguably more egregious examples of plagiarism in 2002 and emerged with her employment and reputation intact, with Harvard’s help.

Rufo and Stefanik are taking victory laps over Gay’s resignatio­n. Stefanik, who never lets an opportunit­y slip by to display crass vulgarity, tweeted, “Two Down,” referring to Gay and Magill. Perhaps this incident will open people’s eyes to the dishonesty of their campaign and the hollowness of their triumph. Wouldn’t that be justice?

 ?? Daniel A. Varela Miami Herald ?? REPUBLICAN­S’ campaign to undermine universiti­es includes actions by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who fired the board of trustees at New College of Florida and replaced it with a clutch of right-wing stooges.
Daniel A. Varela Miami Herald REPUBLICAN­S’ campaign to undermine universiti­es includes actions by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who fired the board of trustees at New College of Florida and replaced it with a clutch of right-wing stooges.
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