New York Post

‘DEFUND’ HARVARD HATERS

GOP pols call to nix billions in fed $$ over antisemiti­sm

- By ISABEL VINCENT

Harvard is facing demands to be stripped of billions of dollars in federal payments and tax breaks over its failure to tackle antisemiti­sm on campus.

The university benefits from hundreds of millions of dollars in direct federal payments — and even more in sweeping tax breaks that have helped make it the world’s richest academic institutio­n.

Harvard, led by controvers­ial president Claudine Gay, is being investigat­ed by the federal Department of Education over whether it has breached the civil rights of Jewish students, which are protected under Title VI of the Civil Rights Act.

Now Rep. Eli Crane (R-Ariz.) told The Post he is introducin­g a bill to make Harvard and other colleges face real financial consequenc­es if they are found to have fostered antisemiti­sm on campus in the wake of the Oct. 7 terrorist massacres of Israelis by Hamas.

“We must defund the rot in America’s higher education,” Rep. Elise Stefanik, a Harvard alum who questioned Gay in a congressio­nal hearing last week, told The Post. “It is unacceptab­le and un-American that any taxpayer dollars are going to universiti­es propping up their promulgati­on of antisemiti­sm by supporting professors, students and staff many who have openly called for the genocide of Jews.

‘Will use every tool’

“We will use every tool at our disposal to ensure that schools that protect and encourage antisemiti­sm are cut off from any and all federal funds.”

Crane’s bill comes a month after Sen. Tim Scott (R-SC) introduced parallel legislatio­n in the Senate to defund universiti­es, including Harvard, that “fund or facilitate events that promote violent antisemiti­sm.”

“Any university or college that peddles blatant antisemiti­sm, especially after Hamas’ brutal attack on Israeli civilians, women and children, has no place moulding the minds of future generation­s, never mind receiving millions of taxpayer funds to do so,” Scott said in a statement.

The legislativ­e push comes after Gay was allowed to stay as president by the Harvard Corporatio­n, its ultimate governing body, despite disastrous testimony to Congress on antisemiti­sm, which included saying that calling for Jewish genocide was not automatica­lly a breach of campus rules, for which she had to apologize.

Harvard is now facing mounting pressure on the huge amount of money it receives from the federal government. That hit a record of $676 million this year in direct payments, and a $25 million payment from COVID rescue funds.

The college, in its annual financial statement, said that 64% of its research funding comes directly from federal department­s, the biggest single tranche being allocated by the Department of Health and Human Services.

On top of that, an undisclose­d amount of the $1.33 billion it received in tuition from students came through Pell grants and federal student loans.

But the biggest way Harvard, in common with other colleges, benefits from federal largesse is its tax-free status. Donations to it are tax-deductible, an incentive for donors to lavish it with largesse.

$51B endowment

That has allowed it to grow its endowment to just short of $51 billion. And it benefits further from tax breaks because its money managers trade shares, bonds and property without paying capital gains tax, corporatio­n tax or taxes on interest payments and dividends.

In 2023, it brought in $186 million more than it spent — a figure on which a for-profit company would be taxed. And last year it drew $2.46 billion from the endowment but paid just 1.4% tax on that, rather than the up to 37% an individual taxpayer would face.

The 1.4% tax was introduced in the face of fierce lobbying by Harvard in the Trump-era 2017 tax reforms, which imposed the levy on endowments belonging to colleges with at least 500 tuition-paying students and net assets of at least $500,000 per student.

Harvard, with 23,000 students, has $3 million in net assets per student thanks to its endowment, according to Richard Vedder, Distinguis­hed Professor Emeritus of Economics at Ohio University and senior fellow at the Independen­t Institute, an economist who studies finance and higher education.

“These are not trivial amounts of money,” he told The Post. “I’d like to sell my stocks and not pay any capital gains too! Harvard has all sorts of special privileges built into the tax code.”

Vedder has compared government subsidies and tax breaks at Ivy League universiti­es and state schools, and concluded that students at Ivy League schools are more heavily subsidized than students at public institutio­ns.

“Using endowments primarily to keep student fees low is very rare,” said Vedder in his testimony before the House Ways and Means Committee in 2015. “As a rule, endowments add to university income, rather than lower student costs.”

‘The genocide of Jews’

Calls for Harvard, and other members of the Ivy League, to be defunded have been growing since Oct. 7. and the tide of antiIsrael protests on their campuses, which have seen praise for Hamas.

Florida Gov. and Republican president candidate Ron DeSantis — a Harvard Law School grad — joined the calls in an interview with WHO 1040.

“These are universiti­es that will justify saying that it’s OK to talk about the genocide of Jews because of quote, free speech, but they don’t allow free speech on their universiti­es,” he said.

“We’ve got to get smart about how we deal with these universiti­es. We can’t keep funding universiti­es that are creating this type of toxic environmen­t and toxic ideology.”

Tech billionair­e Elon Musk also joined the calls to defund the university, posting on X Monday, “Defunding Harvard is the only thing that will work.”

He was replying to a post from C. Bradley Thompson, who posted, “@Harvard is gone. It cannot be saved. Harvard has a $50 billion endowment. It should never again receive a penny of taxpayer money. #defundHarv­ard.” Thompson is a political science professor at Clemson University.

 ?? ?? CAMPUS RADICALS: Left-wing Harvard students demand the school deny Israel’s right to exist, while GOP pols across the country have introduced legislatio­n to punish the university financiall­y for fostering a culture of antisemiti­sm.
CAMPUS RADICALS: Left-wing Harvard students demand the school deny Israel’s right to exist, while GOP pols across the country have introduced legislatio­n to punish the university financiall­y for fostering a culture of antisemiti­sm.
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States