The Guardian (USA)

Harvard to rename school after top Republican donor following $300m gift

- Julia Carrie Wong in New York and Stephanie Kirchgaess­ner in Washington

Harvard University will rename its graduate school of arts and sciences after the billionair­e hedge fund executive and Republican mega-donor Kenneth Griffin, the institutio­n announced on Tuesday, after a new $300m contributi­on brought Griffin’s total support of his alma mater to more than half a billion dollars.

Griffin, 54, is the founder and chief executive of Citadel, a $59bn hedge fund, and Citadel Securities, which trades securities. He is the 35th richest person in the world, with a net worth of $34.9bn, according to the Bloomberg billionair­es index.

Griffin will be just the fourth individual to have a school at Harvard named after him in exchange for a donation, according to the Harvard Crimson student newspaper. His name will carry controvers­y thanks to Griffin’s stature as a major political donor to rightwing politician­s and his company’s investment­s in firearm and ammunition manufactur­ers.

Griffin’s companies held investment­s in gun and ammunition manufactur­ers worth more than $139m as of March 2022, according to Chicago NPR affiliate WBEZ. These included shares in US gun manufactur­ers Smith & Wesson and Sturm Ruger, as well as US ammunition makers Olin Corp, Vista Outdoor and Ammo Inc. As of 31 December 2022, the value of Citadel’s holdings in those five companies had increased to more than $200m, according to a Guardian review of SEC filings.

The investment­s became a matter of public debate in 2022 when Griffin poured millions into a Republican candidate for the governorsh­ip of Illinois. Griffin accused the sitting Democratic governor, JB Pritzker, of failing to combat crime in Chicago, where Griffin’s companies were based. He subsequent­ly moved his companies’ headquarte­rs to Miami.

A WBEZ analysis of firearms recovered by Chicago police from violent crime incidents over five years found that nearly one in four were produced by companies in which Citadel invests.

At the time, Citadel disputed the importance of the investment­s, telling WBEZ that they made up “less than .01% of our portfolio” and arguing that a connection to gun violence was “quite a stretch”.

Griffin rejected a call by the Chicago Sun-Times newspaper for his companies to divest from gun and ammunition makers, writing in a letter to the editor that “40% of American households own a gun” and that “the violence destroying our city is not the result of … legal gun purchases, but rather a failure to prosecute criminals, a lack of support for police, and progressiv­e left legislatio­n that prioritize­s criminals ahead of law-abiding citizens”.

He added: “I will not embrace today’s cancel culture nor engage in amateurish virtue-signaling based on blind ideology.”

Griffin is also a major political donor and one of the most prominent backers of the Florida governor, Ron DeSantis, whom he has urged to run for president in 2024. A one-time fundraiser for Barack Obama, Griffin gave nearly $60m to Republican candidates for federal positions in 2022, according to Politico.

Griffin’s close associatio­n with DeSantis is another potential reputation­al issue for Harvard. The Florida governor has staked out extreme positions on education and LGBTQ+ rights, including by signing the so-called “don’t say gay” bill that restricts Florida teachers from discussing topics related to sexuality and gender identity and banning the state’s public high schools from teaching a new advanced placement course in African American studies.

This year, DeSantis unveiled a legislativ­e proposal to remake Florida’s public colleges and universiti­es that included banning critical race theory – an academic theory developed by Black scholars at Harvard Law School – and diversity and inclusion programs and drasticall­y reducing the protection­s afforded by academic tenure.

Asked to comment about Griffin’s associatio­n with DeSantis and his policies, a spokespers­on for Citadel said: “Ken respects and employs people of all background­s.”

Griffin’s gift to Harvard was unrestrict­ed, the school said, and will go to the faculty of arts and sciences, which includes the undergradu­ate college and PhD programs. In 2014, Griffin made a $150m donation to the elite private university, primarily to fund financial aid. At the time, it was the largest single donation in the institutio­n’s history.

“Ken’s exceptiona­l generosity and steadfast devotion enable excellence and opportunit­y at Harvard,” said Harvard’s president, Larry Bacow, in a statement. “I am deeply and personally appreciati­ve of the confidence he has placed in us – and in our mission – to do good in the world.”

Harvard did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Got a tip on this story? Email Stephanie.Kirchgaess­ner@theguardia­n.com

 ?? Photograph: Charles Krupa/AP ?? Kenneth Griffin will be just the fourth individual to have a school at Harvard named after him in exchange for a donation.
Photograph: Charles Krupa/AP Kenneth Griffin will be just the fourth individual to have a school at Harvard named after him in exchange for a donation.

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