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“It’s shocking to see how far these schools have gone ideologically. Many of them predate the nation’s founding and were founded on pro- American principles.” — Rep. Elise Stefanik, R-N.Y.
they’re no longer familiar. “This change has been significant,”
to the point where many parents and stu- dents, and in particular Jewish students, whom I talk to, no longer even feel safe going to class.” Stefanik, who attended Harvard,
says that the modern-day version of her alma mater and other elite institutions has shifted so far to the extreme left that
said Stefanik. “They have become so cap- tured by progressive ideologies that they have become unrecognizable, and the people know it — they can see that these schools are out of touch with fundamen- tal American values. “It’s shocking to see how far these
schools have gone ideologically. Many of them predate the nation’s founding and were founded on pro-American principles.” The resignations of Gay, along with
Columbia’s Minouche Shafik and the University of Pennsylvania’s Liz Ma-
CAN IVY LEAGUES SURVIVE?
Their multibillion-dollar endowments may not be enough.
T
he Ivy League — Harvard, Yale, Columbia, and others — has long
stood as a symbol of academic prestige. However, storm clouds are gathering
as President Donald Trump’s $130 billion war on universities, targeting antisemitism, radical protests, and “woke” ideologies, may push many schools to the brink of fiscal insolvency. The financial squeeze has been
severe: Harvard University, which received $686.5 million in federal grants in 2024, faces a $2.3 billion freeze for its refusal to dismantle its diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) programs and its failure to crack down on pro- Palestinian protests. Columbia University experienced the cancellation of $400 million in federal
grants and contracts due to pro- Palestinian protests and accusations of antisemitism. In response, the university has agreed to implement policy changes to restore funding. Brown University has experienced $510 million in frozen federal contracts and grants as part of Trump’s crackdown on antisemitism. Princeton University is facing a penalty of $210 million in suspended research grants, pending an investigation into antisemitism. The University of Pennsylvania faced a suspension of $175 million in federal funding due to the university’s policies regarding transgender athlete Lia
JUNE 2025 | NEWSMAX 55
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