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Harvard

Trump Admin Freezes About $2.3 Billion in Harvard Funding

The Trump administration has halted approximately $2.3 billion in federal funding allocated to Harvard University following the school’s refusal to comply with directives from the White House targeting diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) programs, British media reported.

According to an announcement on Monday, April 14, from the US Department of Education, the decision encompasses a freeze on $2.2 billion in grant money, as well as $60 million in federal contracts previously designated for the Ivy League institution. 

While Harvard has not issued a detailed public response to the funding suspension, the dispute marks a significant escalation in tensions between the federal government and elite universities over the direction and governance of campus policies related to diversity and civil rights compliance.

The funding cut was announced hours after Harvard University President Alan Garber announced the university would refuse to comply with the Trump administration's demands for on-campus protests, diversity programs, and campus antisemitism. 

Meanwhile, a member of the Harvard University Kennedy School of Government Dean's Council has recently resigned from his position after he was sued last week by nearly 200 family members of Americans killed in Hamas' Oct. 7, 2023 terror attack on Israeli concert-goers. 

According to the lawsuit, Bashar Masri, a Palestinian American billionaire, is being accused of "aiding and abetting" Hamas by helping the terror group build tunnels and rocket launch sites, as well as allowing top Hamas leaders to use his facilities at his properties in Gaza. Masri's office insists that "neither he nor any businesses associated with him have ever engaged in unlawful activity or provided support for violence and militancy." (INN/VFI News)