The days before the 2024 national election brought varying reports of how Senate and House elections would go and diverse predictions related to the "toss up" between Harris and Trump. The days before the November 5 final balloting included increasing threats that a
on election-watch night.
Understanding that
Trump takes pride in creating uncertainty and chaos is profoundly important. Complaints about the chaos will have little impact on him or his base, primarily due to the long-term commitment Trump has made to discrediting the "deep state" and anyone who opposes him. Those attempting to analyze disinformation, distrust, and divisiveness need to understand that these three "Ds" are the basis for his appeal to those who voted for him; the disenchanted middle and lower socioeconomic classes have never felt any of the systems worked for them and their lived experience confirms their belief.
Concerns immediately arose that
Columbia's capitulation to the Trump administration attack delivered a win reflecting a dangerous imposition power. The
New York Times reported that Columbia was a target emanating from a failed real estate deal proposed by Trump 25 years ago, which could mean the attack could be a singular vendetta of political theater. However, U.S. Constitution
law scholars issued a statement through ACLU offering the opinion that Trump's attack violated 1st Amendment free speech provisions as well as Title VI procedural guidelines. The Columbia press release was a de facto admission that Jewish student complaints were not appropriately addressed; remedies demanded by Trump were modified in specifics but the broad compliance drew condemnation from the AAUP President and others.
Adding another level of attack,
ICE arrested Mahmoud Khalil, a graduate of Columbia University, who is not on student visa but a Green Card and is married to a U.S. citizen, for involvement in a Pro-Palestinian demonstration.
Khalil's detention was temporarily blocked but he remained isolated from legal representation and his wife who will give birth within the coming month. Daniel Levy, spokesperson for the far-right pro-Israel group Betar, claims to have given the Trump administration leads on Khalil as well as thousands of others. Maybe that's why Trump promised that Khalil is only the first international student (although he is not presently on a student visa) to be deported for being involved in protests.
CNN coverage of the Tufts Ph.D. international student taken into custody called lawyers and citizens to push back on criminalization of speech that the Trump administration opposes. The University of Alabama
doctoral student from Iran taken into custody supposedly represented a threat to U.S. security but specifics were not available.
Make no mistake, besides the shock and awe, disdain for law and separation of powers, divide and concur is a favorite for Trump to impose his will. Value and resentment are front and center for the base who brought Trump back for four more years; the result is delight among reactionary conservatives and dismay among progressives. The anti-diversity rhetoric and policy roll-out pitted universities against their own students in two specific examples. One of the first was that, in the face of public pronouncements and denigration of programs to support diversity, students from diverse cultural backgrounds were left to wonder if they will be supported by their institutions, especially when the
Education Department is targeted for reduction in scope or elimination. The Israel v. Hamas war provided another wedging opportunity as Trump and conservatives boxed educators into a corner by labeling anything questioning of Israel as antisemitic. Even if Israel v. Hamas went away, conservatives have labeled campuses as grossly insensitive to Jewish students' claims of marginalization and harassment and the plan is to continue to push that narrative by
staging antisemitism investigations across U.S. campuses.
Trump's anti-Semitism task force includes 3 cabinet members, lawyers, and Fox News correspondents. The task force is orchestrating funding cuts and multiple investigations of universities and cities for not confronting anti-Semitism. Higher education
anti-Semitism hearings started on March 27, 2025 with the calling of "expert" witnesses. The hearing erupted when a panelist, Charles Small who is the founding director and president of the Institute for the Study of Global Anti-Semitism Policy,
repeated criticism that Qatar supports Hamas and fosters anti-Semitism. To the credit of Kansas Senator Roger Marshall, Small was quickly called out for his derogatory and unfounded claims against Qatar.
As Trump's directive to
"diminish" the role of the Education Department rolled out against
strong opposition, especially those who are college educated. Some Education Department
staff were placed on leave for having participated in DEI training. Others eliminated from the Education Department represent an
invaluable resource for accountability. Trump's consideration of
who will serve as Secretary of the Education Department is immensely important. The proposal to appoint
Linda McMahon, whose founding and leadership of the WWE is
asserted as her business acumen, portends a
different path for her versus her predecessor. Her persistence and
success with the WWE suggests she could be up to fulfill Trump's campaign promises and would likely
move to impose controls on higher education, including the
possibility of the Education Department seeking to control costs.
McMahon was slow to submit the required materials in order to schedule her confirmation hearing so an
interim was appointed. The Senate subcommittee released
McMahon's financial disclosure statements and
scheduled her initial hearing for the week of February 10, 2025, although other political appointees in Education have already begun. The questions raised by Senators with
McMahon covered a wide variety of topics with most confirming her
commitment to deliver Trump's charge to return education responsibility to the states and to reduce the scope of the Education Department. As McMahon's nomination moved to the Senate and Trump declared "Long Live the King" in social media, some
question if McMahon's appointment even counts. Nicolas Kent, a former lobbyist for career colleges, was appointed as
Under Secretary of Education, a position responsible for higher education policy. Trump's appointee to the Office of Civil Rights in the Education Department has
a history of strong ties to conservative think tanks and has consulted in drafting legislation to push reform. The acting director of the Office of Civil Rights, which had paused investigations of complaints on campuses, returned to
receiving only complaints based on disability, excluding race and gender.
McMahon was ultimately confirmed by the Senate and her expressed
commitment was to dismantle bureaucracy and return parents to the center of education. McMahon quickly informed Education Department staff to "
prepare for a 'momentous final mission' to eliminate 'bureaucratic bloat' and return education to the states" after her appointment.
The complaints of Trump and his supporters are
animated by socio-economic class bifurcation that is related to higher education access. Those with college degrees are destined to a knowledge class that "tends to invest heavily in their children's education, sending them to private or high-performing public schools and reinforcing a cycle of privilege. This group's tendency to marry within its class further consolidates resources, status and cultural capital with the upper tier, contributing to the reproduction of class advantage." The dynamic of class is evident in the pattern of blue and red states in the 2024 election, reinforcing the perception of urban and coastal elites. Perhaps the political challenges to DEI are simply a way to keep
whiteness at the center of the conversation, privileging that actually undermines the objectives of inclusion and access.
Hang on, higher education... but there is
always another day. Due to the speed and volume of Trump's actions,
Inside Higher Education launched a weekly update, starting after the first 100 days. The imposition of Trump executive actions have spawned a flurry of lawsuits, with many lower courts challenging his actions and even the Supreme Court ruling against him. Examples include blocking changes in the
NIH indirect expenses rate, the
NEA's challenge to the anti-DEI moves, and
20 state Attorneys General who filed suit over Education Department funding cuts. V.P. Vance's adoption of Andrew Jackson's view of the court, "The chief justice has made his ruling; now let him enforce it," is not encouraging. Focus on short-term crises has to be balanced by attention to the long-term core work of knowledge creation and acquisition.