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Harvard-White House talks stall, threatening quick settlement

Akayla Gardner, Bloomberg News on

Published in Political News

WASHINGTON — Harvard University’s talks with the White House have stalled, according to a person familiar with the matter, threatening a quick resolution to a standoff that’s endangering the school’s finances and upending foreign student plans.

A potential deal was knocked off course last week although hopes remain for an accord, said the person, who asked not to be named because the discussions are private. Harvard didn’t immediately reply to a request for comment.

The difficulties suggest that a wide gap remains between Harvard and the White House less than two weeks after President Donald Trump praised the school as acting “extremely appropriately during these negotiations” and said a deal could be reached soon. Education Secretary Linda McMahon told Bloomberg News earlier this month that the administration would be open to restoring federal grants and contracts if it made satisfactory agreements with universities.

Tension has risen more recently, however. The Trump administration ramped up pressure on Harvard earlier Monday, saying that a federal investigation found that the school violated civil rights law in its treatment of Jewish and Israeli students.

“Failure to institute adequate changes immediately will result in the loss of all federal financial resources,” the government said in a letter to Harvard President Alan Garber.

The administration has already frozen more than $2.6 billion in federal research funding for Harvard, threatened the school’s tax-exempt status and sought to prevent it from enrolling foreign students. The government has additional levers it can pull, including Pell Grants for low-income students and access to the federal student-loan program, which at Harvard is used mostly by graduate students.

As Trump has ramped up his attacks, Harvard has fired back by suing the government for blocking federal grants and trying to ban foreign enrollment.

Garber, who is Jewish, has questioned the administration’s interest in working together to confront antisemitism, and Harvard has accused the government of making “unconstitutional demands” that would devastate academic freedom.

 

The White House has for months made Harvard its primary target in its effort to reshape higher education. While the government initially accused Harvard of fostering antisemitism, the attack has expanded to include accusations of political bias and for promoting diversity initiatives in hiring and admissions.

The fight with Harvard is part of a broader campaign influenced by Trump adviser and deputy chief of staff of policy Stephen Miller. The administration has also gone after top colleges including Northwestern, Cornell and Columbia.

An agreement with Columbia broke down in March after interim president Katrina Armstrong downplayed the impact of the changes in comments to the faculty. Armstrong resigned and the school is still trying to reach an agreement with the White House.

University of Virginia President James Ryan said last week he quit instead of fighting the U.S. government amid a Trump administration probe of the school’s diversity, equity and inclusion efforts.

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(With assistance from Janet Lorin.)

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©2025 Bloomberg L.P. Visit bloomberg.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

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