‘A crushing loss to wokeism.’ How a proxy fight over campus politics brought down Harvard’s president

Claudine Gay’s departure seen as victory for US conservatives in escalating ideological battle over higher education

Claudine Gay resigned as Harvard University president on Tuesday. Photograph: Mark Schiefelbein/AP
Claudine Gay resigned as Harvard University president on Tuesday. Photograph: Mark Schiefelbein/AP

The resignation of Harvard’s president, Claudine Gay, on Tuesday followed a lengthening catalogue of plagiarism allegations that appeared to steadily sap her support among the university’s faculty, students and alumni. But for many of Gay’s critics, her departure was also a proxy victory in the escalating ideological battle over American higher education.

Gay resigned on Tuesday amid plagiarism accusations and criticism over testimony at a congressional hearing where she was unable to say unequivocally that calls on campus for the genocide of Jews would violate the university’s conduct policy.

Taking down Gay was a “a huge scalp” in the “fight for civilisational sanity”, Josh Hammer, a conservative talk show host and writer, wrote on the social media platform X.

“A crushing loss to DEI (diversity, equity and inclusion), wokeism, antisemitism & university elitism,” wrote conservative commentator Liz Wheeler, referring to diversity, equity and inclusion.

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“This is the beginning of the end for DEI in America’s institutions,” said conservative activist Christopher Rufo, who had helped publicise the plagiarism allegations.

Conservative activist Chris Rufo pushed for Claudine Gay’s resignation and helped publicise allegations of plagiarism. Photograph: Todd Anderson/New York Times
Conservative activist Chris Rufo pushed for Claudine Gay’s resignation and helped publicise allegations of plagiarism. Photograph: Todd Anderson/New York Times

Until last month, conservative-inspired efforts to remake higher education had unfolded primarily at public universities in right-leaning states such as Florida and Texas, where Republican lawmakers and state officials could exercise their legislative and executive powers to ban diversity offices, set up right-leaning academic centres and demand changes to curriculum.

But Gay’s resignation on Tuesday secured their movement a signal victory at the country’s most storied private university, which had for weeks resisted calls for a change in leadership.

“I think there are major problems with higher education, and Harvard represents a lot of those problems,” said John D Sailer, a senior fellow at the National Association of Scholars, a conservative education nonprofit. “To the extent those problems have been exposed, and scepticism increases towards the current best instantiation of higher education, I think that puts a lot of wind in the sails of reform.”

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Gay’s defenders seemed to agree, warning that her resignation would encourage conservative interference in universities and imperil academic freedom (though some experts have rated Harvard itself poorly on campus free speech during Gay’s tenure in leadership).

“This is a terrible moment,” said Khalil Gibran Muhammad, a professor of history, race and public policy at the Harvard Kennedy School. “Republican congressional leaders have declared war on the independence of colleges and universities, just as governor [Ron] DeSantis has done in Florida. They will only be emboldened by Gay’s resignation.”

Havard president grilled on campus antisemitism

Barely a month had passed since Gay had appeared, along with the presidents of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the University of Pennsylvania, at a congressional hearing on campus anti-Semitism, where their lawyerly defence of a student’s right to engage in anti-Jewish speech provoked national outrage. Some Jewish students, faculty and donors also felt Gay had been too timid in her response to the October 7th attacks on Israel by Hamas, as well as to complaints over anti-Semitism on campus.

Two of the three presidents who spoke at the hearing are now out of office. (The second of those is Elizabeth Magill, who resigned as the University of Pennsylvania president just four days after she testified before Congress.)

On Tuesday, Gay’s antagonists jockeyed for credit, sometimes hailing the effectiveness of their own political theatre. House of Representatives member Elise Stefanik of New York, a Harvard-educated Republican, noted in a statement that her interrogation of Gay at last month’s hearing had “made history as the most viewed congressional testimony in the history of the US Congress”. Republican lawmakers, she promised, would “continue to move forward to expose the rot in our most ‘prestigious’ higher education institutions”.

Republican politician Elise Stefanik on Capitol Hill in Washington. Photograph: Haiyun Jiang/New York Times
Republican politician Elise Stefanik on Capitol Hill in Washington. Photograph: Haiyun Jiang/New York Times

Even before the hearing, conservative activists and outlets had begun reexamining Gay’s acclaimed but relatively thin academic output, prompting further examination by mainstream news outlets.

The public drumbeat began almost immediately after the hearing with a post by Rufo, the conservative activist, who had obtained an anonymous dossier of work published by Gay in which she had allegedly plagiarised other scholars, as well as a report in the Washington Free Beacon.

That outlet published a follow-up on Monday night with additional examples. All told, the plagiarism allegations spanned nearly half of her published academic articles, the report said.

But along the way, Gay – a scholar of black political participation and an architect of Harvard’s efforts to advance what she has called “racial justice” on campus – came to stand for the right’s broader critique of elite academia, which it views as intellectually narrow, lax in standards and overly focused on questions of identity.

Opponents attacked Gay, who attended Princeton and Harvard before turning to an administrative career, as unqualified for the position she had assumed just six months ago, a charge her supporters rejected as racist.

“It was a thinly veiled exercise in race & gender when they selected Claudine Gay,” Vivek Ramaswamy, the entrepreneur and Republican candidate for president, wrote on X on Tuesday. “Here’s a radical idea for the future: select leadership based on *merit.*”

Harvard announced her departure without any indication that it believed Gay had acted improperly; Gay’s resignation letter noted that she had made her decision to step down “in consultation with members of the corporation”, but did not elaborate. Some Harvard faculty and alumni were left to conclude that the school had simply caved to public pressure from activists and powerful donors.

Academic leaders from Harvard, University of Pennsylvania, American University and Massachusetts Institute of Technology at a congressional hearing on Capitol Hill on December 5th. Photograph: Tom Brenner/New York Times
Academic leaders from Harvard, University of Pennsylvania, American University and Massachusetts Institute of Technology at a congressional hearing on Capitol Hill on December 5th. Photograph: Tom Brenner/New York Times

“I am saddened by the inability of a great university to defend itself against an alarmingly effective campaign of misinformation and intimidation,” Randall Kennedy, a Harvard legal scholar and one of the university’s most prominent black faculty members, wrote in a text message.

Like other major research universities, Harvard is supported by a huge volume of federal grants and other funding, a potential pressure point for Republican lawmakers going forward.

Whether the resignation of one or two college presidents will spur any broader remaking of higher education is unclear. As the Covid pandemic recedes, Republican officials and education activists have found it more difficult to interest broad swathes of voters in campaigns to restrict access to sexually explicit books, or in often-vague attacks on “wokeism” and “equity”.

The two Republican presidential contenders who have campaigned most explicitly against higher education institutions – the Yale-educated DeSantis and the Harvard-educated Ramaswamy – have failed to gain lasting traction in the race.

Efforts to stop schools from requiring job applicants to furnish diversity statements, or commitments to particular ideas about race and justice, have attracted support beyond the political right.

But more heavy-handed measures to require – or ban – the teaching of particular ideas have gained less traction, leading activists on the right to focus more on other areas, such as dismantling tenure protections and administrative programmes related to DEI.

“If Rufo’s goal is to enlist the public into his war on higher ed, he has yet to succeed,” said Jeffrey Sachs, a scholar at Acadia University in Nova Scotia who studies academic speech policies. “The public, including a majority of Republicans, does not want government deciding what gets taught in America’s university classroom. Nor do they warm to the idea when specific legislation is presented to them for review.” – This article originally appeared in The New York Times


                        FILE — Harvard University President Claudine Gay speaking at a Shabbat service held in solidarity with Israel, at Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass. on Oct. 13, 2023. Amid plagiarism allegations and a backlash to campus antisemitism, Claudine Gay became an avatar for broader criticisms of academia. (Sophie Park/The New York Times)
FILE — Harvard University President Claudine Gay speaking at a Shabbat service held in solidarity with Israel, at Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass. on Oct. 13, 2023. Amid plagiarism allegations and a backlash to campus antisemitism, Claudine Gay became an avatar for broader criticisms of academia. (Sophie Park/The New York Times)

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