Trump, Harvard
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17hon MSN
Harvard University has been at the forefront of President Donald Trump‘s efforts to curtail antisemitism in higher education. The Ivy League institution has pushed back against these efforts more than other schools have,
Two staff members of the Israeli embassy in Washington, D.C. were shot and killed as they were leaving an event at the Capital Jewish Museum, police said.
Top White House and Justice officials tied the brazen shooting of two Israeli Embassy staffers to ongoing campus protests against Israel’s war in Gaza.
Republicans are struggling to pass the Antisemitism Awareness Act as President Donald Trump’s push to defund Harvard University over alleged antisemitism has turned the measure into a flashpoint in his wider campaign against campus free speech and elite universities.
Harvard is likely to succeed in its challenge of the Trump administration's decision to bar the Ivy League school from enrolling foreign students, legal experts told Newsweek.Harvard sued the Trump administration on Friday,
Five Jewish Democratic senators, including the minority leader, slammed President Donald Trump's strategy of going after certain colleges over instances of antisemitism.
More than half of Jewish American voters disapprove of President Trump’s efforts to combat antisemitism, according to a new poll. In the Jewish Voters Resource Center poll, 64 percent of
Antisemitism is increasing on university campuses — and throughout the world. But let’s be clear: Donald Trump and the right wing are not fighting antisemitism. They are exploiting it. And they are deliberately doing so, using Jewish people as pawns in a broader war on education.
Journalist and author Batya Ungar-Sargon discusses President Donald Trump’s actions to combat antisemitism after two Israeli Embassy staffers were killed in Washington, D.C.
The extreme and paranoid policy paper underscores how the right has weaponized antisemitism to serve its political and theological projects.
The Trump Administration says it’s “combating anti-semitism” when it arrests students and threatens universities. That rationale might be a flimsy pretext, as opponents claim, but it also reflects
Harvard University's bonds, which are part of the Ivy League school's $8.2 billion debt pile, struggled on Friday amid an increasingly fraught standoff with U.S. President Donald Trump's administration.