Trump admin asks court to rule against Harvard without a trial
Following Harvard University's filing for summary judgment at the beginning of the month, the Trump administration filed new documents opposing Harvard's claims and asking for the court to rule in its favor on funding cuts, according to Monday evening filings.
'Harvard, the richest university in the history of the world, annually receives billions of dollars in taxpayer dollars from the federal government. As much as Harvard would like to receive these tax dollars with no strings attached, they are not charitable gratuities,' the lawyers for the federal government wrote in a Monday evening court filing.
The filings are part of a lawsuit filed in April in response to the federal government freezing or cutting nearly $3 billion in federal funding, citing antisemitism at Harvard. The university filed a second lawsuit against the federal government last month, focused on international students.
A summary judgment, which is being asked for on both sides, would allow a judge to rule on the case without a full trial.
The Trump administration's overarching claim against Harvard is that the university failed to protect Jewish students, particularly in the wake of the war in Gaza.
Read more: Federal judge delays decision over Trump admin barring Harvard foreign students
The federal government said its policy is 'not to fund institutions that fail to adequately address antisemitism in their programs' — something Harvard has acknowledged their failures in, according to the filing.
Thereby, the Trump administration canceled Harvard's funding due to 'no longer aligning with the agencies' policy priorities,' according to the filing.
In Harvard's request for summary judgment, which was filed on June 2, the university asked that the court order the government to declare the freeze orders and termination letters unlawful and to 'vacate' them.
They argue in the filing that the canceled funds began a '120-day clock' to submit reports and 'liquidate all financial obligations' related to the federal funding.
The university also requests that the court nullify a collection of letters and termination orders that canceled funding and placed specific conditions on the university, such as allowing the government to force them to hire people with different points of view.
Read more: Sept. deadline might make Trump cuts to Harvard permanent unless courts act
In a separate lawsuit, the federal government responded similarly in court documents on Monday evening.
The lawsuit is led by the American Association of University Professors — including the Harvard chapter — and the Harvard Academic Workers chapter of the United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America (HAW-UAW) against the Trump administration.
The Trump administration argues that the court should deny the organization's request for summary judgment and rule in its favor. It states that the organization is trying to 'insert themselves into the picture,' despite the funding not being allocated to the members, according to a court filing.
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Read the original article on MassLive.
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