WASHINGTON
By COLLIN BINKLEYAP Education Writer
Brown University is rejecting a Trump administration proposal that would provide favorable access to funding in exchange for a wide range of commitments. In a letter to White House officials, Brown President Christinaย Paxson said the deal would restrict academic freedom and undermine the universityโs independence. Brown is the latest university to turn down the proposal. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology backed away from the proposal last week after its president raised similar concerns. Brown’s president said the university is aligned with some of the provisions in the offer, including commitments to affordability and equal opportunity in admissions, but canโt agree to others.
WASHINGTON (AP) โ Brown University is rejecting a Trump administration proposal that would provide favorable access to funding in exchange for a wide range of commitments, saying the deal would curtail academic freedom and undermine the university's independence.
Brown is the latest university to turn down the proposal, which White House officials said would bring "multiple positive benefitsโ including โsubstantial and meaningful federal grants.โ The Massachusetts Institute of Technology backed away from the proposal last week after its president said it would restrict free speech and campus autonomy.
Brown President Christina Paxson turned down the proposal on Wednesday in a letter to Education Secretary Linda McMahon and White House officials. The Ivy League university in Providence, Rhode Island is aligned with some of the provisions in the offer, she said โ including commitments to affordability and equal opportunity in admissions โ but can't agree to others.
โI am concerned that the Compact by its nature and by various provisions would restrict academic freedom and undermine the autonomy of Brownโs governance, critically compromising our ability to fulfill our mission,โ Paxson wrote.
Brown and MIT were among nine universities invited this month to become โinitial signatoriesโ to the proposal. Officials at the University of Texas system said they were honored to be invited, while most others have remained quiet. The Trump administration invited feedback from universities by Oct. 20 and requested decisions no later than Nov. 21.
Brown previously struck a deal with the Trump administration to restore lost research funding and end federal investigations into discrimination.
In that agreement, finalized in July, Brown agreed to a $50 million payout to workforce organizations in Rhode Island. It also agreed to adopt the federal government's definition of โmaleโ and โfemale,โ to eliminate diversity targets in admissions and to renew partnerships with Israeli academics, among other terms.
Unlike that deal โ which includes a clause affirming Brown's academic freedom โ Paxson said the new proposal lacks any guarantee that the university would retain control over its curriculum or academic speech. Her rejection is in line with the views of the โvast majority of Brown stakeholders,โ Paxson wrote.
In a post on his Truth Social platform on Sunday, President Donald Trump suggested other campuses can step forward to participate in the compact. Those that want to return to โthe pursuit of Truth and Achievement,โ he said, โare invited to enter into a forward looking Agreement with the Federal Government to help bring about the Golden Age of Academic Excellence in Higher Education.โ
In its letter to universities, the administration said the compact would strengthen and renew the โmutually beneficial relationshipโ between universities and the government. The compact is a proactive attempt at reform even as the government continues enforcement through other means, the letter said.
The proposal includes several commitments around admissions, women's sports and free speech. Much of it centers on promoting conservative viewpoints, including by abolishing "institutional units that purposefully punish, belittle, and even spark violence against conservative ideas.โ
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