Amid Trump’s crackdown, Harvard Medical School braces for layoffs, cuts, and broad changes
- Harvard University is facing threats from the Trump administration, including potential layoffs, safety concerns, and funding cuts, which have disrupted the lives of faculty and students.
- President Alan Garber stated that the university is taking a stand against the Trump administration's demands and has filed a lawsuit for federal funding recovery.
- International students at Harvard feel unsafe and are organizing for summer housing due to fears of visa revocations associated with the Trump administration.
- Harvard has announced budget cuts while battling the Trump administration's challenges to its diversity, equity, and inclusion programs.
13 Articles
13 Articles
Do Not Applaud Harvard for Doing the Bare Minimum
Do not mistake Garber’s scramble to retain a semblance of liberalism as a stand — let alone fight — against the Trump administration. No number of strongly worded statements nor invocations of “independence” or “constitutional rights” will allow Harvard to claw its way out of the hole it has dug itself into for over a year now.

Harvard students and faculty face the fallout from a showdown with Trump
Town halls warning of layoffs. Medical leaves for mental health. Students readying for deportation. These are the grim signs of a campus under siege. But it’s not just any campus. Harvard University, America’s oldest and wealthiest institute of higher learning, is at a crossroads as it weathers the Trump administration’s attacks. Outwardly, the university has become a symbol of defiance for refusing to cave to the administration’s demands, but o…
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