HomeWorldWhy Harvard is planning a conservative institute amid pressure from Trump

Why Harvard is planning a conservative institute amid pressure from Trump

Talks intensify over a Hoover-style academic center as the university faces federal threats.

July 11, 2025 / 14:35 IST
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A Harvard official described the effort as one that would "promote and support viewpoint diversity" rather than a politically driven effort, but one that would encourage serious, evidence-based debate.
A Harvard official described the effort as one that would "promote and support viewpoint diversity" rather than a politically driven effort, but one that would encourage serious, evidence-based debate.

Harvard University is proceeding with in-house discussions to establish a new academic center that can serve as a destination for conservative and classical liberal scholarship. The project, years in development in whispers, gained momentum in the autumn of 2023 following student demonstrations on university campuses about the Israel-Palestine war and increasing political pressure from the Trump administration. The planned center, which could cost between $500 million and $1 billion to construct, would be among the largest higher-education centers in the country, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing people briefed on the plans.

A Harvard official described the effort as one that would "promote and support viewpoint diversity" rather than a politically driven effort, but one that would encourage serious, evidence-based debate. The initiative is part of Harvard President Alan Garber's broader initiative to revive "intellectual vitality" and reduce self-censorship on campus. A 2024 campus survey of universities showed that only a third of graduating seniors felt at ease arguing about contentious subjects, and just 3% of Harvard College faculty were conservative, according to a 2023 campus newspaper poll.

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Trump administration targets Harvard

The proposal for such an institute is caught in the middle of an ongoing standoff with the Trump administration, which has been critical of top universities as being left-leaning, antisemitic and "discriminatory" in their approach to diversity. The White House responded by freezing billions of federal dollars, threatening the university's tax-exempt status and its autonomy regarding admissions and hiring. The Department of Education, headed by Secretary Linda McMahon, is spearheading the effort, one that Harvard has been battling in court. A hearing is imminent later this month.