Columbia University has slashed 180 staffers after the Trump administration revoked more than $400 million in federal funding. 

The Ivy League school announced the layoffs as the institution faces financial strain following the Trump administration’s decision to pull millions in federal funding in March following its ‘mishandling’ of protests against Israel

The move is a humiliating downfall for the university after initially attempting to stand up to Trump over demands they claimed ‘require us to relinquish our independence and autonomy.’

Within weeks the school began to accept these demands. However, a full restoration of funding requires a serious of dramatic actions. 

The university sent out a letter on Tuesday which detailed a ‘two-pronged effort related to grants terminated by the federal government.’ 

The letter furthered that those efforts included restoring government agency partnerships and adjusting spending until funding could be restored, NBC News reported. 

‘Columbia’s leadership continues discussions with the federal government in support of resuming activity on these research awards and additional other awards that have remained active, but unpaid,’ the letter said. 

‘We are working on planning for every eventuality, but the strain in the meantime, financially and on our research mission, is intense.’ 

Strain on finances, the university said, resulted in 180 staff members, who ‘have been working, in whole or in part, on impacted federal grants,’ were laid off on Tuesday. 

According to officials, those laid off represent 20 percent of the staff funded by the Trump administration’s grants, the outlet reported. 

Columbia University has slashed over 100 staffers after the Trump administration revoked more than $400 million in federal funding after the ‘mishandling’ of pro-Palestine protests on campus

 ‘Columbia’s leadership continues discussions with the federal government in support of resuming activity on these research awards and additional other awards that have remained active, but unpaid,’ the letter said

Strain on finances following Trump’s cuts, the university said, resulted in 180 staff members, who ‘have been working, in whole or in part, on impacted federal grants,’ were laid off on Tuesday

The financial strain has also forced the institution to reduce some of its activity, including ‘running lighter footprints’ within research infrastructure,’ officials said. 

‘We do not make these decisions lightly. We are deeply committed, at Columbia, to the critical work of invention, innovation and discovery,’ they added. 

Officials added that the institution would ‘continue to make prudent budget decisions, even in areas not impacted by federally funded research, to ensure the university’s long-term financial stability.’ 

The efforts to stay in budget included ensuring that salaries will remain fixed across the university for the next fiscal year as well as launching a ‘voluntary retirement incentive program.’ 

‘In the coming weeks and months, we will need to continue to take actions that preserve our financial flexibility and allow us to invest in areas that drive us forward,’ officials added. 

‘This is a deeply challenging time across all higher education, and we are attempting to navigate through tremendous ambiguity with precision, which will be imperfect at times.’ 

University spokesperson Jessica Murphy declined to say whether more layoffs may be expected. 

While the layoffs were expected, faculty found them ‘dispiriting,’ according to secretary of Columbia’s chapter of the American Association University Professors Marcel Agueros. 

‘In the coming weeks and months, we will need to continue to take actions that preserve our financial flexibility and allow us to invest in areas that drive us forward,’ officials said

Trump demanded the university disallow students from wearing masks, the hiring of campus security with the allowance to arrest students, to abolish its current disciplinary process, and the appointment of a new senior vice provost to oversee the university’s department of Middle East, South Asian and African Studies

While the layoffs were expected, faculty found them ‘dispiriting,’ according to secretary of Columbia’s chapter of the American Association University Professors Marcel Agueros

While officials have said they are working with the administration to restore funding, Agueros, an astronomy professor, told AP News that the damage would take years to heal from. 

‘When there’s an interruption in funding, people have to leave, new people can’t be hired, some initiatives have to be put on hold, others need to be stopped, so research stops moving forward,’ he added.  

The announcement followed Trump’s accusations against the Ivy League school which claimed that it took ‘inaction in the face of persistent harassment of Jewish students.’

The White House labelled the protests as antisemitic, a label rejected by those who participated in the student-led demonstrations. 

Trump demanded the university disallow students from wearing masks, the hiring of campus security with the allowance to arrest students, to abolish its current disciplinary process, and the appointment of a new senior vice provost to oversee the university’s department of Middle East, South Asian and African Studies

Though Columbia caved to Trump’s orders, students, staff, faculty and alumni held a protest against the university’s decision to comply. 

A 25-hour ‘speak out’ protest was organized last week where one student labeled the cuts imposed by Trump as ‘an all-out attack on science and academic freedom.’ 

‘We are pioneers in biomedical research, legal research, and environmental science research, and all of that got cut simply because the Trump administration had a vendetta against universities,’ the student, David Guirgis, told NBC News. 

The announcement followed Trump’s accusations against the Ivy League school which claimed that it took ‘inaction in the face of persistent harassment of Jewish students’

Columbia officials added that the institution would ‘continue to make prudent budget decisions, even in areas not impacted by federally funded research, to ensure the university’s long-term financial stability’

Historians described the order as an unprecedented intrusion on university rights long treated by the Supreme Court as an extension of the First Amendment.

Freedom of speech advocates immediately decried Columbia’s decision to acquiesce.

‘A sad day for Columbia and for our democracy,’ Jameel Jaffer, the director of Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University, said in a social media post.

Trump’s Education Secretary Linda McMahon said: ‘Since October 7, Jewish students have faced relentless violence, intimidation, and anti-Semitic harassment on their campuses – only to be ignored by those who are supposed to protect them.  

‘Universities must comply with all federal anti-discrimination laws if they are going to receive federal funding.’

The announcement coincided with recent anti-Israel campus protests at Columbia’s Barnard College, which Trump aggressively condemned.

‘Agitators will be imprisoned/or permanently sent back to the country from which they came. American students will be permanently expelled or, depending on the crime, arrested. NO MASKS!’ he stated on social media.

Trump officials said the Joint Task Force to Combat Anti-Semitism will continue to review and coordinate with other federal agencies to move swiftly.

The White House labelled the protests as antisemitic, a label rejected by those who participated in the student-led demonstrations

Though Columbia caved to Trump’s orders, students, staff, faculty and alumni held a protest against the university’s decision to comply. A 25-hour ‘speak out’ protest was organized last week where one student labeled the cuts imposed by Trump as ‘an all-out attack on science and academic freedom’

That group is made up of officials at the Justice Department, Education Department, Department of Health and Human Services and U.S. General Services Administration (GSA).

Columbia, located in New York City, ‘abandoned [their] obligation to Jewish students studying on its campus,’ officials said.

Since the horrific attack, anti-Israel protests have sprung up across the nation, including most recently at Columbia University and Barnard College in Manhattan—a university hotbed of pro-Gaza activism.

State Department officials also shared that they will soon review foreign student visa holders who were arrested though allowed to stay in the country.



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