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 Iran Uses the War’s One-Month Mark to Intensify Pressure on Gulf States

Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian has used the one-month anniversary...

Harvard Sues Trump Administration Over $2.2B Funding Freeze Amid Free Speech Clash

Harvard University has filed a federal lawsuit to challenge the Trump administration’s freeze on over $2.2 billion in research funding, escalating a legal and ideological battle over free speech, academic independence, and campus activism.

The lawsuit, filed in Boston federal court, argues that the funding freeze is a politically motivated retaliation after Harvard refused to implement a series of government-imposed mandates. These included restricting student protests, revising admissions policies, auditing diversity initiatives, and derecognizing certain student clubs.

Harvard President Alan Garber stated the university will not comply with directives that violate constitutional protections, emphasizing that Harvard “stands for academic freedom, the pursuit of truth, and the autonomy of higher education institutions.”

“The Government has not — and cannot — justify the connection between concerns over campus expression and the suspension of critical research funding,” the lawsuit states. Harvard also underscored the broad impact of the funding halt on life-saving scientific research and national innovation.

The administration’s April 11 letter also threatened to block the university from admitting international students and suggested Harvard risk losing its tax-exempt status. President Trump later posted on social media, criticizing Harvard for promoting “ideological sickness.”

Legal and academic communities have expressed concern over the government’s approach. Tyler Coward of the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression called the administration’s actions “a dangerous precedent,” warning against using financial power to impose political ideology on education.

Harvard’s legal challenge marks a pivotal moment in the broader debate over government influence in academia, with significant implications for the future of university governance, research integrity, and free expression on campus.

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