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Mount Holyoke College president: 'Colleges are not the enemy'

President Donald Trump speaks at the Justice Department in Washington, Friday, March 14, 2025. (Pool via AP)
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President Donald Trump speaks at the Justice Department in Washington, Friday, March 14, 2025. (Pool via AP)

The Department of Education is investigating more than 50 universities for using race to recruit and support some students.

, the president of Mount Holyoke College, has been outspoken about the Trump administration鈥檚 at universities that the White House finds objectionable. Mount Holyoke is not of the institutions being investigated

Holley says higher education needs to stand up to the Trump administration.

鈥淲e have the right as universities and colleges to determine our own missions,鈥 Holley says. 鈥淎nd the government really has some serious restrictions under the First Amendment about telling us what our values and missions can be.鈥

4 questions with Danielle Holley

Standing up to the federal government could come with a huge cost. The Trump administration has pulled $400 million in grants from Columbia University for what it says is the university鈥檚 failure to police antisemitism on campus. It is demanding the university make changes before it reinstates the money. So how would a school like yours, for instance, stand up to the federal government if they came knocking on your door?

鈥淲e have not had the federal government come knocking on our door, but I do think it鈥檚 very important, obviously, for colleges and universities to protect their values and mission.

鈥淔or example, most colleges and universities would say that protecting Jewish students, making sure that antisemitism is not present on our campuses, is a very important college and university mission. The question is, what does the U.S. government, what does the federal government do when they are trying to basically become kind of a super board of trustees or super admissions commission? Because I think one of the things that is important to academic freedom and to individual professors, et cetera, in terms of the First Amendment, is this question of who decides. And so for us as colleges and universities, it鈥檚 very important that we enforce our own rules and standards of conduct and not let the federal government politicize what we do as colleges and universities.鈥

What happens when the cost of doing that is $400 million?

鈥淚 think that we as universities have to challenge, right, the federal government鈥檚 ability to do that. Because if this is viewpoint discrimination, right, if it鈥檚 the government saying you have to think in the way that we think, or you are subject to having your funds pulled then I think the question is really to see them in court, right?

鈥淭he question is really, is this a First Amendment violation by the federal government or are colleges and universities really able to determine internally how to best kind of regulate ourselves internally? There are important values at risk, but the question is, does the federal government have the right to politicize what we do as universities?鈥

Many Americans of different political points of view do believe that college campuses have gone through a bit of a transformation in recent years; they鈥檝e become places for the elite, for instance, where only liberal ideas are embraced or where conservative students don鈥檛 feel like their ideas are heard. Do you think that universities have brought any of this scrutiny on themselves? Could colleges do something to be a more welcoming place?

鈥淎bsolutely. I think as colleges and universities, we have to talk more about what we are there to do, which is to produce knowledge and spread knowledge and help students of whatever political background they鈥檙e from determine how best to use that knowledge to further what they believe are their own values and mission.

鈥淚 think where we鈥檝e gone wrong is to allow this idea to become prevalent. I mean, I鈥檝e taught for 20-plus years. I can barely get students to read the syllabus, let alone indoctrinate them into any form of political belief. So, I think that鈥檚 the false narrative that鈥檚 being pushed is the idea that colleges and universities are somehow indoctrinating students instead of developing and spreading knowledge.鈥

What do you think the Trump administration is actually trying to accomplish here?

鈥淚 think if you read a lot about autocracy and the kind of diminution of democracy around the world, you learn that attacks on the university are one of the first places where people start when they want to attack democracy.

鈥淧eople like JD Vance attended Yale Law School. Obviously, our president attended [the University of Pennsylvania]. These are graduates of the Ivy League universities. So to hear them attack universities, there鈥檚 clearly a mission beyond kind of simply an attack on universities. But the question is, do we have a well-educated populace that鈥檚 able to participate at the highest levels in democracy?

鈥淭he only reason to destroy universities and colleges is to attack a highly, educated democratic populace. And I think it is deeply ironic when we see people who attended the Ivy League universities then attack universities as a problem in our democracy.鈥


 produced and edited this interview for broadcast with .  adapted it for the web.

This article was originally published on

Copyright 2025 WBUR

Lynn Menegon
Peter O'Dowd

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SOMOS CONNECTICUT es una iniciativa de 海角换妻, la emisora local de NPR y PBS del estado, que busca elevar nuestras historias latinas y expandir programaci贸n que alza y informa nuestras comunidades latinas locales. Visita CTPublic.org/latino para m谩s reportajes y recursos. Para noticias, suscr铆base a nuestro bolet铆n informativo en ctpublic.org/newsletters.

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You just read trusted, local journalism that鈥檚 free for everyone, thanks to donors like you.

If that matters to you, now is the time to give. Join the 50,000+ members powering honest reporting and a more connected 鈥 and civil! 鈥 海角换妻.

海角换妻鈥檚 journalism is made possible, in part by funding from Jeffrey Hoffman and Robert Jaeger.