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Trump has sued universities for billions. Here’s what the strategy tells us

A collage of images showing President Trump, $100 bills, a statue holding justice scales, Harvard University's veritas flag and a person wearing a Columbia University T-shirt with keffiyeh scarf. A black checkerboard is overlaid on top of the photos.

The Trump administration has focused its efforts on using funding to affect policies at elite schools.

A year ago, President Trump issued an executive order that put U.S. universities on notice. The Jan. 29, 2025, directive targeted antisemitism on campus and launched investigations at five schools — later widened to 60.

But within weeks of the executive order, federal agencies started withholding billions of dollars in contracts and grants from several high-profile schools and pressuring them to align their policies more closely with Trump’s on a range of issues that extended beyond antisemitism.

Elite universities soon began reaching settlements, starting with the University of Pennsylvania and Columbia University in July. Harvard University was a notable exception, challenging the administration’s actions in court. In September, a federal judge ruled in Harvard’s favor that the government illegally froze more than $2 billion in federal grants and contracts, a decision the government is appealing. Despite Harvard’s victory, more schools agreed to deals.

Some universities paid the government millions of dollars; others paid nothing but agreed to policy or personnel changes. But a common theme has emerged over the past year: The administration is seeking to alter the culture at these powerful institutions, barring them, for instance, from supporting programs aimed at diversity, equity and inclusion.

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What is the administration’s goal? And can it do that? 

Universities have stressed that reaching a settlement doesn’t mean they admit to any wrongdoing. But the deals have called for colleges to agree to policy changes, like adopting definitions of gender as laid out by the president’s executive orders, affecting everything from campus housing to athletic programs.

“In just a year, President Trump has completely transformed American higher education by restoring merit, enforcing civil rights, and eliminating waste, fraud, and abuse,” White House spokesperson Liz Huston told NPR in an email. Huston said the Trump administration “will keep holding even more [higher education institutions] accountable over the next three years — to promote academic excellence and maintain America’s advantage for generations to come.”

But Trump’s use of federal funds to force changes has raised questions from constitutional scholars about whether his tactics violate the law.

“What I find striking and disturbing about what’s happened here,” says Thomas Berry, the director of constitutional studies at the libertarian Cato Institute, “is that the federal government started by simply pausing all of this funding” without proving its allegations.

Berry says that Cato doesn’t love the idea of private universities being dependent on federal funds. But he also says the government shouldn’t use that relationship to meddle in how schools would normally operate.

“To me, it’s a blatant violation of the unconstitutional conditions doctrine of the First Amendment,” says Berry.

The idea behind that doctrine is that a government can’t say someone has to give up a constitutional right such as free speech or they won’t get a benefit — like federal money.

Echoing Berry’s point, Todd Wolfson, president of the American Association of University Professors, says, “Six or seven [Supreme Court] rulings from 1920 onwards all held that the federal government cannot use purse strings to control speech.”

The government has formal processes to enforce civil rights statutes and court rulings, but Berry says the Trump administration isn’t using those tools. Instead, he says, the administration seems to be channeling Trump’s history of filing lawsuits to accomplish his business and personal goals.

“Trump has such a long history as a private citizen of suing individual people or individual entities and dealing with them one at a time,” he says. “But it’s concerning when it’s from the federal government.”

The American Association of University Professors has sued the Trump administration in several venues over its withholding of funds and grants. Its president, Wolfson, is blunt in characterizing the settlements.

“It was extortion.”

He also says the government’s actions are unconstitutional and undermine academic freedoms, while endangering research projects that can benefit the American public.

Still, the government secured significant payments and concessions from a slate of well-regarded universities in 2025:

Northwestern University:

Cornell University:

University of Virginia:

Brown University:

Columbia University:

University of Pennsylvania:

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