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Govs. DeSantis, Hochul threaten academic freedom with political interference

It鈥檚 no secret that politicians are getting more involved in higher education. And while some level of involvement with how colleges and universities operate is appropriate given the amount of taxpayer money spent on campuses, nobody should be surprised to learn that greater political involvement can pose academic freedom risks.
Last Monday, for example, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis the creation of Florida鈥檚 own Department of Governmental Efficiency (DOGE), named after the Trump Administration鈥檚 Elon Musk-led initiative to cut federal spending. The Florida task force is to conduct 鈥渁 deep dive into all facets of college and university operations and spending and make recommendations to the Board of Governors and State Board of Education to eliminate any wasteful spending.鈥
There are viewpoint-based decisions that governors and legislatures have to make about colleges as part of the political and appropriations process. But the more granular those decisions, the more they threaten to substitute academic judgment with political judgment.
During his , DeSantis expanded on what he called 鈥渢he DOGE-ing of our state university system,鈥 saying it would include 鈥渆xamining courses, programming, and staff鈥 with an aim towards helping students gain 鈥渕eaningful employment.鈥 But the governor also, troublingly, made clear that he鈥檚 continuing to take aim at a particular set of viewpoints:
[S]ome of the ideological studies stuff, we just want to prune that and get that out, and we want to make sure that these universities are really serving the classical mission of what a university should be. And that鈥檚 not to impose ideology.
Politicians have long complained about taxpayer money spent on what they see as frivolous academic pursuits 鈥 the proverbial degree in 鈥渦nderwater basket weaving鈥 鈥 but what DeSantis posits goes further. This task force won鈥檛 simply be focused on (say) eliminating majors that offer no real job prospects. Rather, it will seek out courses involving 鈥渋deological studies stuff,鈥 presumably by reviewing course descriptions or syllabi, that in the task force鈥檚 view is not worth teaching.
That鈥檚 not just an invitation to viewpoint discrimination 鈥 it鈥檚 an explicit mandate.
It鈥檚 not hard to see how this could threaten academic freedom by pressuring faculty members to substitute state-level politics for their academic judgment.
For example, let鈥檚 say the University of Florida鈥檚 Chinese Studies department decides that, to understand contemporary China, students need to take a class on Marxist-Leninist political thought. It鈥檚 easy to see how this could be relevant given that China is a Communist country. It鈥檚 also easy to see how an outside agency like Florida DOGE might view this as an effort to propagandize students into Marxism.
What鈥檚 the likely result?
- Most obviously, the department might decide to avoid conflict with the government by eliminating the class altogether despite believing it was needed, therefore impoverishing students鈥 education.
- Even if it did decide to require the class, the department is likely to pressure its instructor not to include things that look pro-Marxist, regardless of whether the professor thinks it would be the best material for the course. That poorly serves students and limits a professor鈥檚 ability to engage in the intellectual pursuit of teaching, to boot.
- Finally, even if the department were to offer the class without compromising on content, its instructor will most certainly feel 鈥渋n the crosshairs,鈥 restricted from following his or her academic conscience lest he or she get the class eliminated through an incautious word.
Colleges should not be immune from investigations into waste and abuse. And there are viewpoint-based decisions that governors and legislatures have to make about colleges as part of the political and appropriations process. But the more granular those decisions, the more they threaten to substitute academic judgment with political judgment. It remains to be seen whether this is how Florida DOGE will actually operate, but the governor鈥檚 remarks create plenty of cause for concern.
Lest there be any doubt that governors of any party are capable of interfering in isolated academic decisions if given the opportunity, New York Gov. Kathy Hochul (no friend of DeSantis) last Tuesday of a CUNY-Hunter College job posting for a professor of Palestinian Studies. Hochul also ordered 鈥渁 thorough review of the position to ensure that antisemitic theories are not promoted in the classroom.鈥
The job listing certainly listed plenty of controversial topics, calling for a 鈥渉istorically grounded scholar who takes a critical lens to issues pertaining to Palestine including but not limited to: settler colonialism, genocide, human rights, apartheid, migration, climate and infrastructure devastation, health, race, gender, and sexuality.鈥 Yet the very next sentence stated, 鈥淲e are open to diverse theoretical and methodological approaches.鈥
Critics are unlikely to believe that the job was really open to scholars with diverse approaches to whether, say, Israel is an 鈥渁partheid鈥 state. Maybe it was, maybe not. But one can鈥檛 make that determination simply based on the language of the listing, and there is no reason to believe that the governor of New York is (or should be expected to be) the best-qualified person to make that call.
Faculty members are supposed to be hired because they are subject-matter experts who have the ability and knowledge in the field to make informed academic judgments. Readers may recall that Winston Churchill famously opined that democracy is 鈥渢he worst form of government except for all those other forms that have been tried.鈥 That鈥檚 just as true when it comes to academic faculty making academic decisions 鈥 like it or not, there are no better alternatives. Even if one believes a particular group of public college faculty is, itself, making decisions that harm higher education, as DeSantis and Hochul both seem to believe, there鈥檚 one thing we can know for sure: transferring that job to politicians will only make it worse.
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