Table of Contents
Harvard law prof who agreed to represent Harvey Weinstein ousted as faculty dean

Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein leaves a New York state court in 2018. (Lev Radin / Shutterstock)
This weekend, Harvard University administrators hit another milestone in their campaign to engage in only the most shameful and cravenly political decision-making possible. Dean of Harvard College Rakesh Khurana announced that law professor Ronald Sullivan and his wife Stephanie Robinson . (They are the first African-Americans to hold these positions.) Sullivan, a high-profile attorney, came under fire earlier this year for agreeing to serve on Harvey Weinstein鈥檚 legal team, a decision that led student activists to on the grounds that his agreement to legally represent Weinstein meant he could no longer lead a house where students would be 鈥渨elcomed, supported, and encouraged to raise their voices against any form of discrimination.鈥
Ironically, Sullivan only hours before Khurana announced his decision.
The handwriting was on the wall as far back as February, when Dean Khurana 鈥 last seen chasing the last few sorority sisters off of Harvard鈥檚 campus and creating a 21st century campus mashup of Joe McCarthy and the Court of Star Chamber 鈥 declared that of Winthrop House, the Harvard dormitory/residential college in which Sullivan and Robinson lived and of which they were the faculty leaders. The review, in fact, was led by former Dean of Freshmen Thomas A. Dingman, who last appeared on 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 radar back in 2011 when he attempted to have all freshmen sign a 鈥渒indness pledge鈥 (read: civility code), with the names of all the signers kindly posted in the entryway of each dormitory, so that everyone would know who was nice and who was mean.
Given that this 鈥渃limate review鈥 took place at a time when Winthrop House was in turmoil and had, among other things, been reading 鈥淒own w Sullivan!,鈥 鈥淵our Silence is Violence,鈥 鈥淲hose Side Are You On?,鈥 and 鈥淥ur Rage is Self Defense,鈥 it would be a miracle if the review came back all smiles, regardless of anything Sullivan did.
Coincidentally (ahem), Khurana鈥檚 announcement came one day after a in the Harvard Crimson student newspaper reported that 鈥淸s]ince 2016, more than a dozen Winthrop tutors, students, and staff have brought concerns about Sullivan and Robinson to College administrators in meetings, emails, and reports.鈥 Somehow, though, administrators did not see fit to act on these reports until this weekend. As the Crimson reported, 鈥淢any of the staffers also alleged that Dean of the College Rakesh Khurana, Dean for Administration Sheila C. Thimba, and former Dean of FIREStephen Lassonde have also been aware of issues within Winthrop鈥檚 walls for several years and did not adequately address what more than a dozen current and former Winthrop students and staff deemed a toxic climate.鈥
Gee, I wonder what could have been behind this change of behavior.
Harvard has, of course, decided to go the utterly predictable route of claiming that its refusal to renew Sullivan and Robinson鈥檚 term as faculty deans is not really about the thing that clearly caused it to happen. , 鈥淩akesh Khurana, dean of Harvard College, announced his decision in an email to residents of the school鈥檚 Winthrop House, calling the situation 鈥榰ntenable鈥 and saying it was 鈥榠nformed by a number of considerations.鈥欌 Of course, we have no way of knowing how valid the concerns expressed (often anonymously) about Sullivan and Robinson in the Crimson article, or those to which Khurana refers, might be. What we do know is that until Sullivan inadvertently stepped on a political landmine by doing what many lawyers do every day 鈥 defending an unpopular client 鈥 none of these alleged problems appear to have been worth addressing by administrators.
Absent any transparency about the specifics of these concerns or their validity, any others at Harvard who might follow in Sullivan鈥檚 footsteps and perform the often thankless job of defending the despised will have to expect that they do so at their own peril.
In a final irony, the 鈥渘umber of considerations鈥 to which Khurana referred in his email evidently did not include actual, well, consideration. As :
In a statement, Mr. Sullivan and Ms. Robinson said, 鈥淲e are surprised and dismayed by the action Harvard announced today. We believed the discussions we were having with high-level university representatives were progressing in a positive manner, but Harvard unilaterally ended those talks.鈥
Sounds like someone in the Harvard administration forgot to sign their kindness pledge.
Recent Articles
FIRE鈥檚 award-winning Newsdesk covers the free speech news you need to stay informed.

Maine鈥檚 censure of lawmaker for post about trans student-athlete is an attack on free speech

Trump鈥檚 border czar is wrong about AOC

FIREcalls out 60 Minutes investigation as 'political stunt' in comment to FCC
