Columbia Reaches $221M Settlement With Trump Administration Over Antisemitism Allegations

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The pro-Palestinian encampment on the lawn in front of Columbia University’s Butler Library, April 24, 2024. (ProudFarmerScholar, CC0, via Wikimedia Commons)

Grace Gilson

Columbia University announced Wednesday night that it had agreed to a $220 million settlement with the Trump administration, bringing a close to months of tense negotiations between the two parties over allegations of antisemitism on the school’s campus.

“While Columbia does not admit to wrongdoing with this resolution agreement, the institution’s leaders have recognized, repeatedly, that Jewish students and faculty have experienced painful, unacceptable incidents, and that reform was and is needed,” Columbia wrote in a statement announcing the deal Wednesday.

The deal will free up hundreds of millions of dollars in federal research money that was cancelled by the Trump administration in March, one of the first salvoes by the administration in its campaign against campus antisemitism and pro-Palestinian protests. It is seen as a template by which other universities targeted by Trump might make their own deals.

As part of the deal, the school will pay a $200 million settlement over three years to the federal government. It will also pay $21 million to settle investigations brought by the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission — delivering payments directly to employees who said they had been discriminated against.

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