Harvard’s President: A Tale of Decline and Fall

Harvard’s President: A Tale of Decline and Fall



The decline and fall of Harvard’s president

When it ⁤comes to scandals, the drip-drip-drip kind can prove deadly. Embarrassments accrue; the⁢ mess metastasises. So it was ‌with Claudine Gay,⁣ president of Harvard University. Revelations‌ of plagiarism in ​her academic ⁤work were first publicised⁢ weeks ago. But more kept surfacing. The ⁢latest allegations, published on January 1st in the Washington Free Beacon, a conservative outlet, brought the ⁣total to ⁢several dozen. The next ⁤day ‌she⁣ resigned, ‌a⁤ mere six months into her post—the shortest ⁢tenure ⁣in Harvard’s history. She⁢ determined that this was in the university’s best interests. Harvard’s provost, ‍Alan Garber, will fill the job on an interim basis.

Plagiarism did in Ms Gay, a political scientist⁢ by training. But the pressure on her to step down began with her response to Hamas’s attack on Israel on‌ October 7th. Critics—Harvard donors,​ professors, politicians—assailed ⁤her for not immediately condemning the violence and not disavowing a statement by pro-Palestinian students that blamed Israel. Larry Summers, a former president of Harvard, said he had “never been as disillusioned ⁢and alienated” with the university. ⁣A‍ few days later Elise Stefanik, a Republican congresswoman, called on ‍Ms Gay to⁣ resign.

Then, in early December, came her⁣ dismal ⁣performance at a congressional hearing about antisemitism on campus. Questioned by Ms Stefanik, ​she and two other university leaders refused to say that calling for the genocide of Jews would be punished at their schools. Amid‍ the blowback, the⁢ president ⁣of⁣ the University of Pennsylvania resigned. Harvard’s⁣ faculty rallied behind Ms Gay and urged the ⁤board to back her. Point-scoring Republicans⁢ and meddlesome donors should butt out, went the feeling. It rankled​ that some critics had in effect called Ms Gay, Harvard’s first black leader, a diversity hire.

2024-01-03 ​07:52:18
Article from www.economist.com
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