Harvard president takes 25% salary cut amid federal funding freeze


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Summary

Federal funding freeze

The Trump administration has enacted a freeze on $2.2 billion in multiyear grants and canceled an additional $60 million in contracts for Harvard University. The decision was announced through letters from seven federal agencies, with each citing a shift in agency priorities. Additionally, The Wall Street Journal reports that another $1 billion worth of federal funds for the university could be at risk.

Financial impact

Harvard is temporarily covering the funding gap using its $53.2 billion endowment but warns, based on its legal filing, that this solution is not sustainable. If the freeze continues, the university claims it may have to reduce graduate student admissions and cut faculty and research staff positions. The university has already implemented a hiring freeze for faculty and staff in anticipation of federal policy changes.

Debates on academic freedom, funding

The funding freeze occurred after months of disputes between the Trump administration and elite universities over campus speech, antisemitism, curriculum disagreements and diversity, equity and inclusion policies. The university argues that the Trump administration is threatening academic freedom and that government interference should not dictate university operations.


Full story

Harvard President Alan Garber will voluntarily take a 25% salary reduction for the 2026 fiscal year, a move the university said is part of its response to the Trump administration’s sweeping freeze on federal funding. The cut, which begins July 1, 2025, was confirmed by several news outlets citing a university spokesperson.

Garber’s current salary was not disclosed, but previous Harvard presidents have earned around $1 million annually, according to previous reporting by the student newspaper, The Harvard Crimson.

Salary cut follows federal agencies pulling funding

In a lawsuit filed April 21, Harvard accused the administration of freezing $2.2 billion in multiyear grants and canceling an additional $60 million in contracts as unconstitutional. According to the lawsuit, letters of termination came from seven different federal agencies, including the National Institutes of Health and the Department of Defense. Each letter cited that the grants “no longer effectuate agency priorities.”

The Wall Street Journal reports that another $1 billion worth of federal funds for the university could be cut.

The Trump administration’s actions followed months of tension with elite universities over issues including campus speech, antisemitism, curriculum disagreements and policies involving diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI).

Harvard claims ‘blacklisting’ violates academic freedom

Harvard’s amended complaint said the funding freeze amounts to a “blacklist,” and alleged the government is retaliating against the university for refusing to meet certain political demands. These include changes to school governance and a “viewpoint diversity” audit of students and faculty.

The administration’s Joint Task Force to Combat Anti-Semitism also announced a halt to an additional $450 million in grants, accusing Harvard of allowing discrimination on campus, particularly antisemitism and racial bias in the Harvard Law Review. The task force did not specify which grants would be impacted.

In its filing, Harvard argued that halting research funding does not address concerns about campus discrimination.

“The government has not identified — and cannot identify — any rational connection between antisemitism concerns and the medical, scientific, technological, and other research it has frozen or terminated,” Harvard said.

Harvard pulls from its endowment

Harvard’s $53.2 billion endowment is the largest in the nation. The university is temporarily covering the gap in funding from its own resources, but said that approach isn’t sustainable.

“If Harvard continues to replace the frozen and terminated funding from its own resources,” the lawsuit states. “It will be forced to reduce the number of graduate students it admits and the number of faculty and research staff it pays to conduct research.”

The filing also said the university would struggle to maintain cutting-edge equipment and facilities without federal support. Harvard paused faculty and staff hiring in March, citing the need to assess how changes in federal policy might affect the university. That hiring freeze was implemented before the funding cuts were publicly announced.

Federal Judge Allison D. Burroughs has scheduled oral arguments in the case for July. Because Harvard has not requested an immediate injunction, the funding freeze will likely remain in place over the next several months.

Harvard’s legal argument rests heavily on academic freedom protections.

“No government — regardless of which party is in power — should dictate what private universities can teach, whom they can admit and hire, and which areas of study and inquiry they can pursue,” Garber said in a media statement in April.

Meanwhile, the Trump administration and federal agencies have argued they have a right to withdraw federal funding where they see fit.

“As we have made clear time and again, this Task Force will not waver in its mission to root out discrimination, hate and bigotry at institutions entrusted with public funds,” the Joint Task Force to Combat Anti-Semitism said in a statement. “Harvard, and its leadership group who are tainted by the egregious infractions under its watch, faces a steep, uphill battle to reclaim its legacy as a lawful institution and center of academic excellence.”

While both sides have acknowledged the possibility of negotiation, no resolution has been reached. For now, the nation’s oldest university remains in a standoff with the federal government.

Matt Bishop (Digital Editor) and Harry Fogle (Video Editor) contributed to this report.
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Why this story matters

The standoff between Harvard University and the Trump administration over a federal funding freeze highlights tension between academic freedom, government authority and the future of research and higher education in the United States.

Federal funding and research

Harvard contends that the suspension of over $2 billion in federal grants directly threatens the university's ability to maintain research, faculty and graduate programs, with implications for national scientific progress.

Academic freedom

Harvard claims that the government's actions in freezing funding represent an infringement on academic freedom and university autonomy, raising important legal and ethical questions about political influence on higher education.

Discrimination and campus governance

The federal government justified the freeze in part by citing its allegations of antisemitism and campus discrimination, spotlighting ongoing debates over how universities address bias and manage their internal governance and diversity policies.

Bias comparison

  • Media outlets on the left framed Harvard’s 25% pay cut as a solidarity move sharing financial strain with faculty amid an unjust “funding battle” sparked by politically motivated cuts from the Trump administration, employing emotionally charged terms like “blacklisted” to highlight perceived government overreach and harm to vital research.
  • Not enough coverage from media outlets in the center to provide a bias comparison.
  • Media outlets on the right emphasized Harvard’s defiance of reasonable federal demands tied to concerns over admissions and antisemitism, portraying the funding freeze as a justified “freeze” and relying on terms such as “defying” and “unlawful” to underscore institutional accountability.

Media landscape

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Key points from the Left

  • Alan Garber, president of Harvard, is taking a voluntary 25% pay cut from July 1, 2025, to June 30, 2026.
  • More than 80 faculty members have pledged to donate 10% of their salaries to support the university.
  • Several members of Harvard's leadership are also making voluntary pay cuts, following Garber's example.
  • Garber's pay cut aims to share the financial strain that has impacted faculty and staff.

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Key points from the Center

  • In response to the Trump administration’s freeze affecting close to $3 billion in federal research funding, Harvard University plans to allocate $250 million from its own budget in 2025 to continue supporting its research initiatives.
  • The freeze followed government demands for Harvard to alter governance and conduct viewpoint diversity audits, which the university rejected, leading to a legal dispute.
  • Harvard President Alan Garber announced plans to implement a hiring freeze and make tough budgetary decisions, including reducing his salary by one-quarter for the 2026 fiscal year, in response to the university’s financial challenges.
  • Garber stated the sanctions have halted lifesaving research and may cause lost years of work, asserting that no government should dictate private university policies or academic freedom.

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Key points from the Right

  • Harvard University President Alan Garber will take a 25% pay cut for the 2025-26 school year due to funding cuts of $2.2 billion imposed by the Trump administration.
  • Harvard intends to use $250 million of its own funds to continue research efforts amid the funding freeze, as the university lost more than $2.6 billion in grants.
  • The Trump administration has accused Harvard of failing civil rights laws and frozen $2.2 billion in funding, leading Harvard to file a lawsuit against the administration.
  • Garber stated that "no government should dictate what private universities can teach," highlighting Harvard's refusal to comply with the administration's demands.

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