This billionaire just helped topple UPenn’s president. Is Harvard next?

Hedge Fund billionaire Bill Ackman has been a leading critic of university leaders over their handling of campus antisemitism  (Copyright 2019 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)
Hedge Fund billionaire Bill Ackman has been a leading critic of university leaders over their handling of campus antisemitism (Copyright 2019 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

Bill Ackman is certainly feeling confident, and it’s not hard to imagine why.

The hedge billionaire and Harvard alumnus helped make a national scandal out of a controversial letter from Harvard students that blamed Israeli policy towards Palestinians for setting the stage for the 7 October Hamas attacks, fueling calls to blacklist the student-activists involved. His fingerprint on the present conversation is undeniable.

And the continued public pressure, particularly on his X feed, where legislators and activists mingle and share the chatter, probably helped lead to the resignation of M Elizabeth Magill, the University of Pennsylvania president, who announced her resignation on Saturday.

Meanwhile, his own commentary helped raise a House Education and Workforce Committee hearing on antisemitism last week into the centre of the political discussion, after the presidents of Harvard, Penn, and MIT all gave awkward, legalistic answers when asked about how their bullying policies would handle hypothetical calls for Jewish genocide. (The leaders all condemned antisemitism and calls for violence during the hearing.)

It’s not surprise then, that by Sunday, the investor felt like he held all the cards in his hands.

“Let’s make a deal,” he wrote on X in a message to MIT.  “If you promptly terminate President [Sally] Kornbluth, I promise I won’t write you a letter.”

The hedge funder manager is known for making big bets — he made billions during the pandemic in credit hedges — but will his continued campaign the force out the presidents of America’s Ivy League schools pay off?

Some have celebrated Ackman’s pressure campaign, while others, including some faculty and students at the universities on his radar, have expressed dismay about the considerable influence he and other well-connected outsiders are exerting over educational institutions.

Mr Ackman hasn’t been alone in his efforts, and fellow travellers have sounded a similar valedictory note in recent days.

“One down. Two to go,” US Rep Elise Stefanik, the Harvard graduate whose questioning of university presidents at the committee hearing went viral, wrote on X over the weekend. “This is only the very beginning of addressing the pervasive rot of antisemitism that has destroyed the most ‘prestigious’ higher education institutions in America. This forced resignation of the President of @Penn is the bare minimum of what is required.”

More than 70, mostly Republican, members of Congress have joined in calls for all the university presidents who testified to get the axe.

Chris Rufo, a conservative activist who spearheaded a right-wing campaign against critical race theory in elementary schools, has celebrated Mr Ackman’s effort because it boosts his contention that diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) efforts on campus mean the “death to merit, accomplishment, and the American spirit.”

“Bill Ackman is a man of strength and courage. He’s demonstrated the power of speaking the truth while so many of our elites remain silent,” Mr Rufo wrote on X on Sunday. “Through his actions, he exposes them for what they are: cowards. Abolish DEI — now, and forever.”

Mr Ackman, in turn, has promoted an article from Mr Rufo that claims Claudine Gay, the president of Harvard, plagiarised parts of her thesis. (The article alleges four instances of supposed plagiarism, though two include Ms Gay noting the source material of her claims. The Independent has contacted Harvard and its president’s office for comment.)

He’s suggested in recent days that Ms Gay, a former professor at Harvard and Stanford and a former dean of social science at Harvard — and who is the first Black president of Harvard in the institution’s nearly 400-year history — was chosen because of her race.

Taken together, Mr Ackman’s high-profile actions and alliance with right-wing figures has alarmed some on campus.

On Monday, as university administrators met at Harvard, over 650 faculty members signed a letter of support in favour of President Gay.

“The critical work of defending a culture of free inquiry in our diverse community cannot proceed if we let its shape be dictated by outside forces,” one faculty letter reads.

“The suggestion that she would not stand boldly against manifestations of antisemitism and any suggestion that her selection as president was the result of a process that elevated an unqualified person based on considerations of race and gender are specious and politically motivated,” reads another letter, from Black faculty at Harvard.

On the campus, where Mr Ackman’s influence has already been felt, students voiced a mix of approval over their president’s resignation and concern over free speech implications.

“We were really excited to see that there was some accountability being taken,” student and vice-president of Penn’s Jewish Heritage Programs Joe Hochberg told The Daily Pennsylvanian student paper. “Time and time again, [President] [Magill] was just letting us down and not doing enough or doing completely the wrong thing.”

“I am alarmed at the implications for free speech and academic freedom as the far right uses this resignation as licence to start policing calls for peace, ceasefire, and Palestinian rights,” student Lily Brenner, a member of the progressive Jewish group Penn Chavurah, said in an interview with the paper.

On the opinion pages, the editorial board of the Pennsylvanian noted that many of the figures leading the charge against Penn, such as Rep Stefanik, “have not been physically here.”

“They have not stepped on campus and engaged with students, faculty, and the Penn community at large the way that we have and we continue to do everyday,” an editorial from Sunday reads.

Other commentators, like the progressive writer Peter Beinart, have warned that the kind of potential rules about campus speech that may result from this moment of outside pressure regarding antisemitism could end up silencing Jewish leaders themselves.

In a Saturday post on X, Mr Beinart argued that a potential Penn business school resolution that would punish those using hate speech or celebrating murder or genocide could be used to keep prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu off campus. (In a November speech, the Israeli leader invoked the Biblical story of Amalek, a rival nation to Israel, whom God commands King Saul to wipe out, including killing men, women, children, and animals.)

“Curious what @BillAckman will say when people use these prohibitions on calling for genocide to try to ban Bibi from speaking at Penn because of his comments about Amalek,” Mr Beinart wrote.

MIT, the final part of the Ivy trio under the spotlight, has continued to express its confidence in President Kornbluth.

“The MIT Corporation chose Sally to be our president for her excellent academic leadership, her judgment, her integrity, her moral compass, and her ability to unite our community around MIT’s core values,” university leaders wrote last week after the hearing. “She has done excellent work in leading our community, including in addressing antisemitism, Islamophobia, and other forms of hate, all of which we reject utterly at MIT. She has our full and unreserved support.”

It’s clear the fight is far from over.