High Yield Markets
  • World News
  • Politics
  • Investing
  • Stock
  • Editor’s Pick
Editor's PickInvesting

Punishing Universities for Their Viewpoints Violates the First Amendment

by June 24, 2025
June 24, 2025

Thomas A. Berry

Harvard University Campus

The Trump administration has taken actions to withhold billions of dollars in contracts from Harvard University unless the institution both adopts governance structures approved by the administration and engages in affirmative efforts to promote underrepresented conservative viewpoints on campus. Harvard has now sued the Trump administration, arguing that these conditions violate the First Amendment (among other claims). Cato has joined a broad coalition of organizations, led by the ACLU, to file an amicus brief supporting Harvard.

Our brief explains why the actions taken by the administration violate core principles of free speech and academic freedom. While government funding is not a right, freedom from ideological coercion is a constitutional guarantee. Using the government’s purse strings to compel the government’s preferred speech environment violates both academic freedom and the First Amendment. Allowing coercion here would invite a wider regime of retaliation, coercion, and ideological bullying throughout American life.

At the heart of the First Amendment lies a simple rule: the government may not impose its preferred viewpoint on private parties. Viewpoint discrimination is presumptively unconstitutional, even when officials claim they merely want to “better balance” ideological representation. Indeed, even coerced preferences for truly underrepresented perspectives still amount to unconstitutional viewpoint-based restrictions, because the state has no authority to dictate the proper mix of opinions within a private institution.

Further, government pressure to alter privately expressed viewpoints is presumptively unconstitutional even when that pressure is exerted through a loss of government funding. Governments may cut benefits programs for many legitimate reasons. But once the government establishes a benefits program, it cannot condition participation on a recipient’s exercise—or non-exercise—of rights that fall outside the program’s scope.

Here, officials have openly cited speech by Harvard students and faculty, wholly unrelated to any federally funded project, as the reason to terminate grants. That is textbook unconstitutional discrimination.

Free Speech 16x9

This violation is especially troubling given the university’s role in a free society. Higher education is both a crucible of knowledge and a structural check on unchecked governmental power. The Supreme Court has long held that conditions attached to public funds face heightened scrutiny when they burden the “four essential freedoms” of academia: deciding who may teach, what shall be taught, how it shall be taught, and who may study. Subordinating these freedoms to the political aims of the party in power would replace free inquiry with political doctrine.

Finally, our brief makes clear that nothing in our argument minimizes or exempts Harvard from its viewpoint-neutral obligations to comply with federal civil rights law. To the extent that the Trump administration seeks to remedy alleged violations of laws like the Civil Rights Act, it can—indeed must—do so. But the Civil Rights Act must be enforced through its procedures and in a manner consistent with the First Amendment. 

The administration’s wholesale cancelation of funding to exert ideological control over private education merely wields allegations of lawbreaking as a tool for unlawful ends, and the courts should hold that it violates the First Amendment.

previous post
Georgetown Professor Under Fire After Post Suggesting Iran Should Perform ‘Symbolic’ Strike on U.S. Base
next post
WATCH: Project Veritas Releases Undercover Video of Connecticut Pastor, Youth Director, Secretly Steering Kids Toward Gender Transition, Defying Parents

You may also like

Election Policy Roundup

August 14, 2025

Anti-Profiling Court Order Cuts LA ICE Arrests by...

August 14, 2025

Freedom of Silence? England Investigating a Woman for...

August 14, 2025

The Federal Government and Harm Reduction

August 14, 2025

The Nvidia/AMD-Trump Deal: Legal Questions, Crony Capitalism, and...

August 13, 2025

Justice Delayed: Federal Indigent Defense Funding Crisis Continues

August 13, 2025

The Path to a Safer DC: A Focus...

August 13, 2025

States Should Recognize Other States’ Physician Licenses

August 13, 2025

One Step Forward? The Trump Administration Considers Rescheduling...

August 12, 2025

Georgia State Election Board: Lyft Shouldn’t Have Given...

August 12, 2025
Join The Exclusive Subscription Today And Get Premium Articles For Free


Your information is secure and your privacy is protected. By opting in you agree to receive emails from us. Remember that you can opt-out any time, we hate spam too!

Recent Posts

  • Election Policy Roundup

    August 14, 2025
  • Anti-Profiling Court Order Cuts LA ICE Arrests by 66 Percent

    August 14, 2025
  • Freedom of Silence? England Investigating a Woman for a Wordless Vigil

    August 14, 2025
  • The Federal Government and Harm Reduction

    August 14, 2025
  • The Nvidia/AMD-Trump Deal: Legal Questions, Crony Capitalism, and National Security for Sale

    August 13, 2025
  • About Us
  • Contacts
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Email Whitelisting

Copyright © 2025 highyieldmarkets.com | All Rights Reserved

High Yield Markets
  • World News
  • Politics
  • Investing
  • Stock
  • Editor’s Pick