President Donald Trump said in a social media post last week that his administration will issue the revocation.
The head of Harvard University responded to a new warning from President Donald Trump to remove the Ivy League college’s tax-exempt status amid a protracted battle between Ivy League colleges and the administration.
There would have to be “some reasoning that we have not been exposed to that would justify this dramatic move,” he told the outlet, adding that “tax-exempt status is granted to educational institutions to enable them to successfully carry out their mission of education, and for research universities, of research.”
Some schools, religious organizations, charity groups, private foundations, and others can receive tax-exempt status if they meet 501(c)(3) nonprofit qualifications under the tax code established and enforced by the IRS.
The White House has threatened to pull funding from Ivy League schools over reports of anti-Semitism at campuses and for promoting discriminatory initiatives, among other measures. Harvard filed a lawsuit against the Trump administration over funding that was blocked.
One Ivy League college, Columbia University, agreed to the Trump administration’s requests to overhaul its rules for public protests rather than risk billions of dollars in lost federal funds.
Trump previewed removing the university’s tax-exempt status in comments last month.
“Tax-exempt status, I mean, that’s a privilege. It’s really a privilege. And it’s been abused. By a lot more than Harvard, too,” he told reporters in the Oval Office, while also mentioning Princeton University and Columbia University, additional Ivy League schools. “It’s something that these schools really have to be very, very careful with.”
In mid-April, the Trump administration froze $2.2 billion in grants to Harvard and $60 million in contracts to Harvard University after the school said it would defy the Trump administration’s demands to limit activism on campus.
On April 14, Harvard rejected numerous demands from the administration, which is seeking oversight of Harvard’s student body, faculty, and curriculum. After that, the White House announced the freeze.
Trump administration officials have argued that a loss in funding would be Harvard’s own doing, arguing that the school isn’t obeying federal rules.
When asked about the lawsuit, Leavitt told reporters that the government will respond in court. “It’s quite simple: if you want federal dollars, obey federal law,” she said.
Meanwhile, the Trump administration has said the handling of pro-Palestinian protests by leaders of Harvard, Columbia, and other universities is a violation of the Civil Rights Act’s Title VI, which requires that recipients of federal funding not discriminate based on race or national origin.
Reuters contributed to this report.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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