It finally happened! Claudine Gay resigned as president of Harvard University on Tuesday and ended her tenure as the shortest in the history of Harvard University – September 2023 until January 2024. In her resignation, Gay did not include any scandals that caused the resignation.
As noted by Tyler O’Neil, “The incident arguably illustrates the effectiveness of conservative critics in drawing attention to Gay’s many scandals, and the fecklessness of a university so rooted in diversity, equity, and inclusion that it refuses to acknowledge the ideological roots of the scandal.”
So,
what was so controversial that Gay was forced to resign? According to O’Neil,
Gay testified about antisemitism on campus at a hearing in the U.S. House of
Representatives and gave the wrong answer.
Toward the end of the hearing, Rep. Elise
Stefanik, R-N.Y., asked Gay and two other university presidents whether
“calling for the genocide of Jews” violates the “code of conduct or rules
regarding bullying and harassment” at their universities. All three of the
women hedged, saying the answer depends on context.
Three days later, Gay told The Crimson,
Harvard’s student newspaper, that she was “sorry” and noted that her “words
amplify distress and pain.” She said she had “got caught up in what had become
at that point, an extended, combative exchange about policies and procedures,”
adding that she “failed to convey what is my truth.”
Stefanik, a Harvard graduate, condemned
Gay’s apology.
“No, Dr. Gay. You were given an
opportunity to speak your truth,” Stefanik responded to Gay on X, formerly
Twitter. “And you did. Not once. Not twice. Not 5 [times]. Not 10 [times]. I
asked you 17 [times] (!!!) in the hearing about whether calling for the
genocide of Jews violates [Harvard’s] code of conduct. You spoke your truth
under oath 17 [times]. And the world heard it.”
Liz
Magill, President of the University of Pennsylvania gave the same answer as Gay
in the antisemitism hearing on December 5, and she resigned four days later due
to pressure from donors. Also resigning was the chairman of Penn’s board of
trustees. O’Neil noted:
On Dec. 10, Manhattan Institute Senior
Fellow Chris Rufo published the first in a series of plagiarism
accusations against Gay, comparing sections from the Harvard president’s 1997
dissertation to works published by others.
On Dec. 12, Harvard announced that it had
reviewed Gay’s published work after receiving accusations in October about
three of her articles. The university cleared Gay of accusations that she had
violated its standards for “research misconduct,” but said the review
discovered “a few instances of inadequate citation.” Harvard announced that Gay
would request “four corrections in two articles.”
On Dec. 22, the New York Post revealed that Harvard had sent the newspaper a letter in
late October warning of a defamation lawsuit if it were to publish accusations
of plagiarism. The letter claimed that the passages in question “are both cited
and properly credited.”
Also in December, Jay Greene, a senior
research fellow in the Center for Education Policy at The Heritage Foundation,
and Max Eden, a research fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, drew
attention to the paucity of Gay’s academic record. (The Daily Signal is
Heritage’s news outlet.)
“Over about two decades, Gay has
written 10 journal articles and no books,” Greene and Eden wrote. “This is
about half the average rate for a political science professor, even at a
middling university. By comparison, Amy Gutmann—who, like Gay, is a political
scientist and until early last year served as president of the University of
Pennsylvania—has published more than a dozen books and well over 100 articles.”
Furthermore, Greene and Eden noted that
“Gay’s institutional rise was marked by a pattern of destroying the careers of
genuinely brilliant black scholars who had the stature to point out her
mediocrity.” They wrote that Gay led the charge to undermine black Harvard
economist Roland Fryer and black Harvard Law professor Ronald Sullivan, who had
agreed to serve as an attorney to help defend Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein
from sexual assault charges.
Reporters and analysts went through works
Gay’s published work, finding example after example of text blocks apparently
lifted from other writers without attribution. The steady drip-drip-drip of
information, coupled with conservative outlets such as The Daily Signal
demanding answers and repeatedly raising the issue of DEI in education, appears to have led Harvard to reconsider.
These examples led Greene and Eden, among
many others, to conclude that Gay had been an “affirmative action pick,” an
example of the university’s prioritizing goals for "diversity, equity, and inclusion" over scholarly merit.
Gay
resigned due to too much evidence of her lack of merits for the position, but
she was quick to blame racism and other causes rather than acknowledging her
own problems. O’Neil wrote that the “public campaign to reveal DEI corruption
zeroed in on Gay because she arguably represented the worst of ‘woke’ ideology –
a woman elevated more for her skin color than for her merit, promoting ethe
cause of diversity, equity, and inclusion, and overlooking the rising threat of
antisemitism from the Left.” …
“There were so many reasons that justified
Gay’s removal as president that it is hard to say which one ultimately tipped
the scale,” Greene, the Heritage education scholar, told The Daily Signal
in a statement Tuesday. “She was a plagiarist who destroyed the careers of
rival black scholars on her way to the top, idly stood by while Jew-hatred ran
rampant on campus alleging a newly discovered commitment to free speech,
fostered a dangerous expansion of DEI, and was fundamentally unqualified for
the position in the first place. Any one of these should have disqualified her
from leading Harvard.”
Greene called Gay’s removal an “essential
step forward” but “clearly insufficient” because “almost all of the issues that
justified her removal remain serious problems at Harvard.”
“The university is clearly unwilling to
uphold scholarly standards against plagiarism,” Greene said. “The DEI cudgel
she used to destroy rival black scholars can be used to accuse others of
fostering hostile environments. Harvard continues to selectively enforce its
code of conduct to permit anti-Jewish activity but not activity affecting
other, protected groups. The DEI bureaucracy and the discriminatory
oppressor/oppressed dichotomy it promotes remains undiminished. The board that
selected her despite her manifest lack of qualification for the position
remains in charge.”
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