If there is a new kind of culture war being waged over Americaâs universities and colleges then the University of California, Berkeley has been the definitive battleground. The universityâs decision last February to cancel right-wing provocateur Milo Yiannopoulosâ scheduled talk on security grounds, in the face of a protest by âblack blocâ protesters, was seized on by Donald Trump as an example of campus bias against right-wing views. The US president, who had been inaugurated less than two weeks previously, threatened in a tweet to end all federal funding for Berkeley.Â
All that seems a distant memory as Berkeleyâs famous campus is consumed by preparations for the âBig Gameâ of American college football between Berkeleyâs California Golden Bears and their arch rivals, Stanford Cardinal. Noisy gatherings of students are handing out flyers for the climactic âbonfire rallyâ, which consists of the torching of a giant tower of wooden pallets topped off with a Stanford flag. Just good, harmless student fun.
But the political legacy of the clashes over free speech are being discussed at Berkeley today, too, at a conference on âthe new nationalism and universitiesâ. Carol Christ, who took over as Berkeleyâs chancellor from Nicholas Dirks in the summer, tells the conference: âFree speech has been adopted by the alt-right as one of its strategies to construct a narrative about universities that is extremely useful for their political goals.âÂ
For those who subscribe to the âculture warsâ theory of US politics, the term is used to refer to a political shift that they believe began in the 1960s, whereby key divides in political debate became less associated with class or economics and more with cultural identity and values. And, rightly or wrongly, higher education institutions have become very much associated with the liberal side in that conflict. Conservative concerns over their perceived left-wing bias stretch back decades, but the heat has been turned up by Trumpâs election, the rise of social media and alternative forms of news media, and perhaps also by the worsened economic prospects for many Americans since the economic crisis of 2008.
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The frenzied coverage of free speech controversies on campus has poured gasoline on bonfires that were already burning; recent surveys showing declining trust in universities and colleges among Republican supporters have alarmed many in the sector, and some higher education experts believe that measures in the recently passed tax bill that will hit universities open a new front in the culture wars.Â
The apocalyptic wildfires that recently wreaked such havoc further south in California led news bulletins across the nation. As the 45th president continues to fan the flames of political division, some could be forgiven for seeing in those fires a metaphor for the threats that American higher education is now facing. Just how much of the stateâs and the nationâs campuses will the flames consume?
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Erwin Chemerinsky, dean of Berkeley Law and co-author of the recently published book Free Speech on Campus, puts recent events in context. Going back to the 1950s, the McCarthyist âfight to deal with communists was in large part [conducted] on college campusesâŠthe civil rights protests were often directed at colleges, the anti-Vietnam protests were centred on collegesâ, he points out. âSo itâs not surprising that if thereâs going to be so-called culture wars, campuses will be at the centre of them.â And âif conservatives want to pick a place that they are going to target, itâs easy to see why they select Berkeleyâ.
In response to the cancellation of his speech, Yiannopoulos, a former editor at the alt-right news website Breitbart, planned a âFree Speech Weekâ at Berkeley, featuring right-wing speakers. However, he then cancelled it after the university had planned for it to go ahead. In September, Berkeley also ensured that he was able to make a brief speech on campus, which went ahead without incident but with security costs to the public institution of about $800,000 (ÂŁ605,000).
Another controversy raged in April over the circumstances of right-wing author Ann Coulterâs , while, in September, conservative commentator Ben Shapiro â author of Brainwashed: How Universities Indoctrinate Americaâs Youth â was amid a major security operation.
âSometimes your brand is your curse,â says political scientist Henry Brady, dean of Berkeleyâs Goldman School of Public Policy, noting that the university is âthe home of the Free Speech Movementâ. Originating on the left during the 1960s civil rights era and continuing during protests against the Vietnam War, the movement pressured university administrators to lift the ban on on-campus political activity.Â
âWe are the place where American students got a chance to really bring political speakers to campus on their own, without its having to be done by a professor or an administrator,â Brady says. âThatâs what they fought for, so itâs very hard for us to now sayâŠto the Berkeley Republican club: âyou canât invite Ben Shapiroâ, or to the Berkeley Patriot club: âyou canât invite Milo Yiannopoulosâ. Even though I would personally make a distinction between the two: I think Shapiro is worth listening to; I think Yiannopoulos is just a complete jerk.âÂ
With his Free Speech Week, Yiannopoulos âhoped that he could really explode apart Berkeley and, therefore, in the end, be rejected [by the university authorities]â, Brady says. This would give him a âgreat internet storyâ about Berkeleyâs liberal bias. By permitting him to organise his event, âCarol Christ played chicken with him â and he veered firstâ.
Nevertheless, if Yiannopoulos had a goal to âdiscreditâ universities, perhaps it may have been partially achieved anyway. Last June, the headlines were grabbed by a carried out by the non-partisan thinktank the Pew Research Center. Americans were asked for their views on five groups of major national institutions: religious organisations, banks, unions, the national news media, and colleges and universities. Republican voters and Republican-leaning independents viewed the media least positively: 85 per cent thought that they have a ânegative effect on the way things are going in the countryâ. But 58 per cent of Republican supporters felt the same about colleges and universities; by contrast, 72 per cent of Democrat supporters said that higher education institutions have a positive effect. What is particularly striking about the finding is the fact that, just two years ago, âa 54 per cent majority of Republicans and Republican leaners said that colleges were having a positive effect, while 37 per cent said that their effect was negativeâ, the centre noted.
âIt was a pretty big dip in Republic[an] support for universities,â agrees Bob Shireman, senior fellow at the Century Foundation non-partisan thinktank and a former deputy undersecretary in the Department of Education during the Obama administration. âIÂ can only attribute that to the heavy news coverage of protests on campuses around conservative speakers, and related issues.â
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Terry Hartle, senior vice-president for government and public affairs at the American Council on Education, describes the Pew findings as âalarming and a matter of great concern to all college university leadersâ. Hartle, sometimes described as US higher educationâs top lobbyist, adds that the sector has previously relied on bipartisan political support, but that the findings are âconsistent with some of the things weâre hearing, informally, from Republicans on Capitol Hillâ.
Hartle sees free speech as just âone of the factorsâ accounting for Republicansâ declining faith in higher education institutions. Another is that there is âa part of the Republican Party that simply doesnât believe in scientific research as it used to â that could undermine support for universities as wellâ. A third, Hartle thinks, is âthat American higher education, rightly or wrongly, is seen as elite. We are living in a very populist era in the United States and whenever you have populism, elites donât fare terribly well.â
Hartle points to additional evidence that âespecially since the Great Recession, white working-class voters are very uncertainâŠwhether it is financially worthwhile to get a college degreeâ. And this group is âthe centrepiece of the Trump constituency. We simply have not done a good enough job, in higher education, of underscoring to that part of our citizenry that higher education is the best investment most people will ever make.â
Anthony Monaco, president of Bostonâs Tufts University, also blames âeconomic factors such as the cost of higher education and the growing economic disparities in our countryâ for the ânegative views of higher education that have become common in some sectors of American societyâ. And he admits that he is âquite concernedâ.Â
But not everyone is convinced that the Pew survey shows what has been claimed. Lanae Erickson Hatalsky of centrist thinktank Third Way and Ben Miller of liberal thinktank the Center for American Progress, have and suggest that it has been over-interpreted. They point to a of 5,600 Americans, conducted in August and September, in which 86 per cent of respondents agreed with the statement that it is âeasier to get a good job with an education after high schoolâŠthanâŠwithout oneâ. This is âan important reminder that regardless of the headlinesâŠthe need for education beyond high school still maintains broad popularity in our countryâ ââ and thatâs not likely to change anytime soonâ, they write. They also suggest that the Pew questioning doesnât reflect the diversity of the US higher education sector, and wonder whether some Republicans are unhappy
specifically with four-year institutions.

Eloy Ortiz Oakley is chancellor of the California Community Colleges System, which, with more than 2 million students, is the worldâs largest higher education system. He calls the Pew findings âa troubling signâ, indicating that many people âdonât see the direct link any more [between] economic mobility and higher educationâ.
In his view, âpeople have this angst around what they see as those in the elite â even though our president comes from thatâŠand they link it to elite education in the universities, whether itâs Harvard, Yale [or] Berkeley. And then they makeâŠthese very general conclusions that this [elitism] is the case for all of higher education.â
In fact, though, âthe bulk of students coming to our [community] colleges and public universities are first-generation students who just want to get connected to the economy [and] who are much like everyday working-class Americansâ, says Oakley. âSo we have to find a way to disconnect those two visions of higher education. IÂ think that we all can find fault in the elite, selective universities, but thatâs not whatâs happening at 90 per cent of the other colleges and universities.â
That view is backed up by recent research led by Raj Chetty, professor of economics at Stanford and a research associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research. Chetty connected data on the family incomes of more than 30 million college graduates, the institutions they attended and their graduate earnings. He that âchildren whose parents are in the top 1 per cent of the income distribution are 77 times more likely to attend an Ivy League college than those whose parents are in the bottom income quintileâ. But he also found that rates of âbottom-to-top quintile mobility are highest at certain mid-tier public universities, such as the City University of New York and California State collegesâ. And he discovered that Berkeley was the institution most effective at taking students from the bottom 20 per cent of the household income distribution and getting them jobs in the top 1 per cent of the income distribution.
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Robert Nelsen, president of California State University-Sacramento, has in his office a battered saddle that may once have belonged to Calamity Jane: a reminder of how he âgrew up in povertyâ on a Montana ranch and that âwithout an education, I would still be working on a ranch and doing hard labourâ. He describes the Pew findings as âincredibly disappointingâŠTo think that anyone in America would think that colleges are not there to support what we are trying to do. What has made America be successful? It started with the land-grant colleges.â
Nelsen points to the fact that California would be ranked as the worldâs sixth-largest economy if it were an independent country. âWhy? Because youâve got 23 [branches of the California State University], and youâve got a community college system thatâs unbelievable, and youâve got a University of California system that is producing some of the best research thatâs being done in the world,â he says. âEducation has made California what California is. Education makes the United States what it is.â
Could it be, though, that the Pew survey reflects a cultural dissatisfaction with universities and colleges among Republicans, rather than any scepticism about the benefits of a degree? The researchers did note an âideological gapâ among Republicans, stating that ânearly two-thirds of conservative Republicans (65 per cent) say colleges are having a negative impact, compared with just 43 per cent of moderate and liberal Republicansâ. But with Conservative Republicanism in the ascendant, that may be of little comfort to higher education leaders.Â
Arthur Milikh is associate director of the B. Kenneth Simon Center for Principles and Politics at the Heritage Foundation, the conservative thinktank where Trump chose to deliver his major speech on tax reform in October. While free speech concerns have âbecome a rallying cryâ, he believes that âthe mistrust of universities by conservatives in America goes much deeperâ. Milikh argues that, at root, the dissatisfaction arises from a perceived scarcity of âdefenders of the tradition of Western thought and way of lifeâ among faculty, and a prevalence of teaching that is âderisiveâ of that tradition, and intent on âdemonstrating to students how foolish and empty it allegedly isâ. âThe intellectual atmosphere on campuses deeply troubles conservatives,â he says. âOn many campuses it has become nearly impossible for professors to publish research in defence of the traditional family without being labelled a bigot by students and colleagues, and denounced by the diversity infrastructure.â His remedy is for there to be âmore conservativesâ on campus, by which he means âpeople who teach the essential books of the Western canon and take them seriouslyâ. For this reason, âthere needs to be a concerted effort to hire professors who take the Western tradition seriously, and job descriptions should match these values instead of other valuesâ, says Milikh. âIf there is a such an effort, PhD programmes will to some degree adjust and train such people.â
The Century Foundationâs Shireman sees an antipathy to elite higher education in some of the measures in the landmark tax reform bill passed before Christmas by Republican majorities in the Senate and the House of Representatives. Although the Houseâs intention to treat tuition waivers for graduate students as taxable income â which could have added upwards of $10,000 to some graduate studentsâ tax bills â was from the final legislation, a tax on large university endowments remains: the final bill will impose a levy of 1.4 per cent on institutions with endowments of more than $500,000 per student, affecting about 30 institutions.
The politicians âwould like to bring down elite higher education, but they also know that our research universities have contributed enormously to the success of our economyâ, Shireman says.
The Heritage Foundationâs Milikh says that tax-free status is âaccorded to institutions that perform an unambiguous public goodâ, such as charities and churches. âIf itâs the case that universities have to a great extent become (a) the central hub of transforming American culture and (b) a kind of apparatus of the Democratic Party, so that they no longer perform the objective public good they initially served, then IÂ think that thatâs where the idea of taxing their endowments comes from among conservatives.â
Another aspect of recent Republican suspicion of universities relates to research in the social sciences. In 2013, then House majority leader, Republican Eric Cantor, said that public funds for the social sciences âwould be better spent helping find cures to diseasesâ. And, after several legislative attempts to restrict funding for social science, rebuffed by President Barack Obama, the House passed a bill requiring the National Science Foundation to award grants only for research âin the national interestâ, with the focus very much on science and commercialisation. The was passed almost entirely on the strength of Republican votes, but did not complete its passage through the Senate before the election.
Milikh is in the early stages of work on a report examining federal research funding in US higher education, which he hopes will influence the Trump administration. âFunding for non-science, non-defence related subjects in universities is very large and extremely difficult to pinpoint,â he says. âAnd IÂ think that taxpayers deserve to know where on earth their money is going.â
For his part, Shireman supports âthe idea of putting pressure on elite universities to be more open to low-income and middle-income studentsâ. But if that were their motivation, he argues, Republicans should have introduced targets for top universitiesâ intake of such students, with the endowment tax being imposed only if the targets were missed. This âwould be the logical populist policy to enactâ. Without it, the tax amounts merely to a âlashing outâ, Shireman says: a âmiddle fingerâ to higher education, conveying a Republican message of âwe donât like youâ.Â
He also thinks that the attacks on universities are made more virulent by the presence of âan anti-intellectual mentality in the White Houseâ, and the fact that such attitudes are âdominant in the Republican Partyâ as a whole. There have been Congressional plans for cuts in financial support for students or higher education before, âbut it has usually been in a situation where Congress has been more split, or in the hands of the other party, and there was not as great a chance of it all being implementedâ, Shireman says.

Brady rejects the idea that Berkeley is a liberal bastion and talks about the conservative speakers invited to speak to students at its School of Public Policy. âA lot of us are working really hard to make sure that we continue to have conservatives in academia. I feel strongly as a public policy dean that I would do a disservice to my students were they never to hear a conservative viewpoint,â he says. If Berkeley graduates regard people of that ideological stripe as âodd, exotic creaturesâŠthey are not going to be able to work with conservativesâ, he adds.
Monaco, the Tufts president, admits that there are âpolitical excesses on campuses â on both ends of the political spectrumâ. For that reason, âwe need to continue to work to bridge and learn from differences so that we can improve understandingâ. He highlights Tuftsâ Bridging Differences Initiative, launched in autumn 2017, which aims to âposition Tufts to lead nationally and internationally in supporting and developing structures, processes and skills to engage constructively across differencesâ. And he points to the universityâs record of bringing âpotentially controversial speakers to campus without disruptive protestsâ by holding public events running alongside them that feature âstudents of varying points of viewâ.
On the economic front, Oakley, the California Community Colleges System chancellor, talks about âworking-class Americansâ aged over 50 âwho came out of high school and got a good job, but during the recession were displaced â and they canât gain that foothold any more. And they see all these young college students taking jobs. IÂ understand that frustration. But that just means that we, as educators, have to do a better job of helping those displaced workers gain new skills. And weâre not having that conversation â IÂ think thatâs unfortunate.â
Publicly prioritising contributions to regional economies may be another way to shield higher education from the culture wars crossfire. As Times Higher Education has previously reported, Johns Hopkins University and the University of Pennsylvania have led the way here, as wealthy institutions embracing their civic role in the deprived neighbourhoods of Baltimore and Philadelphia where they are located. But the impact of such efforts on public perceptions could be limited unless elite institutions also admit more students from low-income backgrounds.
In her address to the Berkeley ânew nationalismâ conference, Christ says that failing to support free speech âplays into a narrative of the far right to discredit universities. So itâs just extraordinarily important that we do not play that part in that narrative.â But Brady believes that upholding free speech for right-wing speakers is insufficient to resolve the current cultural divide in US society.Â
âYou need to have places where people can actually sit down and talk with each other,â he says. âYou also need to have institutions that are dedicated to the truth. Thatâs what the media used to be in this country. Itâs less so now, since itâs been gutted by the rise of Silicon Valleyâs apparatus. And Silicon Valley has not yet taken on the job of worrying much about the verifiability of the things that appear on its web pages.
âSo whatâs left? Higher education. And we are devoted to truth: we really care about that.âÂ
Indeed, for Sacramento Stateâs Nelsen, the role of higher education is intimately bound up not so much with party politics as with the health of the American polity itself. âWe are educating the populace that will make democracy exist and continue to exist,â he says. âWhen I got into the administration [of universities] I never thought that I was defending democracy. I now understand that thatâs what Iâm doing in many ways.ââ
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POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline:Â Fire in the halls
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