US universities were bracing for an uncomfortable four years ahead after Donald Trump was swept back to the White House in a historic presidential election.
Mr Trump defeated Kamala Harris, his Democratic rival, telling crowds at his campaign headquarters in Florida that US voters had given him āan unprecedented and powerful mandateā.
Speaking toĀ Times Higher EducationĀ before election day, one university leader described theĀ prospect of a second Trump term as āhorrific for higher educationā.
It was unclear how supportive Mr Trump is of theĀ ³¦“DzԳٰł“DZ¹±š°ł²õ¾±²¹±ōĢżProject 2025Ā policy playbookĀ crafted by his allies at a conservative thinktank, which advocates the shuttering of the Department of Education, but Patricia McGuire, president ofĀ Trinity Washington University, said it āspells out a clear desire to debilitate if not demolish many universitiesā.
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āIf Project 2025 does indeed provide a blueprint, it will be about stifling academic freedom, more privatisation of student loan services, and taking higher education, through state and community colleges, out of the reach of less wealthy Americans,ā Mark Shanahan, associate professor of political engagement at the University of Surrey, told THE after Mr Trumpās victory was confirmed.
He added that a second Trump administration could lead to increased attacks on free speech in higher education, particularly if both the Senate and House are controlled by the Republicans.
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This echoed Professor McGuireās predictions of āa ratcheting-up of public show trials of presidents and trustees even more egregious than the hearing thatĀ brought down president [Claudine] Gay of HarvardāĀ amid campus protests of over Israelās war in Gaza, plus an emboldening of politicians in states such as Florida and Texas, who have pushed restrictions on academic freedom, bans on diversity initiatives and reviews of curricula.
Ursula Hackett, reader in politics at Royal Holloway, University of London, said well-funded and networked conservative groups that laid the institutional foundations for Mr Trumpās victory have offered detailed plans to dismantle the Department of Education.
āMost likely, weāll see the relaxation of regulations on for-profit colleges, and the elimination of [outgoing president Joe] Bidenās signature initiatives to support students of colour, LGBT students, and student loan forgiveness.ā
Student voters had been tipped to play a key role in any success for Ms Harris but enthusiasm for the serving vice-president may have been tempered by continuing anger over the Gaza conflict.
Dr Shanahan said a significant majority of students had backed the vice-president, but too often Democratic votes were concentrated in the wrong places.
āIt's likely that too few students came out to vote at all, or they voted either in the college state or their home state where their individual vote had less impact in swingling the election,ā he said.
As results filtered in, the mood soon soured at Ms Harrisā election night watch party at her alma mater, Howard University in Washington DC.
Ravi Perry, a political science professor,Ā Ā that āhigher ed hangs in the balanceā but that the community at Howard ā a historically black institution ā would confront the future together.
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āHoward is resilient,ā Professor Perry said. āHoward is where black legends of all kinds have comeā¦[The] names are endless. Kamala Harris is one of those legendary names. The campus will go on with our heads held high.ā
With exit polls showing college graduates leaning by 57 per cent to 41 per cent for Ms Harris and those without a college degree backing Mr Trump by 54 per cent to 44 per cent, Dr Hackett saidĀ the diploma divide was now an āenormousā gap between the parties.
āItās part of a sorting process that has grown with partisan polarisation - but itās been supercharged by the Trump presidency and candidacy,ā she said.
She said Mr Trumpās attacks on people with advanced degrees, his embrace of anti-intellectualism and ethnonationalism, and his vice-president-elect J.D. Vanceās references to professors as āthe enemyā have contributed to this effect.
āNon-college educated America won,ā said Dr Shanahan. āIt is more populous and much more likely to align with Trump. Harris is seen as an elite insider, and like [2016 Democratic nominee Hillary] Clinton before her, failed to capture the less-educated and less politically-interested vote.ā
Universities around the globe will have been watching the election results closely, with one eye on the possible implications for international student flows, on which the US fell behind during Mr Trumpās first term between 2016 and 2020.
Mr Trumpās return to power could also bring greater scrutiny of ethnic Chinese scientists and research ties with the Asian superpower, a key focus of Republicans during his first term.
Mr Trumpās anti-education rhetoric will be a cause for concern for the sector, as will be any policies against immigration, according to Zhamilya Mukasheva, a fellow in the School of Public Policy at the London School of Economics.
Dr Mukasheva said affordability has also been on the forefront of the debate around higher education.
āFor those who are concerned, for instance, about what Trumpās win means for financial aid to students, the conventional wisdom in political science is that governments find it punishingly difficult to cut back on salient and popular areas of public spending.ā
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