A view of Harvard campus on John F. Kennedy Street at Harvard University is pictured in Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S., December 7, 2023. (Reuters File)

- The House Judiciary Committee subpoenaed Harvard, claiming inadequate cooperation in its probe into Ivy League tuition and financial aid practices.
- Harvard criticized the subpoena as “unwarranted” and denied any collusion in setting tuition or manipulating financial aid policies.
- Republicans allege antitrust violations and political bias; Democrats call the investigation baseless and part of a broader ideological attack on academia.
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The U.S. House Judiciary Committee sent a subpoena to Harvard University on Thursday seeking documents and communications for its probe into tuition costs and financial aid for Ivy League students.
A letter to Harvard President Alan Garber, signed by committee chairman Jim Jordan and U.S. Representative Scott Fitzgerald, both Republicans, described Harvard’s response to previous requests for documents as inadequate and said the committee needs the documents “to fulfill its oversight and legislative responsibilities.”
A spokesperson for Harvard said in a statement: “We are disappointed that the Committee has chosen to issue a subpoena and believe it is unwarranted, unfair and unnecessary.”
It added: “There is no basis for an allegation of collusion in Harvard’s setting of tuition and financial aid.”
The investigation into tuition is part of a larger fight between Harvard and the White House and Congress, including over cuts to federal funding and efforts to block foreign students from attending the university.
Trump Trying to Force a Change at Harvard
President Donald Trump has said he is trying to force change at Harvard – and other top-level universities across the U.S. – because in his view they have been captured by leftist “woke” thought and become bastions of antisemitism.
The subpoena comes as part of an investigation by the Republican-controlled U.S. House Judiciary Committee into whether Harvard and other Ivy League schools broke antitrust laws by raising tuition costs.
“We are concerned that Ivy League member institutions appear to be collectively raising tuition prices while engaging in perfect price discrimination by offering selective financial aid packages to maximize profits,” the letter to Harvard’s Garber said.
U.S. Representative Jamie Raskin, a Democratic member of the Judiciary Committee, called the investigation “plainly ridiculous” and “based on pathetically weak allegations.”
The Harvard spokesperson said the school has produced thousands of pages of documents on its tuition-setting process and financial aid.
While the Judiciary Committee said it had received hundreds of requested documents, it added that some of them contained publicly available facts and lacked specific information that was desired.
(Reporting by Maria Tsvetkova in New York; Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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