Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Harvard Asks Federal Judge to Dismiss Trump Lawsuit
d8a347b41db1ddee634e2d67d08798c102ef09ac
By The New York Times
Published 5 minutes ago on
May 18, 2026

An entrance to the campus of Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass., March 11, 2026. Harvard University, on Monday, May 18, 2026, asked a federal judge to dismiss a Trump administration antisemitism lawsuit against the school, calling the suit “a continuation of the government’s unconstitutional retaliation campaign against Harvard.” (Lucy Lu/The New York Times)

Share

Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

Harvard University on Monday asked a federal judge to dismiss a Trump administration antisemitism lawsuit against the school, calling the suit “a continuation of the government’s unconstitutional retaliation campaign against Harvard.”

The Trump administration in March filed suit against the university in U.S. District Court in Boston, claiming that school administrators were deliberately indifferent to antisemitism on campus, and had failed to protect Jewish and Israeli students from harassment, physical assaults, stalking and exclusion from campus facilities.

The complaint argued that the federal government should not have to pay Harvard existing grants, and should be allowed to claw back grants already given.

The lawsuit was filed about a year after Harvard had sued the federal government, saying that the Trump administration had illegally ended its federal funding. A federal judge in that suit decided in Harvard’s favor.

Harvard’s motion to dismiss the latest case argues that the Trump administration’s suit largely cites incidents on campus from 2023 and 2024, and does not account for the steps the university had taken to improve the culture for Jewish and Israeli students.

“Harvard has engaged in sustained, institution wide efforts to identify and address antisemitism on campus,” the motion states. “These extensive and ongoing efforts are the very opposite of deliberate indifference.”

The administration’s litigation, the motion continues, is part of a government campaign to punish the university “for refusing to cede control over decisions regarding what Harvard can teach, the beliefs of the students it admits, and whom it can hire.”

A spokesperson for the Trump administration did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

By Mark Arsenault/Lucy Lu
c. 2026 The New York Times Company

RELATED TOPICS:

Search

Keep the news you rely on coming. Support our work today.

Send this to a friend