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Today: March 23, 2025
Today: March 23, 2025

Colleges cut ties with a little-known nonprofit targeted by the Trump administration over DEI

Berkeley Faculty Protest
March 21, 2025

Until recently, it was a little-known program to help Black and Latino students pursue business degrees.

But in January, conservative strategist Christopher Rufo flagged the program known as The PhD Project in social media posts that caught the attention of Republican politicians. The program is now at the center of a Trump administration campaign to root out diversity, equity and inclusion programs in higher education.

The U.S. Education Department last week said it was investigating dozens of universities for alleged racial discrimination, citing ties to the nonprofit organization. That followed a warning a month earlier that schools could lose federal money over โ€œrace-based preferencesโ€ in admissions, scholarships or any aspect of student life.

Colleges cut ties with a little-known nonprofit targeted by the Trump administration over DEI
Berkeley Faculty Protest

The investigations left some school leaders startled and confused, wondering what prompted the inquiries. Many scrambled to distance themselves from The PhD Project, which has aimed to help diversify the business world and higher education faculty.

The rollout of the investigations highlights the climate of fear and uncertainty in higher education, which President Donald Trump's administration has begun policing for policies that run afoul of his agenda even as he moves to dismantle the Education Department.

The Trump administration asked colleges to explain ties to The PhD Project

There is a range of nonprofits that work to help minority groups advance in higher education but The PhD Project was not well known before Rufo began posting on X about its work with colleges, said Jonathan Fansmith, senior vice president of government relations at the American Council on Education, an association of college presidents.

โ€œItโ€™s not hard to draw some lines between that incident and why 45 institutions that were partners with The PhD Project are getting this investigation announced,โ€ he said.

Colleges cut ties with a little-known nonprofit targeted by the Trump administration over DEI
Berkeley Faculty Protest

The 45 colleges under investigation for ties to the organization include public universities such as Arizona State, Ohio State and the University of California, Berkeley, along with private schools like Yale, Cornell, Duke and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

The Education Department sent letters to the universities informing them its Office for Civil Rights had received a complaint and they were under investigation for allegedly discriminating against students on the basis of race or ethnicity because of a past affiliation with The PhD Project. The letters set a March 31 deadline for information about their relationship with the nonprofit.

In a statement, the PhD Project said it aims to โ€œcreate a broader talent pipeline" of business leaders. โ€œThis year, we have opened our membership application to anyone who shares that vision,โ€ it said.

Colleges tread carefully on inquiries that threaten federal funding

Public reaction from the universitiesโ€™ leadership has been minimal and cautious, with most issuing brief statements saying they will cooperate with investigators and refusing further comment.

Colleges cut ties with a little-known nonprofit targeted by the Trump administration over DEI
Berkeley Faculty Protest

Colleges may see reason not to push back. The Trump administration has shown willingness to withhold federal funding over issues involving antisemitism allegations, diversity programs and transgender athletes. At Columbia University, under fire for its handling of pro-Palestinian protests, the administration pulled $400 million in federal money and threatened billions more if it does not comply with its demands.

โ€œThere is a concern that if one university steps up and fights this then that university will have all of their funding cut,โ€ said Veena Dubal, general counsel for the American Association of University Professors. โ€œThey are being hindered not just by fear but a real collective action problem. None of these universities wants to be the next example.โ€

Some colleges moved swiftly to stop working with The PhD Project.

The University of Kentucky said it severed ties with the nonprofit on Monday. The University of Wyoming said in a statement that its college of business was affiliated with the group to develop its graduate student pipeline, but it plans to discontinue its membership.

Colleges cut ties with a little-known nonprofit targeted by the Trump administration over DEI
Trump Higher Education

The University of Nevada, Las Vegas issued a statement saying three professors participated in the program, but two no longer work at the university and a third was killed in a shooting on campus in 2023. Arizona State said its business school is not financially supporting The PhD Project this year and it told faculty in February the school would not support travel to the nonprofitโ€™s conference.

A campaign against the nonprofit's work began on social media

Similar fallout came in Texas earlier this year, when Rufo began posting on X about the PhD Project.

โ€œTexas A&M is sponsoring a trip to a DEI conference,โ€ Rufo posted on Jan. 13. Rufo, a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute, a conservative think tank, accused the university of โ€œsupporting racial segregation and breaking the law.โ€

The next day Republican Texas Gov. Greg Abbot posted on X that the university โ€œpresident will soon be goneโ€ unless he immediately โ€œfixedโ€ the matter. Texas A&M responded by withdrawing from the conference, and soon after at least eight other Texas public universities that had participated previously in The PhD Projectโ€™s conference also withdrew, the Texas Tribune reported.

Rufo has not responded to a request for comment.

Some of the schools under investigation raised questions about where the complaints against them originated.

Montana State University said it follows all state and federal laws and was โ€œsurprisedโ€ by the notice it received and โ€œunaware of any complaint made internally with regards to The PhD Project.โ€

Six other colleges are being investigated for awarding โ€œimpermissible race-based scholarships,โ€ the Education Department said. Additionally, the University of Minnesota is being investigated for allegedly operating a program that segregates students on the basis of race.

At the University of California, Berkeley, hundreds gathered Wednesday on the campus known for student protests. But this one was organized by faculty, who stood on the steps of Sproul Hall, known as the birthplace of the free speech movement in the 1960s.

โ€œThis is a fight that can be summed up in five words: Academic freedom is under assault,โ€ Ula Taylor, a professor of African American studies, said to the crowd.

In a campus email Monday, Berkeley Chancellor Rich Lyons did not specifically mention the investigation targeting his school. But he described the federal governmentโ€™s actions against higher education as a threat to the school's core values.

โ€œA Berkeley without academic freedom, without freedom of inquiry, without freedom of expression is simply not Berkeley,โ€ Lyons said. โ€œWe will stand up for Berkeleyโ€™s values and defend them to the very best of our ability.โ€

___

Associated Press writer Collin Binkley contributed to this report.

___

The Associated Pressโ€™ education coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find APโ€™s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.

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