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Linda McMahon Says Columbia Deal Brings Cultural Change

by Trending Newsfeed
July 25, 2025 at 10:32 am
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Student Loan Borrowers Face Debt Collectors After Defaulting

WASHINGTON, DC - APRIL 30: Education Secretary Linda McMahon speaks during a Cabinet meeting at the White House on April 30, 2025 in Washington, DC. Trump convened the meeting as reports released today say the U.S. economy contracted 0.3% in the first quarter of 2025, the first negative reading in three years, fueled by a massive surge in imports ahead of the administration's expected tariffs. (Photo by Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)

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In a move already sparking nationwide debate, U.S. Education Secretary Linda McMahon stood on camera Thursday and called it “a cultural change for the campus.” She was talking about Columbia University—one of America’s most prestigious schools—signing a $220 million agreement with the Trump administration after months of tense, behind-the-scenes negotiations.

But here’s where the tension spikes: this wasn’t just a simple settlement. It came after allegations that Columbia failed to protect Jewish students from antisemitic harassment during explosive protests over the Israel–Hamas war. For months, the university faced accusations of looking the other way as students reported intimidation and abuse. Now, after all the outrage, this deal arrives—and with it, a swirl of questions that aren’t going away.

McMahon, speaking to ABC News, framed the agreement as a milestone. She said she hopes it becomes a “template” for other universities, a sign that campuses can once again be safe havens where every viewpoint has room. On the surface, it sounds like resolution. But dig deeper and you see the conflicts still simmering.

Columbia agreed to pay $200 million over three years and to overhaul admissions and hiring practices—changes that effectively ban the use of diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) policies on campus. Yet in the same breath, the university insists it broke no civil rights laws and admits no wrongdoing. Acting President Claire Shipman wrote that while Columbia recognizes “painful, unacceptable incidents,” it rejects the government’s conclusion that Title VI was violated. That sharp divide leaves a story unfinished, a wound only partly stitched.

🚨 BREAKING: Columbia University caves to President Trump — agrees to pay a $200 MILLION settlement to the federal government

This comes after the university allowed RAMPANT pro-Palestine riots on their campus, and was accused by the Trump administration of discriminating… pic.twitter.com/2D9xdFOwk1

— Nick Sortor (@nicksortor) July 24, 2025

Meanwhile, students and alumni are already speaking out. Some Jewish students say they’re relieved. Others, like recent graduate Eden Yadegar, say it doesn’t go far enough, warning, “We have a lot more work to do.” Their words hint at a deeper truth—this deal may be historic, but it hasn’t erased fear on campus.

The financial stakes are enormous. The agreement restores nearly half a billion dollars in education grants and research contracts that had been frozen since March. That freeze followed a federal task force report that accused Columbia of “inaction” when Jewish students asked for protection. Yet while the money flows again, critics argue that safety can’t be bought—and that only time will show if Columbia’s promises hold.

McMahon rejected claims that the administration is overreaching or stifling academic freedom, saying the government isn’t dictating curriculum but demanding fairness: “There has to be both sides represented on campuses,” she said.

Scott Jennings on Columbia University: “You don’t pay $200 million to just ‘make something go away.’ You pay $200 million because, you know, you got caught red-handed.”pic.twitter.com/GU2zSrL3jc

— Thomas Sowell Quotes (@ThomasSowell) July 24, 2025

Here’s the twist that keeps this story alive. Even as McMahon celebrated the Columbia deal as a “great win,” she revealed her department is still negotiating with Harvard University over more than $2 billion in frozen federal funds. Those talks are stalled in court. And just this summer, the University of Pennsylvania struck its own agreement after a separate civil rights investigation.

Watch: President Trump tells me Harvard “wants to settle” after Columbia University agreed to pay $200M in fine. 💰

“The bottom line is we’re not gonna give any more money to Harvard… we want to spread the wealth to other schools,” he says to me.

He vows to “ultimately” win… pic.twitter.com/BV5IUjJyYv

— Iris Tao (@IrisTaoTV) July 25, 2025

Columbia’s settlement might look like closure. But the unanswered questions, the untested promises, and the looming fights with other universities tell a different story—one that’s still unfolding. And with every new headline, the stakes on America’s campuses only grow higher.

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