CNN's Scott Jennings Showed That This Dem Was Not Ready for Primetime
Did Donald Trump Call Into C-SPAN's Washington Journal? Here's What Happened.
America Is Back: Team USA Sweeps Canada to Take Home Gold in Milan
A Tale of Two Athletes
America Keeps Winning
San Fernando Valley Film Accountant Pleads Guilty to $2 Million Embezzlement Scheme
Gavin Newsom, Bernie Sanders Say They Don't Know How to Get Birth Certificates
Romanian Hacker Pleads Guilty in 2021 Breach of Oregon State Government Office
Chaos Erupts in Mexico After Elimination of Cartel Leader 'El Mencho'
Byron Donalds Blasts Zohran Mamdani Over ‘Impossible’ Free Bus and Grocery Store Plan
TSA PreCheck Still Active During Partial Government Shutdown
Arizona Advances Bill to Rename a Highway After Charlie Kirk. Will the State's...
Secret Service Kill Armed Man Who Broke Into Mar-a-Lago
An Ambitious Bible-Reading Plan
Family As Communion: Familiaris Consortio
Tipsheet

Why Larry Hogan Just Backed Out of Harvard Fellowships

Why Larry Hogan Just Backed Out of Harvard Fellowships
AP Photo/Julio Cortez

Former Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan announced Monday he is withdrawing his offer to participate in two Harvard University fellowships over the school’s response to the Israel-Hamas war.

Advertisement

In a letter to President Claudine Gay, Hogan said he had been looking forward to “sharing leadership lessons” during the fellowships at the Kennedy School of Politics and the Chan School of Public Health.

“Unfortunately, this letter is to officially inform you that I must regretfully withdraw my offer to participate in this engagement,” he wrote. “I cannot condone the dangerous anti-Semitism that has taken root on your campus, especially by more than 30 Harvard student organizations attempting to justify and celebrate Hamas’ terrorism against innocent Israeli and American civilians.”

While he defended the free speech rights of students, Hogan said their speech should have been more forcefully challenged by the University. 

Harvard’s failure to do so is “a moral stain on the University,” Hogan argued.  

“The lessons of history are clear: we must all do our part to take a clear stand in the face of genocidal acts against the Jewish people or any group. There is no “both sides” when it comes to the murder, rape, and kidnapping of innocent women and children,” he continued.

Advertisement

Hogan said he hopes his decision prompts the University to “take meaningful action to address anti-Semitism and restore the values Harvard should represent in the world.”

Following widespread criticism of Harvard's response to the student groups, Gay said “no student group — not even 30 student groups — speaks for Harvard University or its leadership.”

Hogan's decision is the latest fallout for Harvard over its response. Earlier this month, Israeli billionaire Idan Ofer and his wife resigned from their posts on the executive board of Harvard’s Kennedy School and withdrew a planned donations of millions of dollars.


Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement