Featured

Greg Stanton Applauds University of Arizona Declining White House Funding Agreement

The University of Arizona announced this week that it will not sign onto a White House proposal offering increased federal funding in exchange for changes to campus policies.

The decision came after Representative Greg Stanton encouraged UA President Suresh Garimella to reject the agreement in early October.

Stanton called the proposal "an unprecedented intrusion into higher education" and expressed concern it could affect the university's ability to make independent decisions. 

Following UA's announcement, Stanton thanked the university on X, stating that ”Arizona universities exist to serve students, not political agendas.” 

The Letters

The White House sent letters to nine universities on October 1, asking them to make several changes to their policies. 

These included removing consideration of sex and race from admissions decisions, evaluating faculty members' viewpoints, and closing down campus programs that the administration views as unfriendly to conservative ideas. 

President Suresh Garimella's response acknowledged some common ground with the administration's goals but raised concerns about one key issue. 

He emphasized that federal research funding should be awarded based solely on the quality of the research, not other factors. 

"A federal research funding system based on anything other than merit would weaken the world's preeminent engine for innovation," Garimella wrote.

UA’s Principles

Instead of signing the agreement, Garimella shared UA's own set of principles. He highlighted changes the university has already made, including cutting administrative costs by 22 percent, keeping tuition flat for Arizona students, and promoting respectful dialogue on campus. 

The principles note that UA already has policies against discrimination in admissions based on race, sex, religion, and other characteristics.

Seven universities have now declined the White House offer, which includes MIT, Penn, Brown, USC, Dartmouth, UVA, and UA. Other schools, including Arizona State University, the University of Kansas, and Washington University in St. Louis, are still reviewing the proposal.

Garimella expressed hope that universities and the federal government can continue working together while maintaining each institution's independence.

Ericka Rodriguez Diaz

Ericka Piñon is a reporter for Cactus Politics specializing in Arizona Legislative Correspondent. With 1 year on the ground in Phoenix, Arizona, they have been cited by Cactus Politics, Big Energy News, The Floridian Press, and Texas Politics. Her focus is on Public Relations and Communications. Email: Ericka@dnm.news

Recent Posts

Adelita Grijalva Raises Concerns Over DHS Plan to Equip Immigration Agents With AI Glasses

Representative Adelita Grijalva (D-AZ) is questioning a federal proposal to equip immigration agents with AI-powered…

17 hours ago

Priya Sundareshan Blames Natural Gas for Relentless Rate Increases

Arizona Senate Democratic Leader Priya Sundareshan (D-AZ) is pointing to fuel costs as a key…

18 hours ago

Judge Finds State Did Not Follow Law in Water Policy Rollout Affecting New Construction

An Arizona court has struck down a state water policy that limited new housing development…

19 hours ago

David Schweikert Introduces Bill Making Copper a Critical Mineral

Representative David Schweikert (R-AZ) has introduced legislation to designate copper a critical mineral and boost…

19 hours ago

Juan Ciscomani Successfully Updates Federal Guidelines on Service Dogs in Laboratories

Representative Juan Ciscomani (R-AZ) is celebrating the successful updating of federal guidelines on the use…

22 hours ago

Andy Biggs Introduces Legislation Reining In Federal Monitors

Representative Andy Biggs (R-AZ) has introduced legislation reining in court-appointed federal monitors for law enforcement.…

23 hours ago