Conservative Attacks on Higher Ed Are Attacks on Democracy – The Chronicle of Higher Education

DeSantis is putting the public back in public universities, a recent headline from National Review declared. Conservative politicians, strategists, and pundits love to trumpet the claim that Gov. Ron DeSantiss model of higher-education reform is democracy in action. This is false.

The Florida legislature is currently considering House Bill 999, which would cut professors out of the faculty-hiring process, eliminate funding for all campus diversity, equity, and inclusion programs, and effectively ban any coursework in critical theory, including critical race theory, queer theory, and intersectionality.

Im a fan, conservative writer Nate Hochman said about HB 999, in an interview for the New York Times last month:

All this talk about democratic accountability for public institutions can be seductive. But lest we be swayed by the high-minded rhetoric, lets pause for a moment to consider the meaning of public itself. As Columbia University English professor Bruce Robbins explains, there are important ambiguities when the term is invoked to represent the social whole. Paraphrasing Robbins, public can refer to what is decided on or managed by the community, as well as what is available to or done in the service of the community. The former emphasizes public control, while the latter stresses public access.

The public in public higher education is primarily about access to higher-education institutions that are dedicated to serving the public. Of course, members of the public should have a say in shaping public colleges. But those with the requisite expertise, namely faculty members, must be at the forefront when it comes to making decisions about teaching and research. As the American Association of University Professors has argued for more than a century, this is essential if colleges are to remain true to their mission to generate and disseminate knowledge.

The Atlantic staff writer Tom Nicols warned us back in 2019 that President Donald Trumps disdain for expertise would outlive his administration. Sure enough, following in Trumps footsteps, DeSantis is mounting an aggressive attack on expert knowledge, stripping away the decision-making powers that professors have had for more than a century regarding critical educational matters. HB 999 would sideline faculty by investing state lawmakers, university presidents, and trustees with the power to make decisions on everything from the curriculum to faculty hiring and promotion. Floridas GOP clearly never got the memo that academic freedom and faculty autonomy have helped to make the U.S. higher-education system the envy of the world.

Grandstanding populist rhetoric provides a veneer of righteousness to the DeSantis higher-ed reform agenda. Consider this statement by Christopher F. Rufo, architect of the nationwide anti-CRT crusade and policy adviser to DeSantis: I believe in an uncompromising new conservatism that attempts to restore the authority of the people over their government and lay waste to woke institutional capture.

For Rufo and co., campuses are first and foremost culture-war battlegrounds and they have no qualms about using scorched-earth tactics. Last year, Rufo was one of six new conservative trustees appointed to the New College of Florida, a public liberal-arts college in Sarasota that the DeSantis administration is determined to turn into the Hillsdale of the South. Here is how Rufo described the sea change to come: We will be shutting down low-performing, ideologically-captured academic departments and hiring new faculty. The student body will be recomposed over time: some current students will self-select out, others will graduate; well recruit new students who are mission-aligned.

As one Twitter commentator aptly put it: This is Soviet-era shit.

Rufo has no patience for the powers of persuasion when raw power will do. After Harvard University psychologist Steven Pinker criticized the heavy-handed moves to re-make New College, Rufo replied: Sorry, buddy Were in charge now. Rufo and the other newly installed trustees have already succeeded in replacing the colleges president and abolishing the colleges diversity office, achieving the first steps in what Rufo described as the hostile takeover of New College.

You would need a geologist to sort through all the layers of hypocrisy embedded in the ongoing transformation of public higher education in Florida. On the one hand, the Florida reform model rejects frameworks such as critical race theory, DEI, and intersectionality as too ideological, nothing more than woke indoctrination masquerading as scholarship. On the other, it says universities must promote concepts such as individual rights, patriotism, and Western Civilization. Nothing ideological to see here, right?

At a press conference in January, Rufo said that the purpose of a university is not to push political activism. At around the same time, he released a YouTube video called The Conservative Counter-Revolution Begins in the Universities, in which he outlined DeSantiss plan to recapture territory on Floridas public campuses. All the rhetoric about democracy, accountability, and the will-of-the-people rings hollow given that Rufo has compared his public persuasion campaign to Communist propaganda, openly describing his strategy to turn the phrase critical race theory into the perfect villain.

Higher-education reform in the Sunshine State is not a good-faith effort to put the public back in public universities. Indeed, it imagines that adult taxpayers are the only members of the public who count and confuses public accountability with public control. As taxpayers, we will hold our city accountable for maintaining the local roads, but we wont tell the construction crews what kind of asphalt to use when the potholes need fixing.

The public good is eroded when state colleges are governed by diktats that tell professors what they can and cannot teach. If legislators and political appointees are put in charge of curriculum and hiring decisions, the quality of public higher education in Florida will plummet. With state intervention in the DeSantis mold, Floridas colleges really will be in the business of indoctrination.

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Conservative Attacks on Higher Ed Are Attacks on Democracy - The Chronicle of Higher Education

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