Trump’s “Compact for Academic Excellence in Higher Education” For Universities and Colleges Is Extortion and Violates Constitutional Rights
Why so many universities are rejecting the White House’s proposed ‘compact’
Team Trump sent several leading U.S. universities a proposed one-sided deal. They’re balking at the offer, and it’s worth understanding why.
Oct. 20, 2025, 2:43 PM EDT By Steve Benen
Donald Trump and his administration have spent much of the year targeting American higher education in a multifaceted campaign, but the story took an unexpected turn earlier this month when the Republican White House unveiled a “Compact for Academic Excellence in Higher Education.”
The document, sent to nine leading U.S. universities, offered the schools a deal of sorts. The institutions would become eligible for preferential treatment in the distribution of federal grants, but in exchange for this special status, the universities would have to give Team Trump greater control over everything from admissions to tuition, faculty to speech codes.
It’s not working: Last week, five giants in higher education — Brown University, M.I.T., the University of Pennsylvania, the University of Southern California and the University of Virginia — all effectively told the White House, “Thanks, but no thanks.”
The New York Times reported on one especially interesting element of the larger story:
Brown’s decision, in particular, is a case study of how the White House may have misjudged its own strength and academia’s nerve, especially once one of Mr. Trump’s top aides said that the nine schools initially chosen to consider the proposal were ‘good actors,’ or could be. After Trump officials abruptly moved to shut off federal money in April, Brown forged a multimillion-dollar settlement in July. But when the Trump administration returned this month and asked the school to consider its ideology-for-funding compact, it refused to sign.
In other words, earlier this year, Brown was one of the many universities that came under fire from Team Trump. A few months later, the school grudgingly struck deal with the administration.
At the time, Brown administrators probably thought they were in the clear. After all, they’d already struck a deal with the president’s team, which presumably removed them from the West Wing’s enemies list.
But Brown quickly discovered that it wasn’t enough: The school struck a deal in July, only to have the White House come back again in October with another appeal. If the university wanted special treatment, only available to Trump’s true pals, Brown would have to give the president’s operation even more control over how the institution operates.
And it was at that point that Brown decided it wasn’t negotiating with an administration working in good faith. (It was a lesson Columbia University learned months earlier.)
It was also a lesson a variety of prominent American law firms also learned this year.
The broader point shouldn’t be lost on those working in any field: Trying to appease or placate the White House is a fool’s errand. Yes, those who refuse Team Trump’s ridiculous offer risk drawing the president’s wrath. But therein lies the point: Accepting his offers won’t immunize you. On the contrary, he’ll just keep coming back for more.
It’s something for the other schools still weighing what to do with the proposed “compact” to keep in mind.
Steve Benen is a producer for “The Rachel Maddow Show,” the editor of MaddowBlog and an MSNBC political contributor. He’s also the bestselling author of “Ministry of Truth: Democracy, Reality, and the Republicans’ War on the Recent Past.”
- media
- MSNBC News - Breaking News and News Today / Latest News
- The New York Times (NYT) - Breaking News, US News, World News and Videos
- organizations
- political parties
- Democrat Party
- Trumpian Party
- universities
- Brown University
- Columbia University in the City of New York
- MIT - Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- University of Pennsylvania
- University of Southern California
- The University of Virginia
- companies
- foreign governments
- state, local governments
- federal government
-
Constitution of the United States
- U.S. Constitution - Article I / Library of Congress
- U.S. Constitution - Article II / Library of Congress
- U.S. Constitution - Article III / Library of Congress
- U.S. Constitution - Article IV / Library of Congress
- U.S. Constitution - Article V / Library of Congress
- U.S. Constitution - Article VI / Library of Congress
- U.S. Constitution - Article VII / Library of Congress
- U.S. Constitution - First Amendment / Library of Congress
- U.S. Constitution - Second Amendment / Library of Congress
- U.S. Constitution - Third Amendment / Library of Congress
- U.S. Constitution - Fourth Amendment / Library of Congress
- U.S. Constitution - Fifth Amendment / Library of Congress
- U.S. Constitution - Sixth Amendment / Library of Congress
- U.S. Constitution - Seventh Amendment / Library of Congress
- U.S. Constitution - Eighth Amendment / Library of Congress
- U.S. Constitution - Tenth Amendment / Library of Congress
- U.S. Constitution - Eleventh Amendment / Library of Congress
- U.S. Constitution - Twelfth Amendment / Library of Congress
- U.S. Constitution - Thirteenth Amendment / Library of Congress
- U.S. Constitution - Fourteenth Amendment / Library of Congress
- U.S. Constitution - Fifteenth Amendment / Library of Congress
- U.S. Constitution - Sixteenth Amendment / Library of Congress
- U.S. Constitution - Seventeenth Amendment / Library of Congress
U.S. Constitution - Eighteenth Amendment / Library of Congress- U.S. Constitution - Nineteenth Amendment / Library of Congress
- U.S. Constitution - Twentieth Amendment / Library of Congress
- U.S. Constitution - Twenty-First Amendment / Library of Congress
- U.S. Constitution - Twenty-Second Amendment / Library of Congress
- U.S. Constitution - Twenty-Third Amendment / Library of Congress
- U.S. Constitution - Twenty-Fourth Amendment / Library of Congress
- U.S. Constitution - Twenty-Fifth Amendment / Library of Congress
- U.S. Constitution - Twenty-Fifth Amendment / Library of Congress
- U.S. Constitution - Twenty-Sixth Amendment / Library of Congress
- U.S. Constitution - Twenty-Seventh Amendment / Library of Congress
- Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS)
- US Courts
- Department of Justice (DOJ)
- Federal Reserve
- Federal Reserve Board - Federal Reserve Act
- U.S. Department of the Treasury
- Department of Education (ED)
- Congress
- President of the United States (POTUS)
- White House (WH)
- Trump autocracy
-
Donald J Trump
- President Donald Trump (45)
-
President Donald Trump (47)
- President Trump (47) Administration
-
President Trump (47) Cabinet
- press secretary
- Karoline Leavitt
- press secretary
-
Donald J Trump
- extortion
- grifter
- self-dealing
- corruption
- con artist
- crime
- cryptocurrency
- criminal associates
- criminal businesses
- criminal media
- criminal organizations
- criminal partners
Related Posts
- 2025-10-27: World Stock Market Closing Indexes: Americas (Strong Gains). Europe, Middle East, & Africa (Moderate Gains). Asia Pacific (Strong Gains).
- Trump’s Divided America: Red States Get Disaster Aid. Blue States Get Nothing!
- Mike Johnson (T-LA4) Amps Up Trump’s Divisive Rhetoric Declaring Democrats As Legislative Terrorists After Threat Against Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY8) Thwarted