Public higher education unions rallied Tuesday in Boston against the Trump administration’s crackdown on colleges and universities.
Massachusetts receives more federal research funding per capita than any other state and proposed spending cuts put local jobs at risk.
Levin Kim, national chair of Higher Education Labor United, called the cuts “reckless,” and said they threaten biomedical innovations and lifesaving treatments.
“These cuts are going to have impacts for generations of scientists to come,” Kim pointed out. “It’s not like we can just turn everything back on, and so that’s why we believe that it’s really crucial to stop these cuts.”
Union members gathered at the JFK Federal Building in Boston, joining with others at more than 50 locations nationwide. Last week, a federal judge permanently blocked the White House from limiting funding to the National Institutes of Health, which supports academic research. An appeal is likely.
The Trump administration has already revoked the visas of more than two dozen students in the state. School officials worry the recent arrest of a Tufts University student by masked immigration agents could make other foreign students reconsider studying in the U.S.
Joe Ramsey, senior lecturer at the University of Massachusetts-Boston, said attacks on students and higher education threaten the pursuit of knowledge and truth.
“The injury being done to our most vulnerable international immigrant students and workers right now is an injury to all of us; our ability to know the world so that we can change it and engage it meaningfully,” Ramsey contended.
Ramsey added schools cannot teach students to think critically and be citizens of the world if they cannot speak their own minds on campus. More than 80,000 international students currently reside in Massachusetts.