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The Endowment Question: Trump’s Plan Reaches for Universities’ Private Wealth

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One of the most audacious and legally questionable elements of the Trump administration’s university “compact” is its reported attempt to dictate how schools must spend their own private endowments. This move extends federal control beyond the realm of public funds and into the private wealth of institutions, a move that critics see as a shocking overreach and a potential violation of contract law.

Endowments are private funds, built over generations from donations by alumni and philanthropists. They are governed by strict legal agreements and managed by independent boards of trustees with a fiduciary duty to uphold the donors’ intent. The idea that the federal government could override these arrangements and command how this money is spent is a radical departure from established legal and financial norms.

This demand reveals the depth of the administration’s desire for control. It is not content with leveraging the federal grants it provides; it wants to influence the spending of every dollar the university has. This could be used to force universities to fund initiatives favored by the administration or to defund those it opposes, effectively co-opting the institution’s entire financial base for its political project.

The legal challenges to such a demand would be immense. Universities would likely argue that it violates their rights as private corporations and interferes with their contractual obligations to donors. This part of the compact may be its most vulnerable point, an overreach so extreme that it could be easily struck down in court.

However, the inclusion of this demand, whether legally enforceable or not, sends a powerful message. It signals that in the administration’s view, no aspect of a university that receives federal funding—not even its private assets—is off-limits to government control. It is a clear statement of intent to achieve total dominance over the institutional life of American higher education.

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