The standoff between the Trump administration and the University of California, Los Angeles just hit unprecedented levels. A White House official confirmed that the administration is demanding a staggering $1 billion settlement from UCLA after the Department of Justice accused the university of antisemitism and other civil rights violations.
This makes UCLA the first public university to face a sweeping federal funding freeze over these types of allegations. The Trump administration has already struck multimillion-dollar deals with elite private colleges like Brown University ($50 million) and Columbia University ($221 million), and is currently battling Harvard for an even larger payout.
At UCLA, the trouble stems from 2024’s turbulent protests over the Israel-Hamas war. When counterprotesters clashed with demonstrators, chaos erupted—traffic cones were thrown, pepper spray filled the air, and more than a dozen people were injured before police broke it up. The next day, over 200 protesters were arrested. Jewish students later reported being blocked from classes by pro-Palestinian encampments.
The DOJ says UCLA “acted with deliberate indifference” and violated federal civil rights laws, leading to the suspension of $584 million in federal grants. UCLA has already paid $6 million in a separate settlement involving Jewish students and a professor, and pledged millions more to antisemitism prevention initiatives.
UC President James B. Milliken says the proposed $1 billion fine would “devastate” California’s top public university system, while Governor Gavin Newsom accuses Trump of using federal power to target political opponents. Higher education leaders also suggest the move is politically motivated, given Newsom’s outspoken criticism of the president.
The administration has framed these settlements as reforming universities, as it claims are dominated by liberalism and discriminatory diversity programs. But with the dollar amounts skyrocketing, the fight between Trump and California’s flagship university is looking less like a policy dispute—and more like a political showdown.
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