WASHINGTON — Many colleges accused of tolerating antisemitism on their campuses have been settling with federal civil rights investigators in the weeks before the inauguration of President-elect Donald Trump, who urged a tougher response to campus protests against the war in Gaza.
By settling with the Education Department, the schools close the cases against them as long as they meet the terms of the agreements, which mostly have required training, policy updates and reviews of past complaints.
But many colleges at the center of the highest-profile cases — including Columbia and Cornell — face investigations that remain unresolved and could run the risk of harsher penalties after Trump takes office. Trump has not said what he would like to see come of the investigations, but he has threatened to revoke federal money for schools that fall short of his demands.
''Colleges will and must end the antisemitic propaganda or they will lose their accreditation and federal support,'' Trump said in a virtual address to Jewish donors in September. ''No money will go to them if they don't.''
Settlements with the Education Department's civil rights branch have piled up in recent weeks with the University of Washington, the University of California, Johns Hopkins, Rutgers and the University of Cincinnati. Those follow other voluntary agreements signed by Brown and Temple universities, along with the University of Michigan.
University presidents are ''desperate'' to enter agreements now ''because Donald Trump is coming and there'll be hell to pay if they don't,'' said Kenneth Marcus, who led the Education Department's Office for Civil Rights during Trump's first term and now leads the Brandeis Center, a Jewish civil rights nonprofit.
''They don't want their cases to still be pending on the docket when the new administration takes office,'' he said. ''They understand that the price of settlement is about to increase.''
The flurry of recent deals has drawn outrage from Republicans in Congress who say the Biden administration is letting colleges off the hook.