Dani Rodrik
CAMBRIDGE
– The University of Virginia recently faced a storm of protest after
its Miller Center of Public Affairs appointed President Donald Trump’s
former Director of Legislative Affairs, Marc Short, to a one-year
position as Senior Fellow. Two faculty members severed ties with the center, and a petition
to reverse the decision has gathered nearly 4,000 signatures. A similar
protest erupted at my home institution last year, when Corey
Lewandowski, a one-time campaign manager for Trump, was appointed a fellow at Harvard’s Institute of Politics.
The Trump
administration confronts universities with a serious dilemma. On one
hand, universities must be open to diverse viewpoints, including those
that conflict with mainstream opinion or may seem threatening to
specific groups. Students and faculty who share Trump’s viewpoint should
be free to speak without censorship. Universities must remain fora for
free inquiry and debate. Moreover, schools and institutes of public
affairs must offer student and faculty opportunities to engage with the
policymakers of the day.
On the other hand,
there is the danger of normalizing and legitimizing what can only be
described as an odious presidency. Trump violates on a daily basis the
norms on which liberal democracy rests. He undermines freedom of the
media and independence of the judiciary, upholds racism and
sectarianism, and promotes prejudice. He blithely utters one falsehood
after another.
Those who serve with
him are necessarily tainted by the experience. Trump’s close associates
and political appointees are his enablers – regardless of their personal
merits and how much they try to disassociate themselves from Trump’s
utterances. Qualities like “intelligence,” “effectiveness,” “integrity,”
and “collegiality” – words used
by Miller Center Director William J. Antholis to justify Short’s
appointment – have little to commend them when they are deployed to
advance an illiberal political agenda.
The stain extends
beyond political operatives and covers economic policymakers as well.
Trump’s cabinet members and high-level appointees share collective
responsibility for propping up a shameful presidency. They deserve
opprobrium not merely because they hold cranky views on, say, the trade
deficit or economic relations with China, but also, and more
importantly, because their continued service makes them fully complicit
in Trump’s behavior.
Academic institutions
must therefore tread a narrow path. They cannot turn their backs on
Trump and his entourage, nor ignore their views. Otherwise, they would
be stifling debate. This would run counter to what universities stand
for. As a pragmatic matter, it would also backfire, by giving the Trump
camp another opportunity to demonize the “liberal elite.”
But clear rules of engagement are necessary. The most important principle to uphold is the distinction between hearing someone and honoring someone. Trump’s immediate circle and senior appointees should be welcome for discussion and debate. They should be treated in a civil manner when they show up. But they should not be accorded the degree of respect or deference that their seniority and government positions would normally merit. We do not, after all, have a normal administration that can be served honorably.
This means no
honorific titles (fellow, senior fellow), no named lectures, no keynote
speeches headlining conferences or events. While individual faculty
members and student groups should be free to invite Trump appointees to
speak on campus, as a rule such invitations should not be issued by
senior university officers. And lectures and presentations should always
provide an opportunity for vigorous questioning and debate.
Without two-way
interaction, there is no learning or understanding; there is only
preaching. Administration officials who simply want to make a statement
and escape searching interrogation should not be welcome.
Students and faculty
who sympathize with Trump may perceive such practices as discriminatory.
But there is no conflict between encouraging free speech and exchange
of views, which these rules are meant to support, and the university
making its own values clear.
Like other
organizations, universities have the right to determine their practices
in accordance with their values. These practices may diverge from what
specific subgroups within them would like to see, either because there
are contending values or because there are differences on the
practicalities of how to realize them.
For example, some
students may believe that requirements for a certain course of study are
too stringent or that examinations are a waste of time. Universities
allow free debate about such matters. But they reserve the right to set
the rules on concentration requirements and exams. In doing so, they
send an important signal to the rest of society about their teaching
philosophy and pedagogical values.
Allowing full debate of Trumpism
while refusing to honor it would be no different.
Universities should
uphold both free inquiry and the values of liberal democracy. The first
calls for unhindered exchange and interaction with Trumpist views. The
second requires that the engagement be carefully calibrated, with not
even a semblance of honor or recognition bestowed on those serving an
administration that so grossly violates liberal democratic norms.
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