Senators and presidents at the Senate HELP Committee hearing debated whether diversity, equity and inclusion programs and campus political culture are weakening public trust in higher education and discussed recent antisemitism concerns at some institutions.
Senator Bill Cassidy opened the hearing by saying the higher education system "has lost its purpose" in some respects and criticized diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) spending and campus political polarization, noting that some reports show institutions spend on administrative staff to promote DEI. Cassidy told witnesses that Harvard University declined the committee's invitation to testify about recent antisemitism reports.
Michael Lindsey, president of Taylor University, told the committee that many campuses have "grown rich but rudderless" and that his Christian liberal‑arts institution has sought to combine moral formation with student development. "American higher education has lost the trust of the people it's intended to serve," Lindsey said. He described Taylor's emphasis on shared foundational documents, expanded teaching‑learning centers and community investment, including a local revitalization initiative he said would generate housing, trails and business development in Taylor's hometown.
Why it matters: Senators from both parties raised campus safety and freedom‑of‑expression questions amid high‑profile incidents of antisemitism at multiple colleges. Witnesses representing faith‑based and historically Black institutions urged policies that preserve access while ensuring campuses protect students and demonstrate results in training and employment.
Discussion vs. decision: The session recorded witness testimony and senator questions without any formal committee action. Senators emphasized differing views on admissions standards and mission‑driven institutional approaches and asked witnesses how to balance pluralism, academic freedom and institutional values.