特朗普称其政府正与哈佛大学谈判,寻求10亿美元赔偿


更新于:2026年2月3日 / 美国东部时间上午10:09 / CBS/法新社

周一晚间,总统特朗普表示,其政府正就哈佛大学提起10亿美元的损害赔偿诉讼,这显然是对《纽约时报》一篇报道的回应,该报道称哈佛大学在与政府解决纠纷的持续谈判中已争取到一些让步。

“我们现在寻求10亿美元的损害赔偿,并且未来不想再与哈佛大学有任何关系。”特朗普先生在其Truth Social社交平台上写道。

他援引《纽约时报》的话称:“然而,大学内部一些人认为,哈佛大学别无选择,最终必须达成协议。政府多次试图削减研究经费,这将导致无法维持的危机。与许多主要研究型大学一样,哈佛大学的财务模式依赖联邦资金。”

《纽约时报》周一早些时候报道称,经过长期谈判,特朗普政府已放弃要求哈佛大学支付2亿美元和解金的诉求。

该报道援引“哈佛大学和与此事相关的特朗普政府官员,在匿名情况下描述私下对话”的消息源称,“特朗普政府官员最近几天表示,总统不再期望得到这笔款项。”

特朗普去年9月告诉记者,谈判人员已接近与哈佛大学达成5亿美元的和解协议,其中部分条款包括开设新贸易学校的计划。

“他们想搞一个复杂的职业培训概念,但我们认为这完全不充分,也不会成功,因此被否决了。”特朗普在周一的帖子中表示。

“这只是哈佛大学试图逃避超过5亿美元巨额现金和解的一种方式,考虑到他们犯下的严重且恶劣的非法行为,这个数字应该高得多。”他补充道,但未具体说明哈佛大学被指违反了哪些法律。

政府官员指责哈佛大学和其他高校宣扬所谓的“觉醒”意识形态,却未能在支持巴勒斯坦的抗议活动中充分保护犹太学生,并提出了一系列法律投诉,同时要求巨额赔偿。

今年9月,一名联邦法官裁定,特朗普政府因反犹主义指控冻结近20亿美元联邦拨款,这一行为违反了哈佛大学的第一修正案权利和联邦法律。

美国地区法官艾莉森·伯勒尔在9月的裁决中表示,冻结资金是“政府发起的对该校的猛攻”,其“更多是为了推行违反第一修正案的政府正统观念,而非其他任何事情,包括打击反犹主义”。

此外,去年特朗普禁止大多数国际学生赴美就读哈佛大学后,哈佛大学也单独起诉了联邦政府。伯勒尔后来做出有利于哈佛大学的裁决,阻止了该政策。司法部表示将提起上诉。

批评人士称这是政府对自由派大学的施压运动。哥伦比亚广播公司新闻已联系哈佛大学请求置评。

Trump says his administration is seeking $1 billion in talks with Harvard

Updated on: February 3, 2026 / 10:09 AM EST / CBS/AFP

President Trump said late Monday his administration is seeking $1 billion in damages from Harvard University in an apparent response to a New York Times report that said the school had won some concessions in ongoing negotiations to settle its dispute with the government.

“We are now seeking One Billion Dollars in damages, and want nothing further to do, into the future, with Harvard University,” Mr. Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform.

He quoted the Times as saying, “Some connected to the University, however, think Harvard has no option but to eventually cut a deal. The Administration has repeatedly attempted to cut off research grants, which would be an untenable crises. Like many major research universities, Harvard relies on federal funding for its financial model.”

The Times earlier on Monday reported Mr. Trump had dropped his administration’s demands for a settlement payout of $200 million from Harvard, after protracted talks.

Citing “Harvard and Trump officials briefed on the matter, speaking on the condition of anonymity to describe private conversations,” the Times said “Trump administration officials have indicated in recent days that the president no longer expects such a payment.”

Mr. Trump told reporters last September that negotiators were close to reaching a $500 million settlement with Harvard, with part of the deal including a plan to open new trade schools.

“They wanted to do a convoluted job training concept, but it was turned down in that it was wholly inadequate and would not have been, in our opinion, successful,” Mr. Trump said in his Monday post.

“It was merely a way of Harvard getting out of a large cash settlement of more than 500 Million Dollars, a number that should be much higher for the serious and heinous illegalities that they have committed,” he added, without specifying what laws Harvard had allegedly broken.

Administration officials have accused Harvard and other colleges of promoting so-called “woke” ideology while failing to sufficiently protect Jewish students during pro-Palestinian protests and filed a series of legal complaints along with demands for large payouts.

A federal judge ruled in September that the Trump administration violated Harvard University’s First Amendment rights and federal law when it froze nearly $2 billion in federal grants due to the antisemitism allegations.

In her ruling in September, U.S. District Judge Allison Burroughs said the funding freeze was part of a “government-initiated onslaught” against the school that was “much more about promoting a governmental orthodoxy in violation of the First Amendment than about anything else, including fighting antisemitism.”

Harvard also separately sued the federal government last year after Mr. Trump barred most international students from entering the U.S. to study at Harvard. Burroughs later ruled for Harvard, blocking that policy. The Justice Department said it will appeal.

Critics have called it a pressure campaign by the administration on liberal universities. CBS News has reached out to Harvard University for comment.

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