SAN FRANCISCO (AP) 鈥 The president of the University of California this week reiterated that student governments are prohibited from financial boycotts of companies associated with any particular country, including Israel, as the Trump administration continues its probe of alleged antisemitism on college campuses.
Michael Drake did not mention Israel by name, but he did single out student governments in a letter he sent to chancellors of the university system. He said that while freedom of speech and inquiry are core commitments of the university, its policies also require that financial decisions be grounded in sound business practices, such as competitive bidding.
"This principle also applies to student governments," he wrote. 鈥淎ctions by University entities to implement boycotts of companies based on their association with a particular country would not align with these sound business practices.鈥
UC spokesperson Rachel Zaentz said in a statement that the letter is in keeping with the university's opposition to financial boycotts of companies associated with a particular country.
鈥淲hile our community members have the right to express their viewpoints, financial boycotts are inconsistent with , academic freedom and the free exchange of ideas,鈥 she said. 鈥
College campuses exploded with pro-Palestinian protests in the wake of , including a particularly at the University of California, Los Angeles last year. At the start of his term this year, President Donald Trump launched , including the University of California, Berkeley.
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and National Science Foundation are requiring research grantees to certify they will not engage in boycotts of Israel or promote diversity, inclusion and equity or risk federal funding.
The California chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations said Drake's letter is yet another example of the university system's attempts to silence student and faculty support of Palestinian human rights.
鈥淚t sends a chilling message that financial interests and political pressure outweigh free expression and moral responsibility to take a stand against a foreign nation committing a genocide,鈥 said Oussama Mokeddem, the group's government affairs director.
The UC Student Association, which represents students across the campuses, did not immediately respond to a request for comment. But its president, Aditi Hariharan, told the Los Angeles Times that she disagreed with the ban.
鈥淪tudents already have little influence on how the university works, and student government is one of the few places where they can really get involved and have their voices heard,鈥 she said in an interview before the letter was released.
The Associated Press