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Best of the Daily Blast: Trump Spirals into Crazed Fury after Harvard Humiliates Him Very Badly

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Original air date: February 2, 2026 With the Daily Blast on break this week, join us as we revisit some of our top episodes of 2026! After The New York Times reported that President T...

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"Very good." "Very good." "Very good, very good." "It's at 31st July." "This is the Daily Blast from the New Republic, produced and presented by the DSR network.

I'm your host, Greg Sargent." "After the New York Times reported that President Trump had backtracked on the major demand he'd made on Harvard University, he spiraled out of control in three wild tirades. He denied backtracking, demanded a correction from the Times, and levied a series of unhinged

new threats against Harvard. What's interesting here, though, is how panicked, ineffective, and humiliated Trump looked as he fired off crazed half-cocked threats at the University. Why don't more institutions grasp that standing firm in the face of Trump's bullying is the only way to diffuse it?

We're talking about all this with Ryan Eonos, a political scientist that Harvard who's been at the forefront of arguing that Harvard shouldn't cave. Ryan, nice to have you on. "Thanks, I'm very glad to be here."

So the Times reported that Harvard seems to have decided not to pay the $200 million

that the Trump administration was demanding over claims that it had mishandled anti-Semitism on campus. Apparently Harvard's leadership worried about the backlash to surrendering to Trump. They had to weigh that against the prospect of losing a lot of federal research grants, which the administration has been attempting to cut.

Ryan, can you walk us through how all this happened and bring us up to date?

Yeah, well look, I mean, it's a long convoluted story, but we have to remember that this

is all in the context of Trump's authoritarian attacks on civil institutions. And the universities are just one of those, just like other authoritarian's have done in another country's universities are primed target, and everybody knew from day one that Harvard would be one of those primed targets because the primed target, because of it's standing in American higher education.

And so, not long after Trump took office, he set off a series of demands to Harvard and went through, and illegally canceled contracts that had been awarded to Harvard with the promise that these would come back as ransom payments go with extortionary payments go, if Harvard aceted to a series of demands that essentially took away his independence as a university that were completely in a front to the system of higher education United

States, and then Harvard sued, sorry, led by the faculty and then joined by the University in one, and won these grants back after our research funding had been canceled. So supposedly, in the background, at least we hear from the New York Times that there's been a series of negotiations on going, and as you mentioned, one has reported that Harvard

was not going to pay out this sort of arbitrary yet very high sum of 200 million or 500 million

it's gone all over the place that Trump seems to have lost it for lack of a better term and gone on a ramp that now is a billion dollars, which I think just shows the arbitrariness of this whole situation. Well, Trump, indeed, exploded in fury at this news, he claimed on truth social that the Times has been fed a lot of nonsense by strongly anti-Semitic Harvard.

He said, quote, "We are now seeking one billion dollars in damages," he also said, this should be a criminal not civil event. So Ryan, it's very clear that he's deeply humiliated by the suggestion that he might backtrack, so he seems to be saying that the Justice Department should investigate Harvard criminally in some way and that the administration won't back off unless Harvard hands

over a billion dollars. Can you make any sense of this new set of threats?

Well, I think the only way to make sense of it is not from a legal perspective, or in many

ways even a political perspective, but to put it in the perspective of Trump trying to assert authoritarian control. What he cares about is control. He cares about winning because he wants to take control of civil institutions. And so all he really wants to signal is that he's caused Harvard to bend to its well.

There's a dollar amount, doesn't matter. I don't think he even really knows what he's talking about when he says that Harvard could be subject to criminal charges. He says it's about anybody that defies him, he says it's about Democrats, he says it's about

Universities, he sends us about he says it's about media organizations and it...

he extends the federal government as a tool of his authoritarian tactics not as a matter of justice like the Justice Department is actually supposed to operate. Well, it's worth pointing out that if you take the two things together, he's essentially

saying we will criminally investigate you unless you hand a billion dollars over to causes

that I value, I'm not sure that that's the way it's supposed to work, is it right?

No, I mean, this is extortion and this is what we need to call that, right? I mean, people talk about negotiations and deals and things like that and that's extortion. And we would call this extortion if it was a guy on the street putting me gunned your head and saying give me a billion dollars or, you know, I'm going to call the trigger. We know what that is.

Or I'm going to break your knuckles in the back room, but this is the federal government doing the same thing and when we put it in those terms, which is clearly what they're doing, it shows just how outrageous and how against any kind of system of law this is. It's absolutely extortion and to your point about language like deals, I want to underscore

what you're saying there, which is that media organizations have often covered this by

saying something like Trump is trying to make a deal with Harvard or Trump is trying to make a deal with whatever institution he's extorting. And that actually adopts the administration's framing of it and sanitize what he's actually doing yet this sort of language has been ubiquitous. It's a real problem, I think.

Oh, I totally agree. And look, I mean, if I could, you know, go in and rewrite every headline in the New York

Times really like to because they adopt this language and I think they should no matter.

But I don't even entirely blame the New York Times because I think what this shows in some ways is that in a democracy, which the United States has been, we are not used to having a government doing this and we don't know what other language to use. You know, we are used to assuming that our government's operate in a sort of a good faith or at least their subject to electoral pressures where they try to stay within the balance

of the law, and so we assume that what governments are doing is something that's going to be normal and responsive somewhat to citizenry. And now we're met with this president that is operating as an authoritarian. There's no doubt about that. That's exactly what he's doing.

And so we kind of use this old language, it isn't really suitable for this situation. Yes, well, let's just go into the situation a little more.

When you explain the role of research grants here, why they're so essential to Harvard's

flourishing and how seriously Harvard has to take the prospect of losing them, we've seen Harvard fight back on that front and Harvard has won at least temporarily. That's where we are, right? But it's still a looming threat. Can you talk about why it matters?

Oh, yeah, it's definitely a looming threat and it's not even clear that it will ever go away as long as an administration can make arbitrary decisions like this outside the rule of law.

And the reason this matters, and I think this is a really important question I'm glad

you asked Greg, is because American universities are not just Harvard, one way that we fund this research, which is the world leading research, is through contracts we get with the federal government. And this important to use that term, because these are not grants in the way someone might think of it.

Like, you know, a grant you give to somebody to, you know, that because they want an art contest or something like that, where we think about that, these are contracts where people put in competitive bids to further the interests of the United States as prescribed by law from Congress. And Harvard, whatever university has these, one a competitive, one a competitive grant to get

it, and then enter into a contract to deliver these research projects that would further the interests of the United States. In the US government, or the US government made the decision that Harvard won the competitive bidding process, too, I want to underscore your point here, which is, which is that when the US government enters into a contract with Harvard to conduct some research, it's doing

so because it has undergone theoretically a rigorous process and determined that doing this contract would be in the interests of the United States. It's not something that's handed to Harvard for nothing. That's absolutely right, and it's, it's vetted by experts that are previously vetted by the US government and, you know, people apply from across the country, sometimes isn't

across the world. And these are, as you said, grants around things that are in the interests of the United States, most of these come out of medical research, but do things like fight cancer or another, and infectious diseases, a lot of them are related to national defense when it comes to things that serve our military, a lot of them are things that are aimed at trying to

Help the American population generally when it comes to things like fighting ...

like that.

And so these were things that were prescribed by law to be things that the United States

government should be funding because it's in our best interest for the American people. And Trump, not for any particular, you know, policy-oriented reason, but similarly to punish what he perceived as this political enemies, came and said, we're going to take these away from Harvard. And so, you know, we can't underscore enough what he's actually doing is taking away research

who was supposed to be done in the best interest of the American people, but essentially Harvard, like anywhere else, is therefore unable to do this very expensive research that was undertaking not for its own good, really, but because there's professors and other researchers here who's main motivation is to produce research that makes America society better and healthier and safer.

Just as a quick aside, I think this is really rooted in Trump's utter inability to have

any conception of something called the public interest to him, all he's doing is hurting

Harvard in his head, right? And so, it does hurt Harvard to lose these federal grants because Harvard relies on them for, you know, the way it does business and survives us in institution and flourishes in institution, but Trump is incapable of saying to himself, wait a minute, do we want this contract to continue because it's in the interest of the American people or not?

Everything is just a tool or a weapon to reward friends and punish enemies. That's really the essence of this. Oh, of course. And this is to use this term again because it's a hundred percent appropriate. This is the way authoritarian is operate.

They can't separate the national interest from their own interests. They think they are this thing and Trump is shown over and over again, he's incapable of separating these things. He's willing to burn down any institution, beat our elections, beat free speech, be our trust in government in order to serve his own ends.

And that includes research that better as the American people. I mean, look, you know, the Harvard School of Public Health public health, think about that. You know, there's not any greater public good than that is how to undergo a radical downsizing or they're losing faculty, they're losing their ability to research, they're losing their

belly to serve the public interest because Donald Trump thinks it's something he wants to target in a political game and he's hurting the American people, but he thinks it's in his best interest. I want to highlight a really interesting nugget in the times it's reporting. It says that Trump's cratering standing with the public is now making Harvard leaders

more inclined to refuse the cave to Trump because if they did that now, they'd face backlash for easing the pressure on him when he's vulnerable. Ryan, that seems to capture the basic collected action problem here. It's not until Trump has been severely weakened that Harvard leaders came to this realization, but they should have realized that a little sooner or no.

I mean, in other words, if more institutions had realized that if they all stood up to Trump, it would weaken him further, which would in turn make it easier to resist his bullying, we'd be better off now. Yeah, look, 100% because this underscores a collective action problem that's been here from the beginning.

And a lot of us have said that Harvard needed to stand up and push back. And to their credit, the Harvard administration did, they did stand up and push back. But in the background, there's been this idea that some people in Harvard leadership wanted

to cut a deal with the Trump administration, and maybe that was the best way out, maybe

that was a way to move things forward. But, you know, I'll tell you, you know, who Harvard should owe a debt of gratitude to is the people of Minneapolis and Minnesota more largely that have really stood up and show in just how much Trump's approval will crater when people actually push back against it. And they've made him politically.

He's been, his own worst enemy, he's getting politically weaker as he goes, because this is what authoritarianists do, they give in their own way, but every institution that stands up and pushed back, pushes back enables that. And that's what we've seen from the ones that actually have, including Harvard. Well, can you explain some of the internal politics at Harvard to us?

There seems to be a camp there, as you said, that wanted Harvard to surrender to Trump's,

you know, $200 million extortion demand.

But there's also this group of professors, I guess, here in this camp, who specialize in threats to democracy and they see any cave like this is having much broader societal ramifications for our slide into authoritarianism. Can you talk about that divided Harvard? You're absolutely right that there is a group of professors that really are feeling the

pain of what's going on and want to say that the best and easiest route is to just normalize things.

And look, that's what authoritarianists do is they apply pain and they want to normalize things.

And so it's hard to blame somebody, that's for example, is being essentially kidnapped or

Had some may hold ransom by authoritarian, and that's what a lot of Harvard p...

are feeling right now.

They can't move forward to their research because of what Trump is doing.

But a lot of us are looking at the broader picture, or people like political scientists,

and other people that have looked at what happens when countries lose their democracy. And they say, this is exactly what we're facing. There is no doubt about it. And we are facing a situation where if we don't stand up now, then things are going to just keep getting worse and we're going to keep sliding into authoritarianism.

We're already there. And the question is whether we can allow this anti-democratic regime a Donald Trump to consolidate or not. So when we look at the larger picture, all of this research and these things we want to do are tied up in our system of free government.

They're tied up because we are a place where researchers want to be. They're tied up where people have free expression.

They're tied up in the idea that people can express free ideas.

And that's frankly what has made the American higher education system, the envy of the world. There's no doubt that we lead in that. And it's tied up in our system of free government. It's things do not flourish in places where people don't want to go and do research

freely. And so if we don't look at that in the bigger picture, eventually that all goes away, no matter what kind of short-term extortion or ransom we're going to pay. Why don't these other camps at Harvard, the ones that aren't as preoccupied with the largest societal ramifications of all this?

Why aren't they aware of what you're saying? How do they respond when you bring this kind of thing up, when your camp brings this kind of thing up?

Well, I think part of it is the collective action problem that we've noted where everybody

thinks maybe it's some of the else's job to push back and things will go back to normal. And of course, when that happens, eventually we all lose, right? We all put our head in the sand and we put them back up or democracy is gone. But I think it's the easy human ability to push things off or to rationalize things away. They may be this isn't so bad.

But I also think, and I think this is a problem that the American public is just waking up to. No matter Harvard professor is nobody else, in many ways, doesn't matter how educated you are.

It's hard for us to see the threats that we're facing because we always assumed that these

were things that happened in other countries, you know, America was the democracy, where the oldest democracy in the world. And in many ways, those of us that are alive now do the most fully democratic period of our democracy. And so it's hard for us to imagine a situation where when somebody like me says no, our democracy

is coming apart. In many ways, it's already come apart, and so matter whether we can take it back to its full state or not, they think that's hyperbole, because they're basing it somewhat rationally on the whole history they've seen behind things. And what they need to do is think about it more holistically and realize that, yeah, we are

now in a system of competitive authoritarianism, and it's just about whether we manage to take our democracy back from that. Well, I'll tell you, it's really puzzling to me that this camps still persist in that set of views because if you look at the broader picture here, Harvard has been winning some of the skirmishes in this war by fighting back.

They have their federal funding at least for now, Trump's efforts to prevent international students from enrolling hasn't penned out, again, at least for now. Harvard President Alan Garber has seen kind of widely as a real fighter for academic freedom and democracy, and he's getting fed it for that. Meanwhile, universities that have cave to Trump were only rewarded by a renewed effort

by Trump to extort more from them.

So clearly, the lesson is that standing up to Trump is the only way.

So to close this out, Ryan, what happens now does Harvard hang tough and does Harvard end up winning? Look, I think if they do hang tough, they're going to win. The courts are back against Trump. I do.

The courts are pushing back against Trump. The American people are pushing back against Trump. He is politically weak and institutions that actually push back are winning against him. So if Harvard has the willpower to stand up and to do was right, then I think it will absolutely win in the long run.

It sure seems that way to me and the alternative is just unthinkable. Ryan, you know, thanks so much for coming on, man. I really hope Harvard's leaders are listening to you. So do I. Thank you very much.

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