CUPE 3903 Stewards’ Council, CUPE 3903 Executive Committee, YUFA Race Equity Caucus, and CERREC Condemn US Government Attacks on Grad Student Activists and Academic Freedom at American Universities

CUPE 3903 Stewards’ Council, CUPE 3903 Executive Committee, York University Faculty Association Race Equity Caucus, and Glendon’s Race Equity Caucus (CERREC) strongly condemn the recent attacks by the US federal government on the right to protest, independent faculty governance, and academic freedom in higher education; we urge the administration of York University to publicly denounce this overreach. The York University administration must commit to protecting its students and faculty. Almost 100 postsecondary institutions are under investigation for their programs that are associated with diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives—which are being systemically policed across many states—or for “illegal protests” associated with pro-Palestine organizing. 

In particular, Columbia University is a notable recent example of those universities that have been targeted due to their role in the global student encampment movement last year. This growing climate of repression has clear implications for our own campuses, considering York University’s appalling destruction of the York Popular University for Palestine encampment in summer 2024.

Columbia has long been a site of student struggle and resistance, dating back to April 1968 and May 1972, where students organized sit-ins in protest of US participation in the Vietnam War. In the Spring of 1985, students once again took over Hamilton Hall, demanding the university divest from investments held in apartheid South Africa. In the fall of that year, the university agreed to student demands. Considering this history, it is not surprising that Columbia is the current target of such harsh state repression.

On Friday, March 7, 2025, the Federal Task Force to Combat Antisemitism announced the cancellation of $400 million in federal grants to Columbia. On March 8, Mahmoud Khalil, a green-card holding graduate student and activist, was arrested by ICE at his university residence in front of his pregnant wife, and on April 11th, a Louisiana immigration judge ruled that the federal government’s deportation case against Khalil can proceed. Additionally, on March 21, the university administration announced that it would capitulate to the Trump administration’s demands, some of which include: forcing students to disclose their identities if they wear face masks on campus, and removing ‘Regional Studies’ programs from the purview of faculty, and placing them in the portfolio of a newly appointed Senior Vice Provost. Some of these programs include the Center for Palestine Studies, the Institute for Israel and Jewish Studies, and Middle Eastern, South Asian and African Studies. In the midst of global calls for academic boycotts of Israeli universities by Palestinian civil society, the administration has agreed to advance Columbia’s Tel Aviv Center. This type of escalating repression that political activists are facing on our campuses is not exclusive to Columbia or to American universities. Here at York, we are seeing similar patterns with increasing surveillance, police presence, and censoring of activist students and faculty.

With the spread of far-right ideologies across Canada over the past several years, we—as graduate students, unionized workers, contract, and full-time faculty—are not immune to the pressures afflicting our colleagues in the United States. In particular, the precarity that contract-based academic workers face here and abroad puts them at greater risk when they speak out for justice. In addition, here at York, we have already seen that many of our most crucial and critical programs have had their Fall 2025 enrolments suspended. As this repression escalates, we need to be firm in advocating for York University as a sanctuary for critically, creatively engaged thought and action to flourish.

As students and workers, we know that our coordination and community is a crucial source of support, but we also expect and demand more from our University administrators in these unstable times. The CUPE 3903 Stewards’ Council, the CUPE 3903 Executive Committee, YUFA Race Equity Caucus, and CERREC call upon York University President Rhonda Lenton and the Board of Governors to safeguard migrant scholars and join us as we denounce these attacks on freedom of speech, academic freedom, and independent governance in the university.

Click here for a PDF version of this statement.

The CUPE 3903 Units 1, 2, & 3 Bargaining Team met again yesterday (March 10) for the second of five planned meetings in March. The...

The Writing Centre is facing major cuts as part of the broader budget reductions and restructuring initiatives at York, with reports indicating that nearly all...

For CUPE 3903 members who are feeling impacted by ongoing war and instability around the world, please know that you have access to paid leaves...

Meeting Summary  On March 3, the Units 1, 2, & 3 Bargaining Team held the first of five planned meetings in March. All voting members of the Bargaining Team were in attendance. Most of the...

The Ways and Means Fund webpage has now been updated with all the details about the new pilot project, approved by the membership at February’s...

Further by-elections for the Units 1, 2, & 3 Bargaining Team (BT) will be opened at the March 19 Annual General Meeting (AGM). These by-elections are for...

The CUPE 3903 JHSC representatives are gauging interest for member participation in Health & Safety related training conducted by CUPE National. This training is offered...

The BIPOC Caucus is holding elections for the position of Chair. Nominations are open from now until March 15 at 10 AM. Interested members who...

Nominations are open for two (2) Executive positions of the Trans Feminist Action Caucus as well as three (3) positions on the Trans Fund Committee,...

Skip to content