The Democratic Party’s primary fundraising platform helped facilitate donations to the anti-Israel encampment at Michigan State University. ActBlue is set to receive a 3.95 percent cut of those donations, according to its stated policies.
One of the most outspoken supporters of the encampment at Columbia University, classics professor Joseph Howley, is leading a review of the required humanities curriculum for all Columbia undergraduates.
Columbia University president Minouche Shafik again set a deadline for unsanctioned student protesters to vacate their "Gaza Solidarity" encampment. Hours after that deadline passed, the encampment still stands.
The anti-Israel protesters at Columbia University created a "lost and found" group chat to facilitate the return of misplaced items at the sprawling "Gaza solidarity" encampment on campus, the Washington Free Beacon has learned. We've been scrolling through the messages all day, laughing our asses off at some of these posts. Here are a few of the most absurd examples we found:
During his confirmation hearing, embattled Biden judicial nominee Adeel Mangi told senators that he left the board of an anti-Israel think tank because it was not sufficiently "productive."
Columbia University humanities professor Bruce Robbins said student protesters at the school have not called for the "destruction of civilian lives"—just two days after a video surfaced showing a student protest leader calling for the death of "Zionists."
The Biden administration's civil rights chief Kristen Clarke is slated to give the commencement address at Columbia Law School, amid a scandal over surging anti-Semitism at the university.
President Joe Biden's brother Jim worked with Qatari government officials to secure funding for his health care ventures in the United States, according to testimony from his former business partner that Politico reported on Sunday.
The U.S. military's cost estimate to build a pier off Gaza to deliver humanitarian aid has risen to $320 million, a U.S. defense official and a source familiar with the matter told Reuters.
MANHATTAN—For days, Columbia University president Minouche Shafik declined to clear out the unsanctioned "Gaza Solidarity" encampment in favor of negotiations with student protest leaders. Now, she says those negotiations brought no agreement and is asking students to "voluntarily" leave the encampment.
Today, Joe Biden’s 1976 Africa junket is best remembered as the scene for the president’s discredited claim that he was arrested "on the streets of Soweto" in apartheid South Africa when trying to see civil rights leader Nelson Mandela. At the time, though, the trip generated scrutiny for another reason—Biden’s use of federal funds, and the decision to have his brother tag along in lieu of staff.
Nearly two weeks ago, Columbia University president Minouche Shafik assured members of Congress that an anti-Semitic professor had been terminated. That professor, Mohamed Abdou, was "grading his students' papers" before the end of the semester and would "never teach at Columbia again," Shafik said.