Chomsky's Iconic 2016 Assessment of Trump
In late 2016, shortly after Donald Trump's surprising election victory, renowned linguist, philosopher, and MIT Institute Professor Emeritus Noam Chomsky delivered a stark assessment during an Al Jazeera's UpFront special interview. He described Trump as 'off the spectrum,' noting, 'There's never been anything like him in hundreds of years. He's basically a showman.' This phrase captured the unprecedented nature of Trump's political style—a blend of entertainment, unpredictability, and authoritarian tendencies that Chomsky warned could destabilize American institutions, including higher education.
Chomsky, who has spent over six decades at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), influencing generations of scholars in linguistics, cognitive science, and political theory, positioned his critique from a deep well of historical and analytical expertise. His comments resonated in academic circles, where concerns about demagoguery and its threats to intellectual freedom were already simmering.
Evolution of Chomsky's Critiques Through Trump's First Term
Over the ensuing years, Chomsky's views on Trump intensified. By 2020, he labeled Trump 'the worst criminal in human history,' citing environmental destruction, nuclear risks, and assaults on democratic norms. During Trump's first presidency (2017-2021), universities faced early challenges: travel bans affecting international students, scrutiny of campus speech, and cuts to research funding. Chomsky highlighted how Trump's 'showman' persona distracted from policy regressions, such as weakening protections for academic research on climate change.
Academics at institutions like Harvard and UC Berkeley voiced similar alarms, forming coalitions to defend tenure and free inquiry. Chomsky's analyses, often shared in interviews and books like 'Who Rules the World?', underscored how Trump's unpredictability eroded trust in expert institutions, a theme now acutely relevant to higher education.
Trump's Second Term: A Renewed Assault on Higher Education
Following Trump's 2024 reelection, his administration escalated actions against US universities, framing them as bastions of 'woke' ideology. From Inauguration Day 2025, executive orders targeted federal grants, transgender policies, immigration, DEI initiatives, and pro-Palestinian activism. This 'flooding the zone' strategy—issuing overwhelming volumes of probes and cuts—mirrors tactics used by authoritarians to induce compliance.
Chomsky's early warning of Trump's 'off the spectrum' nature seems prophetic, as policies reveal a pattern of coercion. Universities, reliant on $311 billion in state/local spending (2021 figures) and $60 billion in federal research funds (2023), face existential threats.
Federal Funding Freezes and Research Disruptions
The Trump 2.0 administration proposed a 21% cut to federal scientific research in FY2026, slashing NSF to $3.9 billion (under half of 2025) and NIH to $27.9 billion (40% less). A 15% cap on indirect research costs was introduced by NIH, NSF, DOE, and DOD but blocked by courts. These moves threaten labs at public and private universities, delaying breakthroughs in medicine, AI, and climate science.
For example, MIT—Chomsky's longtime home—saw federal grants frozen amid broader scrutiny. Faculty report stalled projects, with graduate students facing uncertain futures. Higher Ed Dive's analysis documents over $ billions in jeopardy.
- Billions in grants paused pending 'loyalty' reviews.
- International collaborations halted due to visa issues.
- Shift to private funding raises equity concerns for under-resourced institutions.
The Controversial 'Compact for Academic Excellence'
In October 2025, the administration offered nine elite universities—including MIT, Harvard, and Princeton—a 'compact' for preferential funding. It demanded DEI freezes through 2028, admissions transparency, and ideological pledges. Most rejected it, with MIT President Sally Kornbluth calling it an overreach on academic autonomy.
Six schools (Brown, Columbia, etc.) settled probes, paying millions (e.g., Columbia's $221M) and altering policies. Critics liken this to loyalty oaths, echoing Chomsky's fears of authoritarian showmanship undermining scholarly independence. AAUP warns of 'existential terror' for non-compliant institutions.
Photo by Martin Sanchez on Unsplash
Visa Revocations and the International Student Crisis
Over 8,000 student visas were revoked in 2025, with hundreds of statuses canceled—many tied to Israel-Gaza speech. Cases like Turkish PhD student Rumeysa Öztürk's detention highlight risks for outspoken scholars. International students, comprising 30% of STEM grad programs, are vital to US innovation.
Universities like Columbia sued, arguing First Amendment violations. Enrollment drops could cost billions, per NAFSA estimates, exacerbating labor shortages in academia.
DEI Probes and Threats to Academic Freedom
150+ investigations targeted Title VI (antisemitism), race-based aid (51 colleges), and trans policies. Public confidence in higher ed fell from 57% (2015) to 36% (2024), fueling GOP support for reforms.
| Issue | Actions Taken | Impacts |
|---|---|---|
| DEI Programs | Bans, probes | Policy reversals at 6 schools |
| Antisemitism Claims | Title VI suits | $400M Columbia cut |
| Research Costs | 15% cap proposal | Court blocks, ongoing delays |
Case Studies: Elite Universities Under Siege
Harvard sued over visa curbs; Columbia paid $221M to settle, adding trainings. MIT rejected the compact, risking funds despite Chomsky's legacy there. Public universities like UMass rallied community support, contrasting elite 'anticipatory obedience.'
Faculty unions, via AAUP and HELU, push for public funding expansion and governance reform. Johns Hopkins' Ronald Daniels notes universities 'unnerve authoritarians' by prioritizing inquiry over power.
Faculty Mobilization and AAUP's Stance
The American Association of University Professors (AAUP) decries the 'war on higher education,' urging democratization of governance. Labor coalitions like HELU advocate free access, equitable labor, against privatization. Over 1,300 Education Dept. staff cuts signal dismantling, offloading to states/agencies.
- Union drives at 100+ campuses.
- Calls for tenure protections.
- Political education for faculty as workers.
Declining Public Trust: A Deeper Crisis
Gallup polls show trust erosion, with self-censorship rampant (72% students). Trump's moves exploit this, but AAUP argues universities must rebuild via open discourse, not retreat. New models like University of Austin emphasize viewpoint diversity.
Chomsky's call to resist distraction aligns: focus on power structures, not spectacle.
Photo by James Yarema on Unsplash
Future Outlook and Actionable Insights for Academics
With FY2026 budgets pending, universities face sustained pressure. Projections: 10-20% funding drops, enrollment shifts to vocational paths. Solutions include:
- Diversify funding via endowments/philanthropy.
- Strengthen faculty unions for advocacy.
- Promote transparency to regain trust.
- International partnerships bypassing US visas.
Chomsky's enduring lesson: intellectuals must speak truth to power, as in his 1967 essay. US higher ed's resilience depends on reclaiming its mission amid the 'showman's' storm. NYT tracks ongoing battles, signaling no quick resolution.







