
Shortly after its inauguration, the Trump administration has made no secret that it isn't especially interested in funding research.
Before January's end, major science agencies had instituted pauses on research funding, and grant funding has not been restored to previous levels since.
Many individual grants have been targeted on ideological grounds, and agencies like the National Science Foundation are expected to see significant cuts.
Since then, individual universities have been targeted, starting with an ongoing fight with Columbia University over $400 million in research funding.This week, however, it appears that the targeting of university research has entered overdrive, with multiple announcements of funding freezes targeting several universities.
Should these last for any considerable amount of time, they will likely cripple research at the targeted universities.On Wednesday, Science learned that the National Institutes of Health has frozen all of its research funding to Columbia, despite the university agreeing to steps previously demanded by the administration and the resignation of its acting president.
In 2024, Columbia had received nearly $700 million in grants from the NIH, with the money largely going to the university's prestigious medical and public health schools.But the attack goes well beyond a single university.
On Tuesday, the Trump administration announced a hold on all research funding to Northwestern University (nearly $800 million) and Cornell University ($1 billion).
These involved money granted by multiple government agencies, including a significant amount from the Department of Defense in Cornell's case.
Ostensibly, all of these actions were taken because of the university administrators' approach to protests about the conflict in Gaza, which the administration has characterized as allowing antisemitism.