Columbia University Interim President Resigns Amid Controversial Trump-Era Policies and Campus Turmoil

Columbia University’s interim president, Katrina Armstrong, will resign and return to her role at the medical center, as announced by the university’s board of trustees. This decision highlights the ongoing turmoil at Columbia and follows the university’s recent controversial concessions to the Trump administration aimed at securing $400 million in federal funding. Armstrong was chosen as interim president during a challenging time for the university, reflecting the significant pressure it faced.

Columbia’s administration is implementing sweeping changes to address the Trump administration’s allegations of inadequate action against antisemitism connected to pro-Gaza protests on campus. These changes include the establishment of a new campus police force, restrictions on face masks, and the removal of faculty governance over certain academic departments, actions that many scholars and activists have condemned as an alarming capitulation to external political pressure.

The leadership upheaval at Columbia is not an isolated incident; it follows the resignation of Minouche Shafik, Columbia’s previous president, in 2024 amid severe backlash from students for her handling of protests against the university’s policies and the actions of law enforcement against demonstrators. Shafik’s tenure was marked by student occupations and widespread unrest, highlighting a campus increasingly embroiled in political controversy.

In addition to the leadership changes, Columbia has faced allegations of retaliating against non-citizen student activists involved in pro-Palestine protests amid the ongoing Israel-Hamas conflict. The recent detention of Mahmoud Khalil, a green card-holder and student activist, has raised serious concerns about the preservation of free speech rights on campus during a period of escalating political tension.

David J. Greenwald, chair of the Columbia Board of Trustees, expressed gratitude for Armstrong’s service while acknowledging the turbulence surrounding the university’s leadership. Claire Shipman, a journalist and Columbia alum, has been appointed acting president as the search for a new leader begins. This sequence of events signals a troubling trend of politicization in educational institutions under the influence of the Trump administration.