Yale University is facing mounting pressure from students, faculty, alumni, and Sen. Richard Blumenthal to reject any settlement with the Trump administration over a Justice Department investigation into the university's admissions practices as negotiations between the two sides continue, reports The Wall Street Journal.
The pressure campaign intensified after reports that Yale renewed settlement discussions with the administration following the rejection of an earlier proposal.
Blumenthal, a Yale Law School graduate, told faculty and students Friday that the university is at a defining moment in its history.
"We're at a legacy-defining moment," the Connecticut Democrat said. "Yale will be regarded either as a beacon and a fighter for academic freedom or as the weakling who succumbed and obeyed."
The Justice Department has accused Yale School of Medicine of discriminating against white and Asian applicants in its admissions process, citing disparities in Medical College Admission Test scores among admitted students.
The investigation is part of the Trump administration's broader effort to eliminate race-conscious admissions policies following the Supreme Court's 2023 ruling ending affirmative action in higher education.
According to the department's findings, admitted Black and Hispanic applicants had lower median MCAT scores than admitted white and Asian applicants. Yale has disputed the government's conclusions and maintains that its admissions process complies with federal law.
A Yale spokeswoman said the university remains committed to protecting "students' free expression, academic freedom, and Yale's ability to determine who is admitted in accordance with the law."
The dispute has prompted faculty, students and alumni to organize opposition to any agreement they believe would compromise the university's independence.
Faculty organizations have called on Yale President Maurie McInnis and the board of trustees to resist what they describe as political pressure from Washington, while an alumni petition opposing a settlement has attracted more than 4,000 signatures.
"The choice before Yale is not simply whether to settle one investigation," faculty organizations wrote in a letter to university leaders. "It is whether to participate in a broader campaign to turn civil rights enforcement into a mechanism of political control over higher education."
The dispute places Yale among several elite universities that have come under scrutiny from the Trump administration.
Columbia University, the University of Pennsylvania, and Brown University have each reached multimillion-dollar settlements with the federal government over separate investigations. At the same time, Harvard University continues to challenge the administration in court.
"University President Maurie McInnis has come under increasing pressure from faculty, students and alumni urging Yale to continue fighting the administration rather than reach a settlement."