Wyoming lawmakers who attended Harvard University are outraged that their former school is retaining its controversial president after she wouldnât refute all forms of antisemitism on her campus.
Last week, Harvard President Claudine Gay testified to Congress that the school tolerates antisemitism in certain situations, based on its âcontext.â
State Rep. Cyrus Western, R-Big Horn, who earned a masterâs degree from the school in 2016, said Harvardâs backing of Gay shows an egregious âdouble standard.â
âItâs absolutely pathetic,â he said. âFor a school that has positioned itself around safe spaces and respectful free speech to have a president who refuses to acknowledge the mass murder of Jews as antisemetic is pathetic.â
On Tuesday, Harvard Universityâs board announced it will retain Gay, the universityâs first Black president.
In a statement, the school defended Gayâs leadership while acknowledging that sheâs made mistakes regarding the comments she has made about the Israel-Hamas War and the schoolâs policy on antisemetism.
Sen. Dave Kinskey, R-Sheridan, who earned a Bachelor of Economics from Harvard in 1979, also condemned the decision.
âThe progressives have completely taken over the elite educational institutions,â Kinskey said. âIt was evident enough when I was at Harvard 44 years ago, but it has gone completely over the edge.â
What Did She Say?
While testifying before Congress last week, Gay said that calling for the genocide of Jews only sometimes violates Harvardâs rules of bullying and harrasment.
âIt can be, depending on the context,â she said.
Gay clarified shortly after that the school does act when it believes antisemetic rhetoric amounts to bullying, harassment or intimidation.
But when New York Republican congresswoman Elise Stefanik pressed Gay on this point and asked her again if calling for the genocide of Jews violates the schoolâs code of conduct, the school president pivoted, saying, âAgain, it depends on the context.â
Western said there is no form of antisemetic rhetoric that can be seen as a source of legitimate academic rigor or discourse. He equated it to someone wearing a white bedsheet as a form of Klu Klux Klan robe around campus and the way this act would likely be perceived by Black people.
âItâs unacceptable and it shouldnât be tolerated,â Western said. âitâs unbelievably racist.â

Reaction
The congressional exchange quickly roiled across social media, drawing anger and outrage from many people with close ties to Harvard and among the American Jewish community.
University of Pennsylvania President Elizabeth Magill, who testified at the hearing with Gay, resigned shortly after.
Gay issued an apology in the schoolâs newspaper.
âWhen words amplify distress and pain, I donât know how you could feel anything but regret,â she told The Crimson.
These words werenât enough to stop a pressure campaign to oust her, with many wealthy donors calling for her removal.
On Monday, the schoolâs board met into the wee hours of the night before deciding to keep Gay.
Started With Hamas Attacks
Gay also came under fire for her initial reluctance to condemn the Hamas terrorist attacks. Thirty student groups at Harvard said after the attacks on Oct. 7 that Israel was âentirely responsibleâ for the mass killing and kidnapping of Israelis that took place that day.
âSo many people have suffered tremendous damage and pain because of Hamasâ brutal terrorist attack, and the Universityâs initial statement should have been an immediate, direct and unequivocal condemnation,â the schoolâs statement on Tuesday said.
Gay was already aware of the concerns brought by Jewish students at the school.
In October, she met with Jewish students at Harvard and heard their concerns. She also announced the formation of an advisory group to confront antisemitism on campus, and said the Ivy League school should be a place where everyone feels safe and seen.
âOur Jewish students have shared searing accounts of feeling isolated and targeted,â she said.
Kinskey said that simply removing Gay would not address what he sees as some of the deeper, underlying issues happening at the school.
âWe can only hope that the big money donors to these institutions can bring enough pressure to get it turned around,â Kinskey said. âBut simply changing the president is not going to do it, the radical leftism, I assume, permeates most of the faculty.â
Western said he saw inklings of this when he attended the school, mentioning how certain places were created on campus for only Black students to attend. He believes identity politics and a âwokeâ agenda has permeated the school.
About 700 members of Harvardâs faculty rallied behind Gay, defending her in several open letters. One of the letters, from Black faculty members, called the attacks on the president âspecious and politically motivated.â
Leo Wolfson can be reached at leo@cowboystatedaily.com.





