A Project 2025 Revolution at GMU?

by James A. Bacon

Lefty professors are fearful that a new Board of Visitors, now comprised of a majority of Youngkin appointees, is about to unleash a right-wing revolution at George Mason University, Virginia’s largest public university.

Six of the 12 Youngkin-appointed board members are, or have been, affiliated with the conservative Heritage Foundation think tank, which recently produced a detailed document, Project 2025, laying out policy options for the next Republican president. Many on the left have decried Project 2025 as a dystopian blueprint for ending democracy and imposing a right-wing autocracy if Donald Trump is elected.

Bethany Letiecq

An article in The Chronicle of Higher Education catalogs concerns articulated by Bethany Letiecq, a professor in GMU’s College of Education and Human Development and chair of the state American Association of University Professors (AAUP) conference.

Letiecq avoids the apocalyptic rhetoric typical of “progressive” media voices, but she warns that GMU is “incredibly vulnerable as a test case for what Project 2025 could look like on campus…. My feeling is, we’ve been captured.”

Letiecq is worried that the new board will bring a new governing philosophy to GMU. “All the ingredients” appear to be in place for “real change,” she said. “We’ve had a strong sense as faculty that once the board shifted to 12-4, the gloves would come off.”

She might be right about that. I hope she is.

The campus culture of George Mason, with an enrollment of 39,000 students, is dominated by the progressive left. The university has islands of conservatism and classical liberalism, most notably the economics department, the Scalia School of Law, and the Mercatus Center which controversially has received funding from the libertarian-leaning Koch Foundation. Like antibodies expelling a plague virus, leftist faculty, students and outside nonprofits have directed unrelenting criticism against these islands of intellectual diversity. 

The drift toward leftist intellectual orthodoxy has not gone unnoticed. Governor Glenn Youngkin has appointed a team of board members who have shown a willingness to challenge the status quo.

Lindsey Burke

Last year Youngkin appointed Lindsey Burke, the lead author of the education chapter in Project 2025. Other appointees with Heritage connections include Nina Rees, an education policy analyst; Armand Alacbay, who has called for dismantling the higher-ed accreditation cartel; Kenneth Marcus, who has called for banning critical race theory from schools; Marc Short, who was considered for the Heritage Foundation presidency; and Charles (Cully) Stimson, a senior adviser to Heritage’s president. The Chronicle article also mentions Robert Pence, observing that he has criticized DEI initiatives at recent GMU board meetings.

Sounds like a fantastic line-up. This crew will hit the ground running.

According to the Chronicle, the Youngkin administration has urged board members to vote for Stimson as rector. He would replace Horace Blackman, who was appointed by former Governor Ralph Northam and will serve another year.

The article cites likely flash points as the Youngkin majority takes control of the board for the first time: disputes over the Board’s involvement in tenure decisions, politicization of the curriculum, and Diversity, Equity & Inclusion.

The faculty doesn’t want the Board getting involved in tenure decisions. Some board members have requested the CVs and written justifications for promotion of professors recommended for mid-year tenure approval, according to the Chronicle. Letiecq circulated a petition with more than 300 signatories calling for the Board to back off. “Help us protect Mason’s faculty, students, and our institution of higher education from political interference,” the petition says.

Translation: Faculty want the tenure-granting process to remain unaccountable to anyone but themselves so they can continue stacking the deck with others like themselves. If GMU is like the University of Virginia, which I follow closely, the result in many departments has been a steady leftward ideological drift of the faculty and increasing assertiveness about injecting leftist ideology into the curriculum.

Youngkin appointees reacted negatively to a suggested change to the GMU curriculum: a mandate for all students to take two courses with a “just societies” designation. Summarizes the Chronicle:

The administration has argued that the curricular change is a necessary mandate that will meet accreditors’ DEI standards and prepare students for civic life. Critics, including some current board members, have said the courses will impose left-leaning ideologies on students and silence conservative voices.

The Just Societies courses are “nothing but pure political propaganda,” the Chronicle quotes economics professor Timothy Groseclose as saying. The board’s scrutiny “is performing a useful service and making the campus less political.”

The Just Societies controversy reached the Governor’s Office, which asked to see copies of the course syllabi. After a contentious board meeting in May, GMU administrators backed off the requirement.

The size and scope of the Diversity, Equity & Inclusion bureaucracy is another issue, as it has been at the University of Virginia. Last September, the Heritage Foundation published a report decrying the “dangerous DEI bloat at Virginia’s public universities.” Among the 65 universities studied, GMU had the highest DEI administrator-to-faculty ratio — 7.4 DEI staff to 100 faculty.

It’s unclear to me why Letiecq (or the Chronicle of Higher Education in quoting Letiecq) gave such prominence to Project 2025 in the article, other than the fact that leftists nationally have demonized the public-policy playbook as a blueprint for imposing Trumpian autocracy on the country — “fascism out loud,” in the words of Democracy Now!

Lindsey Burke’s education chapter in Project 2025 is the opposite of autocratic. Far from increasing presidential powers to dictate education policy, Project 2025 calls for dismantling the federal Department of Education and returning power over K-12 and higher-ed to the states. Burke’s dominant themes are reforming the accreditation process, which has become a mechanism for enforcing progressive priorities in colleges and universities, and the federal student-loan program, which gives university administrations a blank check to run up costs and tuition at taxpayer expense.

“Rather than continuing to buttress a higher education establishment captured by woke ‘diversicrats’ and a de facto monopoly enforced by the federal accreditation cartel,” writes Burke, “federal postsecondary education policy should prepare students for jobs in the dynamic economy, nurture institutional diversity, and expose schools to greater market forces.”

That’s the real root of the problem. Progressive faculty members oppose any form of institutional diversity that reduces their influence, and they want to remain insulated from market forces. They have a sweet sinecure, and they want to keep it.

Burke also threatens the Diversity, Equity & Inclusion regime to which the left is wedded. In a list of core principles to guide higher-ed policy, she highlights the necessity of safeguarding civil rights. “Enforcement of civil rights should be based on a proper understanding of those laws, rejecting gender ideology and critical race theory,” she writes.

Rejecting gender ideology and critical race theory would disarm the left. No wonder Letiecq and her colleagues are alarmed. A revolution is brewing at GMU, but it won’t be autocratic, it will be liberating.

 


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Comments

39 responses to “A Project 2025 Revolution at GMU?”

  1. Virginia Gentleman Avatar
    Virginia Gentleman

    This DEI phobia is exhausting. I would love to have the time to do the analysis to see if the hours spent exposing the DEI activity exceeds the DEI activity.

    1. walter smith Avatar
      walter smith

      Why don't you? Along with tracking the money?
      It's only exhausting because the criticisms are valid and the supporters can only claim "racist" to shut up the valid criticisms. Besides that, it doesn't work, is counterproductive, and creates divisions. But other than that, how was the play Mrs. Lincoln?

  2. Stephen Haner Avatar
    Stephen Haner

    Hilarious to see the Left retract in horror when their own tactics for gaining and retaining power are deployed against them, Project 2025 reads like a few years of good WSJ and National Review writings. Yes, the NYT and New Republic are shocked! The federal education establishment is as useless as it was when Reagan (the ultimate enemy of "democracy", right?) proposed to abolish it.

    1. LarrytheG Avatar
      LarrytheG

      I'd be curious to know how your wife, a career teacher feels. Game to ask?

      This Country is NOT "run" by the left no more than it was run by the "right" under Reagan and Bush who the right now derisively called RINOs (lefties) by the right, like they consider others not on board with Maga/2025 Project. This is just one Federal Agency out of several they propose to dismantle and abolish.

      Read their actual stuff – not the NYT: https://www.project2025.org/policy/

    2. Nancy Naive Avatar
      Nancy Naive

      looks more like a Lewis Powell memo

  3. Tom Blau Avatar
    Tom Blau

    Thank you – informative and well-done.

  4. WayneS Avatar

    …the conservative Heritage Foundation think tank, which recently produced a detailed document, Project 2025, laying out policy options for the next Republican president.

    Thanks. I've been hearing news media people mention "Project 2025" for a few months, now, but I had no idea what it was. Now I know. Right now I'm not sure if I care enough to read it, but my innate curiosity will probably get the best of me eventually.

    1. LesGabriel Avatar
      LesGabriel

      Don't be intimidated by the 922 page label. A lot of it is filler you can easily skip past and it is easy to find the subjects you are particularly interested in. I am guessing that many, if not most, critics have not even opened it, let alone skimmed the contents. I would prefer that those who criticize the report get specific about what they object to, citing page and paragraph.

      1. LarrytheG Avatar
        LarrytheG

        abolishing the Dept of Ed, right?
        getting rid of Title 1 and Head Start, correct?
        not longer requiring states to use standardized testing.
        turning NAEP over to the census dept primary to do statistics?

        true?

        1. Carter Melton Avatar
          Carter Melton

          Larry, check out Verifythis.com .

          1. LarrytheG Avatar
            LarrytheG

            🙂

          2. LarrytheG Avatar
            LarrytheG

            re:
            " WHAT WE FOUND
            Neither Project 2025 nor The Heritage Foundation have called specifically for IEPs to be eliminated. Project 2025 would, however, change how federal funds for IEPs are distributed and allow parents to put that money into savings accounts or use it for private schools.

            A spokesperson for The Heritage Foundation said Project 2025 wouldn’t change the existing IEP process in public schools. But some advocates for people with disabilities say the proposed changes could lead to negative consequences, such as a lack of legal protections for families if their federal rights to an equal education are violated.

            IEPs aren’t mentioned anywhere in "Mandate for Leadership: A Conservative Promise," which outlines the plan for Project 2025. Noah Weinrich, director of media and public relations with The Heritage Foundation, also told VERIFY, “At no time has Project 2025 advocated for the elimination of individual education plans.”

            Under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), public schools that receive federal funding are required to create IEPs for eligible students that outline services they will receive. Private schools, however, are not required to provide IEPs or guaranteed special education services because they do not receive federal funding. "

            Carter, my understanding is that the Feds do not fully fund that program but they require it to exist and it has rules – designed to assure that kids with those needs are addressed.

            And it's already done with grants to the states:

            " Yes, the federal government helps fund special education services for students with disabilities in public schools through annual grants to states, which are then sent to districts. This funding helps schools provide students with a "free, appropriate public education" (FAPE), which includes following the details of each student's individualized education plan (IEP). This can mean hiring staff, building specialized classrooms, or sending students to outside providers"

            The point here is that Project 2025 indicates massive changes to Education of which we don't know all the details and we have good reason to believe they are not limiting themselves to only what they are publishing.

            Read the articles they post and what things they advocate for at the Heritage Foundation.

        2. LesGabriel Avatar
          LesGabriel

          Is there anything regarding education that must be done in Washington and cannot be done by the states?

          1. WayneS Avatar

            Is there anything regarding education that must be done in Washington and cannot be done by the states?

            Yes. The feds can't use the threat of losing federal school funding to blackmail the states into doing what the feds want them to do if there is no education-oriented bureaucracy in Washington…

          2. Matt Adams Avatar
            Matt Adams

            The Feds go to when they want to coalesce power in the Federal Government, threaten to withhold funds.

            That's how we managed the 21 year old alcohol age restriction across the board.

          3. walter smith Avatar
            walter smith

            I'm on – either drinking and voting at 21 or drinking and voting at 18.
            And would be more in favor of drinking at 18 and voting at 21!

          4. Matt Adams Avatar
            Matt Adams

            I thinks immaterial, but the fact that the Fed used coherence to get it to be 21 is wrong.

          5. walter smith Avatar
            walter smith

            Agree
            And I think you intended coercion!
            I hate autocorrect!

          6. Matt Adams Avatar
            Matt Adams

            Yes, typing while grilling is unadvised.

          7. LarrytheG Avatar
            LarrytheG

            THe Feds do that in all manner of things, not just education.. AND the States do that to the counties – Dillon Rule.

            How far do we "devolve"? Down to the county level?

          8. LarrytheG Avatar
            LarrytheG

            There is. Look at why the Education came to be in the first place. The states and localities would not
            fund Title 1 or kids with disabilities, head start, the lunch program, standardized testing (that can compare the states), etc, etc, … The 2025 Project premise is they fundamentally disagree with the Federal govt being involved at all and want to take us back to a time when the states failed to do what was needed. That project actually wants to turn education over to non-public entities including taxpayer-funded religious schools.

          9. LesGabriel Avatar
            LesGabriel

            I got a good education before there was a Dept of Education and so did a lot of other people, and not all of us lived in affluent areas. Legislators at the state level aere more accountable to voters than are bureaucrats in DC.

          10. LarrytheG Avatar
            LarrytheG

            We know that many did not. Take kids with special needs. The states did NOT take responsibility. In fact they fought it.

          11. LesGabriel Avatar
            LesGabriel

            Then your beef would be with the voters in the state where things are not the way you want them to be. Not every state and locality has to do everything exactly the same. That is what the concept of Federalism is all about.

          12. Chip Gibson Avatar
            Chip Gibson

            None.

    2. walter smith Avatar
      walter smith

      It's actually a policy prescription for reforming the government should Trump be able to win despite an even more ramped up cheat mechanism for this election…
      It's sane. Big picture would be de-fanging the administrative state and devolving power back to the States and the people. I think there is some important document that mentions somethiing like that. ..

      1. Chip Gibson Avatar
        Chip Gibson

        Yes there is, Sir.

  5. LarrytheG Avatar
    LarrytheG

    I think Youngkin has pretty much defined himself on the 2025 Project thing.

    It's pretty easy to see what they are proposing – on their own website – out of their own mouths and basically they advocate to end things like Title 1 and Head Start, abolish the Dept of Education altogether, and turn NAEP over to the Census Dept primarily to produce statistics and from what I can tell, no longer be involved in research or defining what "proficiency" is, etc.

    https://static.project2025.org/2025_MandateForLeadership_CHAPTER-11.pdf

    1. WayneS Avatar

      This country survived for almost 200 years without the department of education being a politicized cabinet-level agency.

      1. LarrytheG Avatar
        LarrytheG

        It’s not more or less “politicized” than all the other stuff that Project 2025 and Conservatives claim is now. It’s a made-up issue to take the country back.

      2. Chip Gibson Avatar
        Chip Gibson

        That's a fact. DoE needs to go, the screaming, crazy union woman first, followed by Miguel, and the DEI mob.

  6. LarrytheG Avatar
    LarrytheG

    You know the irony here… Youngkin and the right claim that Va and US schools are "failing" using the Federal Govt Dept of Ed NAEP data – and Project 2025 wants to get rid of the Dept of Ed and most of NAEP except the
    part that keeps statistics! NAEP developed the standards for defining "proficiency" for reading and writing as well as correlates states standardized testing so comparing the states effectiveness is possible.

    That's how Youngkin claimed that Virginia had "failed" it's kids during COVID. He was using FEDERAL DATA!

  7. Chip Gibson Avatar
    Chip Gibson

    Great news. The ship will creak and groan as it is righted, yet it is destined to sail tall, true, and righteously again.

  8. Randy Huffman Avatar
    Randy Huffman

    I have not read Project 25 yet, but did flip through the forward. I wonder which of the following pillars is objectionable.

    Making families the centerpiece of American life and protecting children?

    Dismantling the administrative state and returning governance to American people?

    Defending our nations sovereignty, borders and bounty against global threats?

    Securing our God give rights to enjoy the blessings of liberty? This one made me wonder so read a little deeper, and perhaps it was the statement that left to their own devices, the American people rejected European colonization, slavery, second class citizenship for women, and other things including now wokeism. Yes, I bet that is what got our friends in the left seething.

    The premise of project 25 is for Americans to think for themselves, not be cattle. How horrifying!

    1. LarrytheG Avatar
      LarrytheG

      Here's the problem for me. It's very similar to how some candidates are dealing untruthfully on their support for abortion. They say one thing or muddy their position, then they fully intend to do something different and have and do.

      If Project 2025 was an clearly stated proposal to the voters and openly supported by candidates for Congress and POTUS, and people did overwhelmingly support it – even if I was/am vociferously opposed to it, I would be "ok" with it because that's how our country was founded to be governed. I'd not threaten to "get my guns" or advocate for a civil war , etc. I'd accept the fact that a majority of citizens clearly knew of the intent of the folks advocating it AND agreed and accepted it and I was in the minority.

      Instead, what we have is a surreptitious approach where the GOP candidates including for POTUS claim they don't know much if anything about it – even though Project 2025 is primarily made up
      of people who worked in the prior Trump Administration:

      "Six of his former Cabinet secretaries helped write or collaborated on the 900-page playbook for a second Trump term published by the Heritage Foundation. Four individuals Trump nominated as ambassadors were also involved, along with several enforcers of his controversial immigration crackdown. And about 20 pages are credited to his first deputy chief of staff."

      "For instance, Federal Communications Commissioner Brendan Carr authored an entire chapter of proposed changes to his agency, and Lisa Correnti, an anti-abortion advocate Trump appointed as a delegate to the United Nations Commission on the Status of Women, is among the contributors."

      AND, they are not relying on legislative changes from Congress but on executive office mandates from the POTUS when elected.

      So this is anything but an open process seeking to get a majority of voters to support it. It's a backdoor effort to empower a Strongman type POTUS who will make such changes, outside the law without Congress AND CLAIM complete immunity for doing so.

      So basically – what needs to happen, is people need to know about it and virtually none of those who actually do are admitting they do or that they'll help do it if elected.

      There are closet supporters who claim they know nothing about it or the people who run it. How can you not know people who you appointed and worked for you?

      It's really a clandestine approach relying on voters not knowing what it is or what it is about. That's not the way the country was designed by the founders to be governed. It's antithetical to the entire premise of the country's foundation as laid out in the Constitution.

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