Thursday, May 8, 2025. Annette’s Roundup for Democracy.
Joe is always busy.
President Biden’s first interview since leaving office. BBC.
Watch the President. 👇 29 minutes. Starts at 1:06.
This is not who we are: Biden criticizes Trump in BBC Interview.
In his first broadcast interview since leaving office, the former president criticized several of President Trump’s actions and defended his withdrawal from the 2024 campaign.
his first broadcast interview since leaving the White House, former President Joseph R. Biden Jr. condemned President Trump’s handling of the war in Ukraine and his dealings with global allies, and defended the timing of his withdrawal from the 2024 presidential campaign.
Mr. Biden did not mention his successor by name in the interview with the BBC. But in a departure from an unwritten rule of former presidents, he criticized some of Mr. Trump’s actions as president — including his combative meeting in the Oval Office with President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine in February.
“I found it sort of beneath America in the way that it took place,” Mr. Biden said of the meeting during the interview, which was recorded on Monday in Wilmington, Del., and broadcast on Wednesday. He also pointed to calls from Mr. Trump to rename the Gulf of Mexico, take back the Panama Canal and acquire Greenland.
“What the hell’s going on here? What president ever talks like that? That’s not who we are,” Mr. Biden said. “We’re about freedom, democracy, opportunity, not about confiscation.”
Mr. Biden called the Trump administration’s proposal that Ukraine cede Crimea to Russia as part of a peace plan “modern day appeasement.” Referring to President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia, Mr. Biden said: “Anybody that thinks he’s going to stop is just foolish.”
Mr. Biden was asked whether he thought he should have dropped out of the 2024 presidential campaign earlier. Mr. Biden announced his exit from the race on July 21, about 100 days before the election. “I don’t think it would have mattered,” he told the interviewer, Nick Robinson.
“We left at a time when we had a good candidate, she was fully funded,” he added, referring to Kamala Harris, his vice president who became the Democratic nominee.
Mr. Biden, who had hinted at the possibility that he would only serve one term during his 2020 campaign, said in the interview that he had been prepared to hand over to the next generation instead of running again. “But things moved so quickly that it made it difficult to walk away,” he said, adding: “It was just a difficult decision.”
Mr. Biden said he was worried about the future of global democracy if allies no longer see the United States as a reliable leader. He noted that Sweden and Finland had both joined NATO during his presidency, bolstering the alliance. “And in four years we’ve got a guy who wants to walk away from it all,” Mr. Biden said.
“I’m worried that Europe is going to lose confidence in the certainty of America, and the leadership of America in the world,” he said.
The possibility that the NATO alliance might be dying was a “grave concern” he said.
“We’re the only nation in position to have the capacity to bring people together to lead the world,” he said “Otherwise you’re going to have China and the former Soviet Union, Russia, stepping up.”
If NATO did not exist, Mr. Biden asked at one point, “do you think Putin would have stopped at Ukraine?” He added: “I don’t understand how they fail to understand that there is strength in alliances,” apparently referring to Trump administration officials.
Mr. Trump has often singled out his predecessor for blame in his second term — a Times analysis found that he publicly mentioned Biden’s name more than six times a day on average in his first 50 days in office. Asked whether Mr. Trump was behaving more like a monarch than a president, Mr. Biden put it carefully: “He’s not behaving like a Republican president.”
Trump Finally Drops the Anti-Semitism Pretext
The latest letter to Harvard makes clear that the administration’s goal is to punish liberal institutions for the crime of being liberal. By Rose Horowitch.
The intensely hostile letter that Education Secretary Linda McMahon sent to the leadership of Harvard yesterday has a lot going on. But the most notable thing about it is what it leaves out.
To hear McMahon tell it, Harvard is a university on the verge of ruin. (I say McMahon because her signature is at the bottom of the letter, but portions of the document are written in such a distinctive idiolect—“Why is there so much HATE?” the letter asks; it signs off with “Thank you for your attention to this matter!”—that one detects the spirit of a certain uncredited co-author.) She accuses it of admitting students who are contemptuous of America, chastises it for hiring the former blue-city mayors Bill de Blasio and Lori Lightfoot to teach leadership (“like hiring the captain of the Titanic to teach navigation”), questions the necessity of its remedial-math program (“Why is it, we ask, that Harvard has to teach simple and basic mathematics?”), and accuses its board chair, Penny Pritzker (“a Democrat operative”), of driving the university to financial ruin, among many other complaints. The upshot is that Harvard should not bother to apply for any new federal funding, because, McMahon declares, “today’s letter marks the end of new grants for the University.”
What you will not find in the McMahon letter is any mention of the original justification for the Trump administration’s ongoing assault on elite universities: anti-Semitism. As a legal pretext for trying to financially hobble the Ivy League, anti-Semitism had some strategic merit. Many students and faculty justifiably feel that these schools failed to take harassment of Jews seriously enough during the protests that erupted after the October 7, 2023, terrorist attack on Israel by Hamas. By centering its critique on that issue, the administration was cannily appropriating for its own ends one of the progressive left’s highest priorities: protecting a minority from hostile acts.
Now, however, the mask is off. Aside from one oblique reference to congressional hearings about anti-Semitism (“the great work of Congresswoman Elise Stefanik”), the letter is silent on the subject. The administration is no longer pretending that it is standing up for Jewish students. The project has been revealed for what it is: an effort to punish liberal institutions for the crime of being liberal.
The effort started with Columbia University. In early March, the administration canceled $400 million in federal funding for the university. This was framed explicitly as punishment for Columbia’s failure to adequately address anti-Semitism on campus. The administration then issued a set of demands as preconditions for Columbia to get that funding back. These included giving the university president power over all disciplinary matters and placing the Middle Eastern–studies department under the control of a different university body. Columbia soon announced that it would make a list of changes that closely resembled what the administration had asked for. McMahon praised the changes and said that Columbia was on the “right track” to get its money back, though the government has still not restored the funding.
Having successfully extracted concessions from Columbia, the government moved on to Harvard. On March 31, the administration said that it was reviewing $9 billion in federal grants and contracts awarded to Harvard. As with Columbia, it argued that the university had not sufficiently combatted anti-Semitism on its campus. Harvard then began negotiations with the federal government. But on April 11, the administration sent Harvard a list of far-reaching changes that the university would have to make to continue to receive federal funding. These included screening international students for disloyalty to the United States and allowing an external body to audit faculty viewpoints to ensure diversity.
This was too much for Harvard. “Neither Harvard nor any other private university can allow itself to be taken over by the federal government,” the university’s lawyers wrote in a letter to administration officials. The university sued the Trump administration, arguing that the government had violated Harvard’s First Amendment rights and failed to follow the procedures to revoke federal grants. The government retaliated. It immediately froze $2.2 billion in grants and $60 million in contracts to Harvard, announced that it would consider revoking Harvard’s nonprofit tax-exempt status, and threatened the university’s ability to enroll international students. Even as the war escalated, the putative rationale remained the same. Trump “wants them to come to the table and change things,” McMahon told Fox News. “It’s a civil-rights issue on campus relative to the anti-Semitism.” McMahon never explained how cutting funding for biomedical research would help address anti-Semitism on campus. But the administration at least gestured in that direction.
No longer. The offenses enumerated in the McMahon letter are a disconnected grab bag of grievances. The closest thing to a legal theory for denying Harvard future grant funding is the accusation that the school has violated the Supreme Court’s ruling striking down race-based affirmative action. But revoking an institution’s funding under federal nondiscrimination law requires following a multistep process that takes months, Derek Black, a law professor at the University of South Carolina, told me. The government has to investigate a complaint and prove that the university will not take any steps to resolve the discrimination. Without showing that Harvard has violated nondiscrimination law—as opposed to merely asserting it, without evidence, in a rambling letter—the government can’t refuse to award it grants. “They went from step one to step five or six in a week,” Black said. “There’s no ‘We don’t like you’ authority in the federal Constitution or in statutory law. In fact, quite the opposite: You’re precluded from that.”
Harvard’s leaders have, under duress, acknowledged that the institution needs to make changes. Last week, the university released reports detailing incidents of anti-Semitism and anti-Muslim bias and a pervasive sense of non-belonging among Jewish students. It has announced that it will not support affinity-group graduation celebrations and that leaders will no longer make statements on political issues that don’t affect the university’s core function. “We were faced with a set of demands that addressed some problems that I and others recognized as real problems,” Harvard President Alan Garber told The Wall Street Journal. “But the means of addressing those problems is what was so objectionable.” The fact that the university is willing to make changes strengthens its legal case challenging the cancellation of funding. Several legal experts have predicted that the university will prevail in court.
In a 2021 speech titled “The Universities Are the Enemy,” then–Senate candidate J. D. Vance declared that universities, as left-wing gatekeepers of truth and knowledge, “make it impossible for conservative ideas to ultimately carry the day.” The solution, Vance said, was to “honestly and aggressively attack the universities in this country.” We’ve been seeing the aggressive part of that formula for two months. With the McMahon letter, the administration has gotten much closer to honesty. (The Atlantic)
Trump's Secretary of Education, Linda McMahon, sent this letter to Harvard.
— Ed Krassenstein (@EdKrassen) May 7, 2025
As you can see, the grammar, punctuation and spelling are horrific.
Is this really who we want to decide what’s best for our children’s education? pic.twitter.com/2rAnLmR7SJ
My Mom died of cancer.
— BrooklynDad_Defiant!☮️ (@mmpadellan) May 8, 2025
My grandparents died of cancer.
My best friend died of cancer.
Many of YOU, Democrats and Republicans, have friends and loved ones who died of cancer.
Cutting cancer research is evil AF, and we should ALL agree on that. pic.twitter.com/gdXM4aPB28
Columbia Admin calls in police to stop Library takeover by Pro-Palestinian Demonstrators.
Police Remove Pro-Palestinian Demonstrators Occupying Columbia Library.
The protesters had appeared to be attempting to rekindle the movement that swept the campus last spring.

Dozens of pro-Palestinian demonstrators were taken into police custody on Wednesday evening after occupying part of the main library on Columbia University’s campus in an attempt to rekindle the protest movement that swept the campus last spring.
The protesters, wearing masks and kaffiyehs, had burst through a security gate shortly after 3 p.m. and hung banners in the soaring main room of Butler Library’s second floor, renaming the space “the Basel Al-Araj Popular University,” according to the demonstrators and witnesses at the library.
Columbia security guards blocked them from leaving unless they showed their identification, causing an hourslong standoff. Outside the library, crowds gathered, leading to a chaotic scene. By about 7 p.m., Columbia administrators had called the New York City police back to campus for the first time since the occupation of Hamilton Hall, another campus building, in April 2024.
“Requesting the presence of the N.Y.P.D. is not the outcome we wanted, but it was absolutely necessary to secure the safety of our community,” Claire Shipman, the acting president of the university, wrote in a statement.
The disruption was limited to a single reading room, a university spokeswoman said. A statement from Columbia said that the protesters would face consequences.
“It is completely unacceptable that some individuals are choosing to disrupt academic activities as our students are studying and preparing for final exams,” the statement said. (New York Times).
Governor Pritzker shows his funny side.
But if you live in Illinois, take precautions anyway. Keep Spot safe.
BREAKING: In a masterclass of trolling, IL Gov. JB Pritzker warned pet owners to protect their pets ahead of Kristi Noem’s visit: “Make sure all of your beloved animals are under watchful protection.” Noem once admitted to killing her own dog Cricket.
— CALL TO ACTIVISM (@CalltoActivism) May 7, 2025
Pritzker didn’t stop there:… pic.twitter.com/bAUUi8KirZ
The New Yorker featured photographs of well-known New Yorkers by the photographer Gillian Laub.
This photograph, which is described as of “the political operative Huma Abedin and her fiancé, the investor and philanthropist Alex Soros, in a room whose spectacular city views serve as its adornment” made me particularly happy. Yes, his father is George.
At least, Anthony Weiner isn’t running for NYC Mayor, this time.
I hope the photo gives you pleasure too. Life sometimes offers sweetness and redemption.
