CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2025 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“TRUMP GOES AFTER
UCLA FIRST AND HARDEST BECAUSE IT’S A FAT TARGET”
Go almost
anywhere in the multiple medical centers of slogan-obsessed UCLA and you’ll see
signs reading “It Begins With U” and “Innovating Patient Care since 1926,”
bromides urging every employee from nurses to heart surgeons toward ever-better
performances and ratings.
So far, the
slogans have helped place UCLA’s medical centers first among Western hospitals
in the U.S. News & World Report ratings, topping even famed institutions
like Stanford University’s hospital, the Cedars-Sinai Medical Center and UCLA’s
sister medical centers in San Francisco, Sacramento and Irvine.
But UCLA now also
places first in a far less desirable category: It is the university which
President Trump seeks to dun the most in federal research and fine money, going
after a total of $1.7 billion. That’s in keeping with Trump’s practice of
attacking prominent targets, rarely secondary ones.
The $1.7 billion
represents virtually all annual federal research money UCLA gets, sixth most in
the country behind places like UC San Francisco, Michigan and Johns Hopkins,
schools which had far less anti-Semitic activity during the 2023-24 school
year. By contrast, UCLA sprouted anti-Israel encampments like mushrooms. So in
many ways, UCLA was the largest target Trump could find, and his psychology
suggests that’s why he singled it out.
Fully $500
million of the federal research money was to be taken from UCLA’s medical
facilities and research before a judge the other day stopped the process at
least temporarily on grounds the demands were made via form letters not listing
any transgressions by researchers. The other $1.2 billion is a “fine” for
allowing anti-Semitic camps and other anti-Jewish activities on the campus for
weeks.
Totally ignored
were petitions signed by hundreds of Jewish UCLA faculty noting the campus has
seen no medically-linked anti-Semitism.
Trump’s
administration more than any other appears struck with the central injustice of
Gaza: Over 1,000 Israelis were murdered and kidnapped, but Israel somehow has
been blamed for the entire conflict.
UCLA has been
widely blasted ever since for its long tolerance of the campus encampments and
concurrent interference with other students’ freedom of movement.
The overall
University of California system says it will resist any federal penalties, a
big commitment from this huge institution. Overall, UC campuses get about $17
billion per year from the federal government, including more than $9 billion
for the care of Medicare and Medicaid patients and almost $9 billion in
research funding.
It’s no wonder
UCLA doctors show signs of insecurity from the standoff between school and
government. “What’s going to happen to my family?” wondered one cardiologist
while examining a patient. “Will I and my colleagues have to go somewhere
else?” If they do, what happens to all those “Best in the West” awards and
slogans?
What does America
get for its research money? Early on, it got CT (computerized tomography)
scans. More recently, there have been a wireless implantable brain device that
partially restores vision in some of the blind; drug delivery systems that
cross the blood/brain barrier to reach cancers in the central nervous system,
and gene therapies for babies born without immune systems.
Should advances
like these be lost to Donald Trump’s “war on California,” of which the
attempted UCLA extortion is one part?
So far, UCLA and
the larger UC system appear to be resisting via a mix of lawsuits and
compromise. The campus last month announced new protest rules at least partly
matching federal demands. UCLA will allow pre-approved overnight events, but
not in the campus center. It stopped far short of cutting off admissions of
students with pro-Palestinian or anti-American views, as Trump demanded. The
rules make clear that campus disruptions and blocking of building access will
not be allowed.
All this meets
many Trump demands.
Similar rules
have not yet been applied to other UC campuses, including those in urban
settings like UCSF and the UC San Francisco school of law.
Settlement talks
reportedly involve 10 of the 24 members of UC’s Board of Regents, along with
President James Milliken.
It’s an open question whether Trump appointees will make more demands.
Further pressures figure to spur an increase in UC’s emphasis on lawsuits to
uphold its rights.
Meanwhile, it’s all made the slogan “It starts with U” as good as
obsolete, for no campus employee from nurse to specialized researcher did
anything to provoke the crisis.
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Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. For more Elias
columns, visit www.californiafocus.net