By Stacy M. Brown, NNPA Newswire Senior National Correspondent
Harvard University now finds itself standing where politics, power, and punishment meet, as the removal of a Black dean unfolds alongside a renewed White House campaign aimed squarely at race, history, and who is allowed to speak plainly about both.
Gregory Davis, a resident dean and African American studies scholar, was removed from his position after years-old social media posts were revived by far-right outlets and amplified during Donald Trump’s second presidency. Harvard confirmed Davis was no longer serving in the role and moved quickly to close the matter, even as Davis and his family were given ten days to vacate university housing during winter.
The timing was not incidental. Davis’ removal came as the Trump administration issued sweeping executive orders attacking diversity, equity, and inclusion programs across federal agencies, higher education, and the private sector. Those orders direct agencies to dismantle DEI offices, terminate equity-related grants, and pressure colleges and universities to certify that they do not operate programs the president has labeled illegal and immoral, despite no change to civil rights law.
Civil rights organizations have warned that the goal is intimidation, not legality. By flooding institutions with threats of investigation and funding loss, the administration has created an environment where universities are encouraged to police Black voices before political actors do it for them.
Davis’ academic work focused on how bias operates in admissions and hiring, how institutions decide belonging, and how power shapes opportunity. A graduate of Morehouse College and a Harvard-trained scholar, he studied the very systems now moving against him.
The posts used to justify his removal were written during the national protests following the murder of George Floyd. They criticized policing, whiteness, and Donald Trump. Davis later expressed regret and said the posts did not reflect his current views. Harvard did not dispute that claim publicly. Instead, the university acted after a student-run outlet and far-right media escalated pressure.
This sequence mirrors what’s become a national pattern. Black speech is treated as permanent evidence. White grievance is treated as context.
A report by the Center for Progressive Reform documented how Trump’s second term has revived long standing strategies used against Black Americans, including efforts to freeze federal funding, weaken worker protections, roll back environmental safeguards, and cut programs that disproportionately support Black communities. The report traced these moves to historical campaigns of disenfranchisement, economic extraction, and political suppression.
Trump’s rhetoric frames white Americans as victims of equity efforts, while policy decisions concentrate harm on Black families through job loss, reduced protections, and increased exposure to environmental and economic risk. This inversion has been central to his political rise.
At Harvard, that national posture took institutional form.
Davis’ wife described a family facing sudden displacement, depleted savings, a five-year-old daughter, and a newborn son after a termination that came without warning or transition support.
The pressure now facing universities is unmistakable. The administration does not need to rewrite the law to change behavior. It only needs institutions willing to act as if the law has already changed.
Davis summed up what was taken when he addressed his removal. “It has been the greatest honor of my life to serve as the Resident Dean for Dunster,” he stated. “I will miss my work with students and staff immensely.”
