Washington, D.C. – Today, Congresswoman Elise Stefanik spoke on the House floor about her bipartisan resolution condemning the testimony of the presidents from Harvard University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), and the University of Pennsylvania during a House Committee on Education and the Workforce hearing on December 5, 2023.
 

Watch her full remarks here. 

 

View the full transcript of her remarks below: 

“Thank you Mr. Speaker, and thank you to Chairwoman Foxx for chairing last week’s important hearing.

There is a reason that last week's hearing the university presidents of Harvard, Penn, and MIT made history as the most watched congressional testimony in history with over one billion views. And that's because their testimony was the most morally bankrupt testimony in the history of the United States Congress. 

When asked the very specific question, ‘Does calling for the genocide of Jews violate your code of conduct on bullying and harassment?’ the world watched, and the world heard their answers in horror. As the President of Harvard, the President, now former, of Penn, and the President of MIT equivocated, dehumanized, and failed to answer ‘Yes.’ Anyone with a sliver of decency, humanity, and morality knows that the answer to that question is 'Yes'. 

President Kornbluth of MIT said that such depravity would only be considered harassment depending on the ‘context.’ When pressed during her questioning, Penn's President, now Former President, Magill’s response was shocking to the extreme: ‘If the speech becomes conduct, it can be harassment.’ Finally, Harvard President Gay whose answer was the same: ‘It depends on the context.’ 

It was pathetic, amoral, and inhumane, and by God the world heard it.  

And as I said in the hearing, it does not depend on the context. As attacks against Jewish students have skyrocketed on campuses across America, we clearly have tremendous work ahead of us, Mr. Speaker, to address this rot of antisemitism that is now rooted in our once premier higher education institutions. And we will not be deterred by this important work. This is why I rise today in support of my bipartisan resolution condemning the rise of antisemitism on university campuses around the country and the morally bankrupt testimony of those university presidents. It is only a first step but it is an important step.

I commend my colleagues Congressman Moskowitz, Majority Leader Scalise, and Congressman Gottheimer for joining to lead this historically important, bipartisan effort to stand for moral truth.”