Florida News Connection
June 17, 2025
By: Trimmel Gomes
By Michael Vasquez
for The Hechinger Report.
Broadcast version by Trimmel Gomes for Florida News Connection reporting for
The Hechinger Report-Public News Service Collaboration
Oklahoma wants some of its less-expensive universities to cut travel and
operational costs, consolidate departments and reduce energy use — all in the
name of saving money.
Already, earning a degree at one of these regional institutions is relatively
inexpensive for students, costing in total as much as $15,000 less per year
than bigger state universities in Oklahoma. And the schools, including
Southeastern Oklahoma State University and the University of Central Oklahoma,
graduate more teachers and nurses than those research institutions. Those
graduates can fill critically needed roles for the state.
Still, state policymakers think there are more efficiencies to be found.
Higher education is one of the specific areas targeted by a new state-run
agency with a familiar name, with the goal of “protecting our Oklahoma way of
life,” Republican Gov. Kevin Stitt said in the first DOGE-OK report
this spring. The Oklahoma Division of
Government Efficiency, created around the same time as the federal entity with
a similar title, counts among its accomplishments so far shifting
to automated lawn mowers to cut grass at the state capital, changing to
energy-efficient LED lighting and cutting down on state government cell phone
bills. The Oklahoma governor’s office did not respond to a request for comment
about this effort.
Oklahoma is one of about a dozen states that has considered
an approach similar to the federal DOGE, though some state attempts were
launched before the Trump administration’s. The federal Department of
Government Efficiency, established the day Trump took office on Jan. 20, has
commanded deep cuts to federal spending and the federal workforce, with limited
justification.
As academia becomes a piƱata for President Donald Trump and his supporters,
Republican state lawmakers and governors are assembling in line: They want to
get their whacks in too.
Beyond Oklahoma, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis launched FL DOGE in February, with a promise
to review state university and college operations and spending. Republicans in
the Ohio statehouse formed an Ohio DOGE caucus. One of the Iowa DOGE Task
Force’s three main goals is “further refining
workforce and job training programs,” some of which are run through community
colleges, and its members include at least two people who work at state
universities.
The current political environment represents “an unprecedented attack on higher
education,” said Veena Dubal, a law professor at the University of California,
Irvine, and general counsel for the American Association of University
Professors.
The state-level scrutiny comes atop those federal job cuts, which include
layoffs of workers who interact with colleges, interdepartmental spending cuts
that affect higher education and the shrinking of contracts that support
research and special programs at colleges and universities. Other research
grants have been canceled outright. The White House is pursuing these
spending cuts at the same time as it is using colleges’ diversity efforts, their handling of
antisemitism and their policies about transgender athletes to
force a host of changes that go beyond cost-cutting — such as rules about how
students protest and whether individual university departments require more
supervision.
Higher education, which relies heavily on both state dollars and federal
funding in the form of student loans and Pell grants, research grants and
workforce training programs, faces the prospect of continued, and painful,
budget cuts.
“Institutions are doing things under the threat of extinction,” Dubal said.
“They’re not making measured decisions about what’s best for the institution,
or best for the public good.”
For instance, the Trump administration extracted a number of pledges from
Columbia University as part of its antisemitism charge, suspending $400 million
in federal grants and contracts as leverage. This led campus faculty and labor
unions to sue, citing an assault on academic freedom. (The Hechinger Report is
in an independent unit of Teachers College.) Now Harvard faces a review of $9
billion in federal funding, also over antisemitism allegations, and the list of
universities under similar scrutiny is only growing.
Budget cuts are nothing new for higher education — when a recession hits, it is
one of the first places state lawmakers look to cut, in blue states or red. One
reason: Public universities can sometimes make up the difference with tuition
increases.
What DOGE brings, in Washington and statehouses, is something new. The DOGE
approach is engaging in aggressive cost-cutting that specifically targets
certain programs that some politicians don’t like, said Jeff Selingo, a special
adviser to the president at Arizona State University.
“It’s definitely more political than it is fiscal or policy-oriented,” said
Selingo, who is also the author of several books on higher education.
“Universities haven’t done what certain politicians wanted them to do,” he
added. “This is a way to control them, in a way.”
The current pressure on Florida colleges extends far beyond budget matters.
DeSantis has criticized college campuses as “intellectually repressive
environments.” In 2021, Florida state lawmakers passed a law, signed by the
governor, to fight this perceived ideological bent by requiring a survey of
public university professors and students to assess whether there is enough intellectual
diversity on campus.
At New College in Sarasota, DeSantis led an aggressive cultural overhaul to
transform the college’s atmosphere and identity into something more politically
conservative. The governor has cited Hillsdale College, a conservative private
Christian institution in Michigan, as a role model.
Faculty and students at New College sued. Their complaints included allegations
of academic censorship and a hostile environment for LGBTQ+ students, many of
whom transferred elsewhere. One lawsuit was ultimately dropped. Since the
takeover, the college added athletics programs and said it has attracted a record number of
new and transfer students.
Across America, Republicans control both the legislature and the governor’s
mansion in 23 states, compared with 15 states fully controlled by Democrats. In
those GOP-run states, creating a mini-DOGE carries the potential for increased
political might, with little oversight.
In Florida, “state DOGE serves as an intimidation device,” one high-ranking
public university administrator told The Hechinger Report. The administrator,
who asked not to be named for fear of retribution, said “there’s also just this
atmosphere of fear.”
In late March, university presidents received a letter signed by the “DOGE
Team” at the governor’s office. The letter promised a thorough review by FL
DOGE officials, with site visits and the expectation that each college appoint
a designated liaison to handle FL DOGE’s ongoing requests.
The letter highlighted some of the items FL DOGE might request going forward,
including course codes, descriptions and syllabi; full detail of all centers
established on campus; and “the closure and dissolution of DEI programs and
activities, as required by law.”
The state did not respond to a question about whether FL DOGE is designed to
attack higher education in the state. Molly Best, the deputy press secretary,
noted that FL DOGE is now up and running, and cities and counties are also
receiving letters requesting certain information and that the public will be
updated in the future.
DOGE in Florida also follows other intervention in higher education in the
state: Florida’s appointed Board of Governors, most of whom are chosen by the
governor, removed dozens of courses from state universities’ core curriculum to
comply with the Stop WOKE Act, a state law that took effect in
2022. The law, which DeSantis heavily promoted, discourages the teaching of
concepts such as systemic racism or sexism. The courses removed from Florida’s
12 state universities were primarily sociology, anthropology and history
courses.
“You can’t erase history,” said Meadow Swantic, a criminal justice major at
Florida Atlantic University, a public institution, in an interview at its Boca
Raton campus. “There’s certain things that are built on white supremacy, and
it’s a problem.”
Fellow Florida Atlantic student Kayla Collins, however, said she has noticed
some professors’ liberal bias during class discussions.
“I myself have witnessed it in my history class,” said Collins, who identifies
as Republican. “It was a great history class, but I would say there were a lot
of political things brought up, when it wasn’t a government class or a
political science class.”
At the University of Central Florida in Orlando, political science major
Liliana Hogan said she had a different experience of her professors’ political
leanings.
“You hear ‘people go to university to get woke’ or whatever, but actually, as a
poli-sci student, a lot of my professors are more right-wing than you would
believe,” Hogan said. “I get more right-leaning perspectives from my teachers
than I would have expected.” Hogan said.
Another UCF student, Johanna Abrams, objected to university budget cuts being
ordered by the state government. Abrams said she understands that tax dollars
are limited, but she believes college leaders should be trusted with making the
budget decisions that best serve the student body.
“The government’s job should be providing the funding for education, but not
determining what is worthy of being taught,” Abrams said.
Whatever their missions and attempts at mimicry, state-level DOGE entities are
not necessarily identical to the federal version.
For instance, in Kansas, the Committee on Government Efficiency, while
inspired by DOGE, is in search of ideas from state residents about ways to make
the state bureaucracy run better rather than imposing its own changes. A Missouri Senate portal inspired by the
federal DOGE works in a similar way. Yet the federal namesake isn’t taking
suggestions from the masses to inform its work.
And at the federal level, then-DOGE chief Elon Musk in February emailed
workers, asking them to respond “to understand what they got done last
week,” he posted on X. “Failure to respond will be
taken as a resignation.” Employees were asked to reply with a list of five
accomplishments.
The Ohio DOGE Caucus noted explicitly it won’t be doing anything like that.
“We’re not going to be emailing any state employees asking them to give us five
things they worked on throughout the week,” Ohio state Rep. Tex Fischer, a
Republican, told a local radio station. “We’re really just
trying to get like-minded people into a room to talk about making sure that
government is spending our money wisely and focusing on its core functions that
we all agree with.”
Michael Vasquez wrote this article for The
Hechinger Report.
Support for this reporting was provided by Lumina
Foundation.
Content for this Post is provided by Florida
News Connection, a Bureau of Public News Service. Public News Service is
a member of the The Trust Project.
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