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Columbia Picks Former U. Wisconsin-Madison Chancellor as Fourth New President in Two Years

Columbia Picks Former U. Wisconsin-Madison Chancellor as Fourth New President in Two Years

“Her appointment comes at a tumultuous time for the university, which is still recovering from its protracted battle with the Trump administration.”

Jennifer Mnookin’s record in Wisconsin does not inspire confidence. She is fond of capitulating to the left.

The Washington Free Beacon reports:

Columbia Taps University of Wisconsin Chancellor Jennifer Mnookin as Fourth President in Two Years

Columbia University has selected University of Wisconsin-Madison chancellor Jennifer Mnookin as its next president, according to three people familiar with the decision. Mnookin, the former dean of UCLA School of Law, will be Columbia’s fourth president in two years.

Her appointment comes at a tumultuous time for the university, which is still recovering from its protracted battle with the Trump administration.

As UW-Madison chancellor, Mnookin struck a deal with the school’s “Gaza Solidarity Encampment” after it occupied a major campus thoroughfare, framing the protesters as well-intentioned activists who were “motivated by understandably passionate feelings about the devastation in Gaza.” In exchange for their cooperation, the school pledged to go easy on the protesters and host at least three guest scholars from Palestinian universities.

Mnookin also threw her support behind the Black Lives Matter protests in 2020, telling black students at UCLA Law, “we see you. Black Lives Matter.”

“As members of a law school community in particular, we must recognize and grapple with the complicity of the legal system and law enforcement in acts of racism and violence,” she wrote to the school. “These recent horrifying instances are, sadly, not aberrations; our legal system has been part and parcel of our nation’s shameful history of institutionalized racism.”

She would strike a different tone five years later in a November conversation with the New York Times that took place while she was being considered for the Columbia job. She told the paper that universities had over-indexed on identity politics.

“I think that many universities, not all, but many, were for a period of time deeply focused on identity diversity, and really not so focused on viewpoint diversity or belief diversity,” she said in an interview. “[U]niversities should be spaces where ideas, and different ideas, embodied by people from different backgrounds, come together.”

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Comments

destroycommunism | January 27, 2026 at 1:28 pm

to her credit:

Campus leaders asked protesters multiple times[18] over several days to bring their demonstration into conformity with the law. Protesters were also given several opportunities to voluntarily leave the encampment with their belongings and avoid consequences. Campus leaders had described potential consequences immediately before[19] and after[20] the encampment was erected.

On May 1, 2024, Mnookin authorized campus police to dismantle the encampment.[21] Campus police were assisted by the Madison Police Department, the Dane County Sheriff’s Office, and Wisconsin State Patrol. The removal of the encampment resulted in 34 arrests of students, professors and community members. Most protestors were released without citation,

this was after non stop pleas by Mnookin to leave…….

but at least she moved forward …and of course the courts were not going to go against the blmplo thuggs

She’s actually *still* the Madison chancellor, until the end of the spring semester, so former seems a bit early.

Anyhow, yeah, she didn’t really let the encampment thing go for super long.

WildernessLawyer | January 28, 2026 at 8:48 am

Fingers crossed for improvement at Columbia but I am not optimistic.