No Longer Nudging: States are Overhauling Higher Ed

Michael Harris joins TVP to discuss state legislatures are changing higher ed governance, why higher ed isn’t investigating its own Epstein ties — and how power is being reshaped in colleges and universities.

52 minutes
By: Trusted Voices

Higher education has always been political. What’s different now is where, and how, that power is being exercised.

In this episode of Trusted Voices, Teresa Valerio Parrot and Erin Hennessy are joined by longtime governance scholar and dean Michael Harris for a wide-ranging conversation that makes one thing clear: The center of gravity in higher ed decision-making has shifted decisively to the states. And it’s not drifting back anytime soon.

From closed presidential searches to the outright elimination of tenure, state legislatures and governors are no longer nudging institutions from the sidelines. They’re reshaping governance structures, board authority, and leadership pipelines in real time. Harris points out that what once felt unthinkable — executive orders replacing legislative debate, boards acting as political agents rather than institutional fiduciaries — is now becoming normalized.

The discussion traces how this plays out across the country: Florida and Texas setting early precedents, Iowa emerging as a bellwether, and states like Idaho and Utah reducing transparency in presidential searches under the banner of “efficiency.” The result? Presidents starting their roles with trust deficits, faculty and staff locked out of decision-making, and campuses bracing for governance whiplash every election cycle.

But the episode doesn’t stop at governance mechanics. It zooms out to the underlying driver: power. Not just ideological power, but electoral math. As Harris argues, attacks on higher education increasingly mirror broader efforts to influence who votes, where students live, and how politically engaged campuses can be. Knowledge still matters — but who controls it, and who benefits from it, matters more.

The conversation also tackles accountability, from public-health readiness on campuses to higher education’s conspicuous silence around the Epstein files. Other industries are investigating. Higher ed, largely, is not, raising uncomfortable questions about transparency, ethics, and who institutions protect when scrutiny hits.

And yet, the episode closes on a reminder worth holding onto: students. Amid all the policy fights and political pressure, today’s students remain engaged, curious, and ready to lead. The challenge for higher education isn’t whether this era will pass. It’s whether institutions are prepared to lead — openly, credibly, and with purpose.

Show Notes

And speaking of… Higher ed and the Epstein files

Trusted Voices

Trusted Voices

Podcast

Trusted Voices explores the complex intersection of leadership and communication in higher education. Each episode, hosts Teresa Valerio Parrot and Erin Hennessy chat with university presidents, industry thought leaders—and each other—about the latest news in the industry and the challenges and opportunities facing those in the most visible roles in higher ed.

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