Trump again seeks cuts to federal funding for tribal colleges and universities
The administration of Donald Trump has proposed cutting federal funding for tribal colleges and universities for the second consecutive year, according to a budget plan released last week.The fiscal year 2027 proposal includes a $1.5 trillion increase in defence spending while reducing funding for programmes linked to trust and treaty responsibilities to tribal nations. It also proposes eliminating funding for the Institute for American Indian Arts, the only federally funded college dedicated to contemporary Native American arts.According to the Associated Press (AP), the proposal also calls for cuts to tribal colleges and universities (TCUs) and to institutions operated by the Bureau of Indian Education (BIE), including Haskell Indian Nations University and Southwestern Indian Polytechnic Institute.Students at both institutions had filed a lawsuit against the BIE last year over funding and staffing reductions.
Leaders warn of impact
Ahniwake Rose, president of the American Indian Higher Education Consortium, said the proposed cuts could have severe consequences.“If this budget was to pass, our TCUs would be forced to close within a year,” Rose said, according to AP.The proposal also includes reductions to federal spending on housing, business and infrastructure programmes that benefit Native American communities.
Dependence on federal funding
There are around three dozen tribal colleges and universities in the United States, most of which are operated by tribal nations and serve largely rural areas. Many offer reduced tuition for tribal citizens.Most of these institutions rely heavily on federal funding, which is tied to the government’s trust responsibilities and treaty obligations to tribal nations.
Previous cuts and uncertainty
AP reported that funding for TCUs was also reduced last year, including cuts to grants from agencies such as the United States Department of Agriculture that support education for tribal communities.The administration also reduced funding for minority-serving institutions and reallocated some of it to historically Black colleges and universities and TCUs. Leaders at tribal colleges said they do not expect those reallocated funds this year.Rose said that Congress will now decide whether to maintain funding levels.
Political response
Ben Ray Luján criticised the proposal, particularly the plan to eliminate funding for the Institute for American Indian Arts.“These cuts are unacceptable, and I will fight relentlessly to protect IAIA and secure the federal funding they need,” Luján said in a statement, as quoted by AP.“President Trump’s budget proposal to eliminate IAIA’s federal funding is a direct attack on Native communities and yet another example of how the administration is turning its back on Native communities,” he added.
