Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • Kash Patel’s girlfriend sues MS Now claiming defamation
    • House Judiciary invites NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell to testify about Sports Broadcasting Act
    • White House warns demonstrators rioting will not be tolerated amid New Jersey protests
    • CUNY Systemwide Race-Based Recruiting Challenged In Equal Protection Project Complaint To DOJ
    • Doctors Celebrate Breakthrough Cancer Treatment with Standing Ovation
    • HORROR: “I’ve Been Stabbed!” – UK Police Bodycam Footage Shows Stabbing Victim Henry Nowak Pleading with Officers as They Cuff and Drag Him (VIDEO)
    • Monkeypox is spreading in the mountains of western Sudan
    • Second Lady Usha Vance Launches Summer Reading Program for Students
    • World News Vids
    • Whatfinger News
    • Donate
    Whatfinger News Quick Hits
    Subscribe
    Monday, June 1
    • Home
    • Whatfinger News
    • Breaking News 24/7
    • Rumble Fast Clips
    • Right Wing Vids
    • Daily News Link List
    • Military
    • Crazy Clips
    • Entertainment
    • Support Whatfinger
    • Donate To Whatfinger
    Whatfinger News Quick Hits
    Home»News»College faculty study shows campaign donations skew far to the left
    News

    College faculty study shows campaign donations skew far to the left

    Whatfinger EditorBy Whatfinger EditorMay 30, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    A new study finds that donations from faculty at U.S. top universities have become increasingly one-sided – suggesting that politically active faculty are clustered within a “narrow” and “ideological” far-left band. To be sure, similar studies have long concluded that U.S. universities have more liberal-leaning than conservative-leaning faculty.  
    However, the new study, released Thursday and commissioned by the nonprofit civil liberties group the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression, attempts to more accurately assess a faculty member’s political ideology through culling campaign contributions, instead of merely finding a member’s political affiliation. 
    The study consisted of cross-referencing the names of 100,000 faculty members at 55 universities to state and federal campaign contributions. 
    FIRE Vice President of Research Angela Erickson said the results also suggest politically active faculty are clustered within a “narrow ideological band, which raises serious concerns about whether students and scholars are getting the full benefit of the open inquiry universities promise.”
    The study also gives faculty members a political ideology “score” based upon their donations. 
    University of Rochester professor David Primo culled the list of faculty members, then cross referenced the names with a database of over 850 million state and federal campaign contributions.
    The members who could be matched with donations were assigned a score.
    “Studying faculty campaign contributors provides a unique window into the views of politically active professors,” Primo said. “These data allow us to systematically measure viewpoint diversity at top universities and lay a foundation for strengthening discourse, teaching, and research on college campuses.”
    The average ideology score of faculty donors in the 55-school sample was only slightly less left-leaning than some of the most left-wing members of the U.S. Senate, such as Vermont Independent Sen. Bernie Sanders and Massachusetts Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren, according to FIRE, which also says there was no equivalent critical mass of donations on the Republican side.
    By analyzing the donations and scores, it was also possible to approximate which schools “might have greater intellectual diversity than others,” FIRE also said. 
    Other findings include:

    The humanities and fine arts show the least political diversity, while business and agriculture show the highest
    Eight of the 10 most politically diverse faculty bodies were at universities in the South. The two others were Kansas State University and Brigham Young University). 
    Four of the 10 least intellectually diverse campuses were on the West Coast, and four were Ivy League schools in the Northeast.


    Read Full Article: https://justthenews.com/politics-policy/education/college-faculty-study-based-campaign-donation-finds-members-clustered?utm_source=justthenews.com&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=external-news-aggregators

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Whatfinger Editor

    Related Posts

    Kash Patel’s girlfriend sues MS Now claiming defamation

    June 1, 2026
    Read More

    White House warns demonstrators rioting will not be tolerated amid New Jersey protests

    June 1, 2026
    Read More

    House Judiciary invites NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell to testify about Sports Broadcasting Act

    June 1, 2026
    Read More
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    • Is Ivermectin the Key to Fighting Cancer? …. – Wellness (Dr. McCullough’s company) Sponsored Post 🛑 You can get MEBENDAZOLE  and Ivermectin from Wellness 👍

    🛑Breaking News 24/7 📰Rumble Clips👍 Choice Clips🎞️CRAZY Clips😜 Right Wing Vids🔥Military⚔️Entertainment🍿Money💵Crypto🪙Sports🏈World🌍Sci-Tech🧠 ‘Mainstream 🗞️Twitter –X🐤Lifehacks🤔 Humor Feed 🤡 Humor Daily🤡 Live Longer❤️‍🩹 Anime😊  Food🍇 US Debt Clock 💳 Support Whatfinger💲

    Whatfinger News Quick Hits
    Whatfinger Quickhits is published by Whatfinger News

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.