WASHINGTON — Morehouse College is set to announce that President Joe Biden will deliver its commencement address on May 19, but some faculty members have raised concerns about the decision, according to a person familiar with the matter and an email to faculty reviewed by NBC News.
“This week, I received an inquiry from concerned faculty about rumors they were hearing about President Biden’s selection as the 2024 Commencement speaker,” Kendrick Brown, Morehouse College’s provost and senior vice president for academic affairs, wrote in the email to faculty members on Friday.
Kendrick said he would convene a virtual meeting on April 25 “to extend an opportunity for faculty with different perspectives on the selection of our Commencement speaker to ask questions and make comments.” He said students would also engage with the president of the college, David Thomas.
Kendrick did not return a request for further comment, and a spokesperson for Morehouse declined to offer more details.
The pushback on Morehouse College leadership’s decision comes amid increasing protests on college campuses over Biden’s support for Israel in its war against Hamas in the Gaza Strip. The protests since the war began in October have already forced Biden, and other top administration officials, to dramatically scale back appearances at college campuses.
Commencement season is typically a time when presidents reach young audiences and offer an opportunity to deliver a keynote address highlighting their accomplishments and future. In an election year, commencement speeches can carry particular significance.
But Biden’s addresses this year are poised to be fraught, largely due to growing protests over his refusal to call for a permanent, immediate ceasefire in Gaza without conditions. The president is struggling with younger voters, and recent polling also shows many Black voters are not enthusiastic about supporting his candidacy.
Speaking at an Historically Black College and University would provide an “opportunity” for the president, according to the person familiar with the controversy.
The White House declined to comment.
israeli hamas conflict columbia university protest palestinian (Kena Betancur / AFP – Getty Images)
Brown wrote in his email that Morehouse first extended its invitation to Biden in September, and that the college would announce the president as its speaker early this week.
And, he wrote, “the College does not plan to rescind its accepted invitation to President Biden.” The meeting on Thursday “is a forum for discussion and to respond to questions about the invitation that was extended and accepted,” Brown wrote in the email.
Morehouse, like other colleges, has faced students speaking out about the war in Gaza. In February, the Maroon Tiger — Morehouse’s student publication — reported that a student pulled an Israeli flag down from the chapel and was detained by campus police.
“Students are not in favor of the way in which the United States has handled this situation, and are surely not in favor of the trauma and the pain and the genocide that the Palestinian people are going through — but also that innocent civilians and Israel are going through as well,” Calvin Bell, a Morehouse College student said in February, after the flag incident.
“It’s not been a secret nationwide, if not globally, that there are a lot of concerns…about how the war has been handled and how America and the presidency has been in the war,” a source familiar with the Morehouse commencement planning told NBC News. “We’ve heard conversations like that. There’s also plenty of people who are excited to have a sitting president as their commencement speaker.”
This article was originally published on NBCNews.com
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