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Columbia president tried to remove Jewish ‘mole’ on university board

Newly published emails show that Claire Shipman downplayed concerns about campus antisemitism and called for the dismissal of one of the institution’s ‘most outspoken Jewish advocates’

July 3, 2025 15:29
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Claire Shipman, acting president of Columbia University, has apologised after it emerged she called for the removal of a Jewish member of the university's board (Image: Getty)

By

Andrew Bernard,

Vita Fellig,

Jewish New Syndicate

1 min read

Claire Shipman, acting president of Columbia University, has apologised after it emerged that she called for the removal of a Jewish member of the institution’s board.

A cache of emails, published by the House Committee on Education and Workforce, showed that Shipman said of Shoshana Shendelman: “I just don’t think she should be on the board.”

They also revealed that she agreed with another board member’s characterisation of Shendelman, whom the committee called one of Columbia’s “most outspoken Jewish advocates”, as a “mole” and a “fox in the henhouse”.

In addition to the messages about removing Shendelman, Shipman called for the appointment of an Arab or Middle Eastern board member and described the congressional investigations into Jew-hatred on college campuses as “Capitol Hill nonsense”.