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Higher Ed Joins March on Wall Street to Defend DEI Programs

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Al Sharpton March On Wall Street Ap 25240579999166NEW YORK — The early morning mist hung over Lower Manhattan as buses began arriving from campuses across America. From Historically Black Colleges and Universities in the South to state flagships in the Midwest, from community colleges in New Jersey to Ivy League institutions in New England, students and faculty poured into New York City with a singular purpose: to stand with the Rev. Al Sharpton in defending diversity, equity and inclusion programs under siege.

Thursday's "March on Wall Street" drew thousands to Manhattan's Financial District, but among the clergy, labor and community leaders were hundreds of higher education advocates who had traveled from every corner of the nation, transforming the demonstration into an unlikely convergence of campus and community activism.

The 45-minute march through downtown Manhattan carried special significance, timed to coincide with the anniversary of the Civil Rights-era March on Washington in 1963. But this time, the target wasn't the nation's capital—it was corporate America's headquarters.

"We come to Wall Street rather than Washington this year to let them know, you can try to turn back the clock, but you can't turn back time," Sharpton said as the demonstration began at New York’s popular Foley Square. 

For the academics who joined the march, Sharpton's words resonated with particular urgency. Since returning to the White House in January, President Donald J. Trump has successfully moved to end DEI programs within the federal government and warned schools to do the same or risk losing federal money.

Dr. Harold Williams, an adjunct sociology professor from Philadelphia who had driven three hours with a van full of colleagues, clutched a handmade sign reading "Education is Democracy."  

"We're watching the systematic destruction of everything we've worked to build," said the 63-year-old educator, who was just one when his mother brought him to Washington, D.C. on August 28, 1963  to hear Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., deliver his famous “I Have a Dream” speech.  "They're not just cutting programs, they're cutting the pathways that opened higher education to an entire generation of students."