Harvard president Claudine Gay resigns after rows over plagiarism, antisemitism
- Claudine Gay, Harvard’s first black president, announced her departure just months into her tenure
- She was attacked for her response to antisemitism on campus, and then accused of plagiarism

The president of Harvard University resigned on Tuesday after coming under ferocious attack over plagiarism accusations and her response to antisemitism on campus amid the Israel-Gaza conflict.
Claudine Gay was criticised in recent months after reports surfaced alleging that she did not properly cite scholarly sources. The most recent accusations came Tuesday, published anonymously in a conservative online outlet.
Gay was also engulfed by scandal after she declined to say unequivocally whether calling for genocide of Jews would violate Harvard’s code of conduct, during testimony to Congress alongside the heads of MIT and the University of Pennsylvania last month.
Gay, who made history as the first black person to be president of the powerhouse university in Cambridge, Massachusetts, said in her resignation letter that she’d been subjected to personal threats and “racial animus”.

Her downfall comes after the university’s governing Harvard Corporation had initially backed her after the public relations disaster of the congressional testimony.