Harvard IOP Student Leader Resigns, Citing ‘Palestinian Exception to Free Speech’
S2:E20

Harvard IOP Student Leader Resigns, Citing ‘Palestinian Exception to Free Speech’

As we neared the one-year anniversary of October 7 earlier this month, the Harvard Institute of Politics — the largest student organization on Harvard’s campus and its flagship platform for political discourse — saw a high-profile shakeup in its student leadership. 

Citing the Palestinian exception to free speech, a vocal pro-Palestine activist resigned as the chair of one of the IOP’s popular programs on campaigns and advocacy. 

The reason? Closed-door infighting over how to handle the 2024 elections and Israel-Palestine conflict in its programming. 

As concerns about free speech and censorship ramp up, the IOP shakeup marked a fundamental disagreement between the IOP’s top student leadership on how to handle political campus discourse on Israel and Palestine.

Today on Newstalk, we join our reporters to break down the dispute — and we join the student who resigned to hear his version of the story.

Creators and Guests

Frank S. Zhou
Host
Frank S. Zhou
Founding Host and Co-Producer, Newstalk at The Harvard Crimson (heard in all 50 states, 110+ countries, 2024 ACP National Podcast of the Year)
Yael S. Goldstein
Host
Yael S. Goldstein
Host, Newstalk Season II at The Harvard Crimson
Dhruv Patel
Guest
Dhruv Patel
Harvard Kennedy School and Institute of Politics Reporter, The Harvard Crimson
Nuriel Vera-Degraff
Guest
Nuriel Vera-Degraff
Editorial Board Member, The Harvard Crimson
William Mao
Guest
William Mao
Harvard Kennedy School and Institute of Politics Reporter, The Harvard Crimson