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  • Axios Austin

    Why the University of Texas is unlikely to divest from Israel

    By Asher Price,

    2024-05-08
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3uTFtw_0ssYnpXD00

    Pro-Palestinian protesters on the University of Texas campus have made a specific request of university officials that's very unlikely to be entertained — divest from weapons manufacturing companies selling arms to the Israeli military.

    Why it matters: Apart from whether divestment makes sense as a fiduciary or moral matter, the university's unwillingness to bend on its portfolio is overdetermined by state politics.


    • UT is a public institution overseen by a board of regents appointed by Gov. Greg Abbott and confirmed by state senators.

    The big picture: Protests at UT and campuses across the country have sought to use divestment as a tool to put pressure on Israel, whose assault on Hamas has killed tens of thousands of Palestinians, including many civilians.

    • Israel is responding to the Oct. 7 Hamas attack that killed some 1,200 people and during which around 240 were taken hostage.

    Dig in: The UT System's investments are handled by the nonprofit University of Texas/Texas A&M Investment Management Company ( UTIMCO ).

    • The not-for-profit corporation's governing board is dominated by the UT System Board of Regents.

    State of play: UTIMCO manages $74.6 billion in assets for the UT and Texas A&M systems. Among the investments are companies that produce weapons and ammunition that go to Israel, per a list compiled by the Quaker organization American Friends Service Committee . They include:

    • Northrop Corp., with UT shares valued at roughly $1.4 million, per UTIMCO's annual audit report .
    • Lockheed Martin Corp., with UT shares valued at almost $1 million.
    • RTX (formerly Raytheon), with UT shares valued at nearly $600,000.
    • General Dynamics Corp, with UT shares valued at about $500,000.

    What they're saying: "These companies are not only profiting from the genocide of Palestinians but are directly responsible," according to a "University of Texas at Austin Student Statement of Solidarity with Palestine" that has been signed by dozens of organizations.

    The other side: "This will NEVER happen," Abbott wrote on X about the protesters' divestment demand.

    • Abbott's office declined an Axios interview request. A spokesperson for the UT System did not respond to an interview request about UTIMCO.
    • A Washington Post analysis of nationwide university investments in Israel found that UTIMCO had little direct exposure to Israel — save an investment of $4 million to $8 million in a Tel Aviv-based venture capital fund run by TLV Partners.

    Between the lines: "Colleges and universities have long been a target of Republican lawmakers due to the perception of liberal biases among faculty, staff, and students," Joshua Blank , research director of the Texas Politics Project at UT, tells Axios.

    • "Given that Republican voters are unlikely to be reacting positively to the protests taking place on college campuses … the governor is likely operating in a safe space among his partisans."

    Catch up quick: A 2019 law bars the state's public agencies — including UT — from entering into contracts worth $100,000 or more with companies with 10 or more full-time employees that boycott Israel.

    Behind the scenes: When Abbott signed an initial version of the law barring public contractors from boycotting Israel, a major Texas trading partner , he said "anti-Israel policies are anti-Texan policies."

    Flashback: In the 1980s, UT officials shrugged off calls by students to divest from companies with holdings in apartheid South Africa.

    • Former UT president William Cunningham told KUT that such a move could have cost the university roughly $30 million.
    • He added that "over time … the corporations that we had invested in had largely begun to pull out … and I think it's a result of what happened at UT Austin and all the other schools around the country."

    Zoom out: As of this year, at least 38 states have passed bills and executive orders aimed at discouraging boycotts of Israel, per the American-Israeli Cooperative Enterprise, which describes the boycotts as antisemitic.

    What's next: Expect Texas' top policymakers to tighten their embrace of Israel as campus protests continue.

    Get more local stories in your inbox with Axios Austin.

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