
This past Capitol Hill week had something truly bipartisan that broke through the clutter. Holding two bills with long names and short tempers, a small group of lawmakers entered the press cycle and insisted that American universities have been surreptitiously receiving funding from nations that, by nearly any honest reading, do not wish the United States well. It’s difficult to ignore how much the conversation has changed as you watch it happen. This type of legislation might have died in committee five years ago. A Republican from Florida is currently standing next to a Democrat from New Jersey.
The package targets two issues simultaneously, with Rep. Elise Stefanik of New York leading the House side and Rick Scott of Florida leading the Senate. The first is the constellation of “branch campuses” where American universities operate, frequently profitably and in silence, in countries like China and Qatar. The second is the influx of foreign research funding into sensitive areas of academia, such as biotech, AI, and quantum computing—fields where a stolen weapons schematic may be less significant than a leaked notebook.
| Key Information | Details |
|---|---|
| Lead Sponsor (House) | Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-N.Y.) |
| Lead Sponsor (Senate) | Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.) |
| Democratic Co-Sponsor | Rep. Josh Gottheimer (D-N.J.) |
| Bills Introduced | No Branch Campuses in Hostile Countries Act; Defending American Research Act |
| Related Legislation | DETERRENT Act (amends Section 117 of the Higher Education Act) |
| Countries Listed | China, Russia, Iran, North Korea, Cuba, Venezuela, Qatar, Turkey |
| Sensitive Research Areas | AI, biotech, quantum computing |
| Current Reporting Threshold | $250,000 (proposed reduction to $50,000, or $0 for countries of concern) |
| Enforcement Body | U.S. Department of Education |
| Introduced | Early May 2026 |
Stefanik presented the matter in her trademark direct manner, building much of her recent notoriety on a now-famous hearing that resulted in the resignation of two Ivy League presidents. She told Fox News Digital that foreign enemies are “sowing discord” on campuses, and while the diagnosis isn’t always as clear-cut as the rhetoric, she is correct that something has changed. She noted that for years, universities in her own state have operated satellite operations within China. The same has been done by other elite schools in Washington and Chicago. Speaking with those who have worked in higher education compliance offices, it seems like this was bound to eventually catch up with the industry.
Any college that accepts funding from a list of designated adversarial governments would be barred from receiving federal research funding for five years under the Defending American Research Act. In academia, five years is a long time. It’s long enough to destroy a lab and lose a generation of graduate students. The point is that the bill’s sponsors are obviously aware of this. They want the threat to be so great that colleges are ultimately forced to decide between the federal and foreign checks.
The inclusion of Qatar is noteworthy. Nearly everyone can understand North Korea, Iran, Russia, and China. However, Qatar serves as a mediator in some of the more contentious disputes in the area, houses a U.S. military installation, and assisted in the evacuation of Americans from Afghanistan. Stefanik contends that no matter what Doha does overseas, the “billions” of dollars it has invested in American universities have funded something different on campus. The Wall Street Journal reported that Qatar surpassed all other nations in non-tuition funding to U.S. schools between 2012 and 2024. The Foundation for Defense of Democracies has been making a similar argument for some time.
It’s still unclear if either bill will reach the floor in its current form or if Chairwoman Virginia Foxx’s longer-term goal is to combine them into a more comprehensive reauthorization of the Higher Education Act. The fact that more than 160 House Democrats voted against a previous iteration of the crackdown indicates that, despite its existence, the bipartisan label is not as strong as press releases suggest.
Naturally, universities are uncomfortable. For months, the American Council on Education has expressed concern about ambiguity and reporting burdens. However, the political landscape has changed. While some campuses make headlines for reasons that no donor wanted to see, parents are witnessing tuition rise. Walking through this debate, it seems like the schools took too long to get ahead of it. The universities might not agree with the way Congress is currently moving forward on their behalf.

