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The Charles Koch Foundation donated $25 million to USU, here’s how it’s impacted the university

Editor’s note: this story was done as a collaborative project with The Guardian.

For the past year, we have been investigating the Koch donations for our student newspaper, The Utah Statesman and The Guardian. We interviewed more than 20 of our fellow students and staff, and pulled dozens of public records and wrote stories about it. What we found paints a picture of how Charles Koch is using his wealth to affect the education of 3,500 students at the Huntsman School of Business.

At first, Angel Lopez felt honored to have won the scholarship.

In 2017, the marketing student at Utah State University’s business school was named a Koch Scholar, a program sponsored by Charles Koch, the ultra-conservative billionaire. Fifteen students are given a $1,000 stipend and selected to participate in the “reading group,” tasked with reading one book a week.

But Lopez, 23, the son of Latino immigrants who aspired to become a social worker, soon felt the program was promoting a hardline brand of rightwing politics. His required readings, with titles such as Order Without Law and Anarchy Unbound, could often be boiled down to a single idea: Government is bad.

Critics say the Koch Scholars program is one example of how Charles Koch has sought to transform the Utah State business school into a libertarian mouthpiece. Over the last 10 years Koch has given millions to the university, including a $25 million gift in 2017 that led to the creation of a think-tank: the Center for Growth and Opportunity at Utah State University.

He is pursuing similar policies at schools nationwide, in what Koch officials themselves describe as a concerted effort to influence the next generation of political and business minds. “Our funding helps [scholars] follow their research wherever it may lead,” the foundation says in public materials. “We are committed to the highest standards of philanthropy.”



There are 5 comments

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  1. Todd Noebel

    Your title posed a question that, based on what is presented here, seems to be no, it has not become a “right wing mouthpiece”. It would appear that the University, and students, have benefited from the donations from the Koch foundation. Why not state that?

  2. Jerry N. Wesner

    I’ve noticed for years that business schools are almost always more conservative than the rest of the universities where they are housed. This may help explain why.
    I would be highly skeptical of the independence of thought of any university accepting such massive quantities of Koch money. Business people are noted for insisting on getting value for expenditure. When it comes to indoctrinating the business leaders of tomorrow, a few millions from billionaires is probably seen as a bargain.

    The rest of us should see it for what it is — buying leaders who will adopt their philosophy and impose it upon us all when possible.

  3. Marcus Williams

    The Koch Brothers:
    Mission: “Destroy public education from within.” The USU business school is complicit.
    Mantra: “When having $50 billion each (Charles & David) just isn’t enough.”


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