Florida University Latest to Cut Ties With China’s Confucius Institute

Florida University Latest to Cut Ties With China’s Confucius Institute
Yongjin Wang, director of the Confucius Institute in the University of Lagos. April 6, 2016. (PIUS UTOMI EKPEI/AFP/Getty Images)
Reuters
8/17/2018
Updated:
8/17/2018

The University of North Florida will close a campus branch of a Chinese-run cultural institute, the latest U.S. college to do so amid criticism from U.S. legislators that China uses the institute to influence American higher education.

The Jacksonville-based university said on Aug. 14 it had determined after “careful consideration” that the Confucius Institute, which opened a branch there in 2014 to promote language and culture, did not meet the university’s mission.

“After reviewing the classes, activities, and events sponsored over the past four years and comparing them with the mission and goals of the university, it was determined that they weren’t aligned,” the university said in a statement.

It did not elaborate on the reasons for ending the partnership, but said the institute would be closed in February, fulfilling legal obligations to provide six months’ notice for ending the contract.

The Confucius Institute headquarters in Beijing and China’s foreign ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Other major U.S. colleges, including Pennsylvania State University and the University of Chicago, have cut ties with the institute after professors complained its programs were Chinese propaganda wrapped in culture and language education.

Florida Sen. Marco Rubio welcomed the university’s decision.

Senator Marco Rubio speaks at the 2013 Values Voter Summit, held by the Family Research Council, on October 11, 2013 in Washington, DC. (Andrew Burton/Getty Images)
Senator Marco Rubio speaks at the 2013 Values Voter Summit, held by the Family Research Council, on October 11, 2013 in Washington, DC. (Andrew Burton/Getty Images)

Rubio has been among U.S. lawmakers warning that the Confucius Institute was an effort by China to expand its political influence abroad and had contributed to censorship on U.S. campuses.

“I welcome the decision of @UofNorthFlorida to close its Confucius Institute. There is growing & well-founded concern about these Chinese Communist Party-funded Institutes. I continue to urge other FL universities to follow suit,” Rubio said on Twitter.

Rubio and other lawmakers have pursued legislation that would require universities to disclose major gifts from foreign sources, at a time when U.S. politicians, including President Donald Trump, but also many Democrats, have been pushing a harder line in dealing with China.

U.S.-China relations have suffered in recent months, with the two countries locked in an increasingly bitter trade dispute.

Several other universities in Florida still host the Confucius Institute, among more than 100 such centers around the United States.

By Michael Martina