Republican lawmakers from three House investigative committees have asked the University of Pennsylvania to disclose funding sources for its academic institute focused on diplomacy and foreign policy that’s named after President Joe Biden, amid concerns of foreign influence.
Donations from China to the university surged to over $72 million in the three years since the founding of the Biden Center was announced in 2017—compared to $21 million in a similar time frame before the center was set up. That prompted a watchdog group and lawmakers to question whether the funding increase was due to the center.
“Understanding whether the ... [Biden Center] received funds from China or other adversarial nations at the behest of the Biden family or future Biden Administration officials will shed light on the depth and breadth of the potential improper influence these nations enjoy over the Biden family,” states the letter by House Committee on Oversight and Reform ranking member James Comer (R-Ky.), House Committee on the Judiciary ranking member Jim Jordan (R-Ohio), and House Committee on Education and Labor ranking member Virginia Foxx (R-N.C.).
Secretary of State Antony Blinken previously served as managing director of the center before joining the Biden campaign in 2019.
Ron Ozlo, a spokesperson for the university, said in an email to The Epoch Times that the Biden Center has “never solicited or received any gifts from any Chinese or other foreign entity.”
“The University has never solicited any gifts for the Center. Since its inception in 2017, there have been three unsolicited gifts (from two donors) which combined total $1,100. Both donors are Americans,” Ozlo said.
In the letter, the lawmakers expressed concern about the Chinese regime’s use of “strategic investments to turn American college campuses into indoctrination platforms for American students.”
“The CCP’s [Chinese Communist Party] actions call into question whether U.S. institutes of higher education receiving federal taxpayer dollars should be allowed to accept funds from China, the CCP, or other affiliated organizations,” the letter stated.
The lawmakers also asked the university to brief committee staff on the matter by Feb. 4.