Posted on 03/29/2026 3:26:22 PM PDT by Miami Rebel
Republican politician and entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy has published an op-ed reiterating his stance that the state of Ohio has too many universities and they should be consolidated. Ramaswamy cited challenges facing some Ohio schools like enrollment declines and budget cuts, rather than celebrating the recent NCAA tournament appearances of programs like Miami University and Akron University.
Why it matters
Ramaswamy's comments come as a surprise, given the recent success of Ohio universities in the NCAA tournament. His proposal to consolidate schools could have major implications for thousands of jobs and students across the state, especially at smaller regional universities that compete in the Mid-American Conference (MAC).
The details
In his op-ed, Ramaswamy highlighted issues facing some Ohio universities, such as staff cuts and sports program eliminations at Cleveland State, declining enrollment at the University of Akron, and restructuring efforts at Kent State. However, he did not acknowledge the tournament appearances of MAC schools like Akron and Kent State, which employ over 13,000 Ohioans.
Ramaswamy published his op-ed in the Columbus Dispatch on March 28, 2026.
The players
Vivek Ramaswamy
A Republican politician and entrepreneur who has called for consolidation of Ohio universities.
Miami University
An Ohio university that made the 2026 NCAA men's basketball tournament field.
Akron University
An Ohio university that made the 2026 NCAA men's basketball tournament field, but has faced enrollment declines in recent years.
Kent State University
An Ohio university that competes in the Mid-American Conference (MAC) and recently launched a restructuring plan.
Cleveland State University
An Ohio university that has cut staff and eliminated NCAA sports programs in recent years.
What they’re saying
“I love universities in Ohio. I want us to have the best universities. But we have too many of them. They need to be consolidated. And when you consolidate them, they can actually be centers of excellence who are actually the best in their respective domains instead of trying to create replicas and clones of one another throughout the state.”
— Vivek Ramaswamy
“In recent years, Cleveland State has cut staff and eliminated NCAA sports programs. The student count at the University of Akron inched up this past year but is at half of its 2010 enrollment level. Kent State launched a 'Transformation 2028' restructuring plan last year in search of administrative efficiencies. Central State University remains on 'fiscal watch.'”
— Vivek Ramaswamy
The takeaway
Ramaswamy's proposal to consolidate Ohio universities, despite the recent success of some schools in the NCAA tournament, highlights the complex challenges facing higher education in the state. His plan could have major implications for jobs, students, and local communities, especially at smaller regional institutions.
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I can see Oberlin swiftly fading away.
Surprise to whom? Maybe, just maybe Vivek Ramaswamy cares more about academic excellence in graduates at a fair price to students than football?
Whaddya think?
I’m sure that Oberlin is suffering along with every other small liberal arts school in Ohio. I think it has a decent endowment, so it’ll probably hold out longer than most. It’s a private school.
So, the prime argument in this article for the sustainment of universities is “Kollege Sportz”?
Hmmm, after thought, if STEM is removed from our universities, sports are the only thing left that has respect.
You would think the Ohio Republican party could do better than nominating a professional TV pundit.
Closing universities is a touchy subject that would require an extended period of time, and broad political support. It's something you bring up for discussion after the election. Appoint someone to run a commission tasked with considering the state of those universities, make recommendations, etc.. There would be pushback, but that's the only way to do it. It would take years to bring public opinion around, but it might be possible.
Proposing it during the campaign guarantees that it's going to be demagogued by the other side. Democrats will dig in their heels on the issue to extract maximum political benefit, and then be unable to move off that position after the election. It kills any chance of it actually happening.
Nobody is as smart as Ramaswamy thinks he is.
That’s The Cleveland State University, mind you.
I call for Rampaswampy anchor baby to go back to the country he should be in.
The endowment might be depleted quickly if the college pulls another Bakery stunt.
How so? Have you seen the very top?
Shows his naivety and inexperience regarding politics.
His chances of election went from slim to none. Republicans in college towns won’t vote for him.
Not a lot of Republicans in Cleveland. But Cleveland State is the only “commuter” school on the list. IOW, the students going to CSU do so because they don’t have dorm-lifestyle money.
And replace all employees with H1-Bs?
Oberlin is private. Not relevant to this discussion.
Oberlin is a private college, not subject to State consolidation or whatever Vivek is talking about.
watch ... consolidation would mean many fewer “administrator” jobs
so instead, the political process will result in a new Central Objectivization and Consolidation Board ... with the stated objectives of efficiency and saving tax money.... while actually being an entire new and extra layer of bureaucrappy. With more, not less, administrator jobs.
Sort of like the federal Dept of Ed.
As somebody. who was a faculty member at Miami University for over 40 years, I agree that there is no upside to saying this at this time. However, it’s a point that the state should address and should have addressed during those whole 40 years. Ohio is a medium sized state, but has an overabundance of universities. In older times, having a university close to every population center had some merit, but distance is less an issue nowadays. Even with that consideration, the universities are clustered. Ohio State and Ohio university have some unique territory, but Akron Wright State and Kent State are all practically on top of one another. Cincinnati, Miami and Wright State are pretty close as well.
On top of that, Ohio has seven accredited medical schools Including a
DO program at Ohio U, only one of which is private (Case). Formerly two year community colleges are also getting into the four year degree business. It seems like a higher ed hub for every district is the objective and administrative costs rise faster than anything else.
That said, as in all aspects of government, these things are easy to institute and nearly impossible to remove.
IMHO it’d be more productive both academically as well as politically for Vivek to propose getting rid of the “.... studies” majors that don’t provide graduates with a financially benefitting job. Let the Dims defend all the government money and student loans going to those worthless majors. It’ll expose the academic industry for what it is.
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