‘Deeply ashamed’: Summers retreats after Epstein email scandal

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It is a rare occurrence for a single document dump to send shockwaves with such force through the worlds of academia, politics, and the media, but that is what newly released emails between Lawrence Summers and Jeffrey Epstein have done. The former Treasury secretary and Harvard president says he will step back from public life, referring to his continued contact with Epstein as “a major error of judgement” and saying “I am deeply ashamed of my actions and recognize the pain they have caused.”

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1. A Relationship That Survived Conviction

The cache of more than 20,000 emails possessed by the House Oversight Committee revealed that Summers maintained an affable, frank correspondence with Epstein for upwards of a decade after the financier’s 2008 guilty plea to soliciting prostitution from a minor. Their exchanges mixed political gossip, introductions to global figures, and personal matters-including dating advice-well into 2019, just months before Epstein’s arrest on federal sex trafficking charges and subsequent death.

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2. Personal Candor and Political Asides

In March 2019, Summers described to Epstein a tense interaction with a woman, bemoaning he didn’t want to be “in a gift giving competition while being the friend without benefits.” Epstein replied that she was “making you pay for past errors” but applauded Summers for showing “strength.” The emails also show Summers speculating on political figures, referring to Donald Trump in 2017 as “a clown” who was “increasingly dangerous on foreign policy,” and asking Epstein in 2016, “How plausible is idea that trump is real cocaine user?”

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3. Harvard’s Epstein Connection

Summers was the president of Harvard from 2001 until 2006; during that time, the university received close to $9 million from Epstein, including a $6.5 million gift in 2003 for the Program for Evolutionary Dynamics, an idea he had with a Harvard mathematics professor. Later, Epstein was twice admitted to Harvard as a “Visiting Fellow” in psychology, although he did not have the qualification for it. The university stopped taking his donations after 2008 but the association remained a source of scrutiny.

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4. Involvement of Summers’ Wife

The emails outline that, in 2014, Epstein gave $110,000 to a poetry project headed by Summers’ wife, Harvard professor emerita Elisa New, after she pitched him for a $500,000 gift. A spokesperson would later say New “regrets accepting funding from Epstein” and that her nonprofit contributed more than the amount received to anti–sex trafficking efforts.

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5. Institutional Fallout

The disclosures have produced some immediate consequences: The Center for American Progress said Summers’ fellowship has expired, The New York Times will not renew his contract as an opinion contributor, and Yale’s Budget Lab removed him from its advisory committee. The Economic Club of New York cancelled an appearance by Summers and Sen. Elizabeth Warren called on Harvard to cut ties, writing, “Summers cannot be trusted to advise our nation’s politicians, policymakers, and institutions or teach a generation of students at Harvard or anywhere else.”

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6. Comparisons to Other Donor Scandals

The scandal has a grim similarity to other scandals where elite institutions were embarrassed by taking money from figures that later fell under a cloud. Leaders at the MIT Media Lab kept millions in donations from Epstein secret for years following his conviction, listing contributions as anonymous while using him to connect with other wealthy donors. Experts said such secrecy erodes trust and enables donors to maintain their influence despite reputational damage.

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7. The Ethics of ‘Tainted’ Philanthropy

Scholars of philanthropy say that institutions should have transparent, systematic policies in place when vetting donors. As Rob Reich of Stanford explained, nonprofits should accept money from harmful actors only insofar as the money itself is dedicated to repairing the harm caused. Whether or not Epstein’s wealth was a product of criminal activity, itself, it facilitated abuse and bought access to elite circles. Sharon Batt, a bioethicist, says that accepting such funds risks legitimizing the reputation of the donor.

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8. Psychological Impact of Associations 

with Public Figures For politically engaged audiences, these revelations can erode confidence in leaders and institutions. Experts on reputational crises undergird an imperative for clear communication, decisive action, and visible accountability in restoring public confidence. Summers’s decision to step back from public commitments-while continuing to teach-is framed as part of his effort to “rebuild trust and repair relationships,” but the broader damage to Harvard’s image and to the perception of elite networks may take years to mend.

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9. A Career Overshadowed 

Summers’ path-from economic wunderkind to high-profile political and academic leader-has been one of acclaim and controversy. His resignation from Harvard in 2006 came after criticism for comments he made that suggested genetic differences might explain women’s underrepresentation in science. Now, the Epstein Emails add another layer to a legacy complicated by moments of brilliance and lapses in judgment.

The newly published correspondence serves as a blunt reminder that private associations often become public reckonings, sometimes years after the fact, in cases where figures’ crimes leave lasting scars. For institutions, the takeaway is clear: donor relationships and personal networks need to be vetted not just for their legality but also for their values.

 

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