The head of Columbia Law School in New York backed its graduates Tuesday, saying they were "consistently sought out" as it responded to an announcement by 13 conservative federal judges that they would not hire students from the Ivy League university.
The judges announced the boycott Monday, citing the university's handling of pro-Palestinian protests and calling the Manhattan campus an "incubator of bigotry" in a letter to Columbia President Minouche Shafik and Law Dean Gillian Lester.
Lester said in a statement Tuesday that Columbia Law graduates were "consistently sought out by leading employers in the private and public sectors, including the judiciary."
The lead signatories on Monday's letter were all appointees of former President Donald Trump and included Judge James Ho of the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals and Elizabeth Branch of the 11th Circuit, who previously urged judges to similarly boycott hiring clerks from Yale and Stanford following disruptions of events at those law schools with conservative speakers.
But figures suggest the boycott will have limited impact.
Columbia Law School is not a major feeder into federal clerkships, with most of its graduates going into associate jobs at large law firms. Just 21 of the law school's 427 graduates in 2023 went into federal clerkships – about 5% – according to the latest employment data from the American Bar Association.
By contrast, the University of Chicago Law School, Yale Law School, and Stanford Law School each sent 20% or more of their 2023 graduates into federal clerkships. Columbia was 39th out of 195 U.S. law schools for the percentage of the graduating class that went into federal clerkships.
A law school spokesperson did not provide comment Tuesday on whether any of the 13 boycotting judges had hired a Columbia Law grad as a federal clerk.
Federal judges hire two or three law grads annually for yearlong clerkships that can lead to prestigious and high-paying legal jobs. Fewer than 4% of law graduates nationwide get those jobs, the ABA data showed.
U.S. Circuit Judge Jerry Smith, a colleague of Ho's on the 5th Circuit appointed by Ronald Reagan, noted that only two of the approximately 170 active federal appeals court judges had announced plans to join the boycott.
"I have had many outstanding law clerks from Columbia," Smith said. "I do not boycott any law school or its students."
Chief U.S. District Judge Randy Crane of the Southern District of Texas said he would not hire a student who participated in "antisemitic or pro-Hamas protests" but that he would also not support a blanket boycott of the school.
"Some of those law students are likely Jewish and have been the subject of threats and harassment," said Crane, who was appointed by George W. Bush. "I see no reason to punish them."
However, U.S. District Judge Lee Rudofsky, a Trump appointee in Little Rock, Arkansas, who recently traveled with a group of U.S. judges to Israel, said in an email Tuesday that he was considering joining the boycott.
Judges need to "step up to the plate as leaders of the bar to help stop the spread of the virulent Jew hatred that is being normalized on college campuses and elsewhere across the country," Rudofsky said.