South Carolina State University, the state's sole public Historically Black College and University (HBCU), found itself at the center of a heated controversy when it rescinded an invitation to Lieutenant Governor Pamela Evette to deliver the Spring 2026 commencement address. The decision, announced by university President Alexander Conyers on April 29, 2026, came after days of student-led protests that highlighted deep divisions over political representation at graduation ceremonies. What began as campus demonstrations quickly escalated into a statewide debate involving safety concerns, free speech, and threats to withhold state funding from the institution.
The Invitation and Immediate Backlash
The invitation to Lt. Gov. Evette was extended as early as December 2025, selected for her background as a successful businesswoman who built a billion-dollar company from a startup. President Conyers, a retired U.S. Army Colonel and SC State alumnus with degrees in criminal justice, viewed her story as inspirational for graduates entering the workforce. However, news of the selection leaked on April 28, 2026, igniting swift opposition from students who argued her political stances clashed with the university's mission of empowerment, social justice, and inclusivity.
SC State, founded in 1896 as a land-grant institution serving Black students during segregation, now enrolls over 3,000 students, predominantly from underserved communities. Its recent elevation to R2 research status marks progress amid historical challenges, including accreditation probation in the 2010s due to financial woes. Yet, the choice of Evette—a vocal Trump supporter, critic of diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) programs, and pro-life advocate—struck many as misaligned with these roots.
Student Protests: A Call for Representation
Demonstrations erupted on April 28 with silent marches, sit-ins, and chants like "Hey, hey! Ho! ho! Pamela Evette gots to go!" Students, led by figures such as Student Government Association President Zaria Tucker, emphasized that commencement should uplift graduates, not promote partisan politics. A Change.org petition titled "Request a new commencement speaker for Spring 2026," started by a concerned student, amassed over 23,000 signatures. It argued Evette's positions marginalize communities and undermine the HBCU's legacy of progressive values.
Protesters cited specific grievances: Evette's endorsement of President Trump, whom some labeled racist and bigoted; her push to eliminate DEI initiatives seen as vital for Black student success; and her abortion stance conflicting with reproductive rights priorities. Tucker stated, "Commencement is not about politics, but more about representation. What we need as students." The actions remained peaceful, drawing applause when Conyers addressed the crowd.
- Peaceful marches through campus highlighting misalignment with HBCU values.
- Sit-ins accusing Evette's affiliations of supporting policies harmful to marginalized groups.
- Petition demanding a speaker inspiring hope and progress.
University's Response: Prioritizing Safety
On April 29, Conyers personally informed protesters of the decision to rescind the invitation, citing "credible safety threats" and an "abundance of caution." His full statement praised Evette's entrepreneurial record but stressed commencement as a celebratory milestone. "The safety and well-being of our students, families, faculty, staff and guests will always guide our decisions," he wrote, inviting her for future engagement.
Conyers lauded students' civic engagement: "Our students have exercised their rights in a manner that reflects the importance of civic engagement and respectful discourse." The Board of Trustees met on April 30 to discuss the fallout, amid no announcement of a replacement speaker for the May 8 event.
Lt. Gov. Evette's Unyielding Stance
Evette, in a virtual press conference, labeled protesters a "woke mob" and refused apology, framing the cancellation as part of national "cancel culture" targeting conservatives like Charlie Kirk and Ben Shapiro. "It's what we've seen all across the country," she said, attributing it to her Trump support. She highlighted Republican funding for HBCUs under Gov. Henry McMaster and Trump, claiming more done than any prior administration.
Evette plans a future campus visit, insisting facts over feelings prevail.
GOP Lawmakers Escalate with Defunding Threats
Nine Republican House members, including Freedom Caucus affiliates, penned a letter to Ways and Means Chairman Bruce Bannister demanding "no funding" for SC State in the next budget iteration. "If the Lt. Gov. of South Carolina is unwelcome due to different political ideologies and an inability to keep her safe, it is time to defund and reevaluate." Sen. Lindsey Graham expressed disappointment, urging students' voices but decrying the outcome.
This amid SC HBCUs seeking $30M boost; state historically underfunded them by $420M over 40 years, with federal claims nearing $500M owed to SC State alone.
Funding Woes and HBCU Resilience
SC State's fiscal turnaround includes $70M campus investments and R2 status, but threats underscore vulnerabilities. Bipartisan HBCU caucus pushes equity, ironic given GOP's role in recent appropriations. Past controversies, like 2017 Gov. McMaster protests, echo national HBCU speaker disputes where activism shapes platforms.Fox News on GOP response
Implications for Higher Education
This episode spotlights tensions: student agency vs. institutional autonomy, politics in academia, DEI's role at HBCUs. Protests succeeded without violence, reviving traditions of rejecting misaligned honorees. Yet, funding reprisals risk chilling dissent, especially for under-resourced HBCUs producing 25% Black STEM grads despite 3% enrollment share nationally.
Experts note rising polarization; similar cases at other HBCUs involved conservative figures. Solutions? Transparent speaker selection, security protocols, dialogue fostering.
Photo by Jason Leung on Unsplash
Stakeholder Perspectives and Future Outlook
Alumni mixed: some back students' stand, others decry intolerance. Faculty silent publicly amid board scrutiny. As budget debates loom, SC State eyes new speaker; Evette's visit could bridge divides. This saga underscores HBCUs' pivotal role in navigating politics, funding, activism in U.S. higher education.Student petition details
- Balanced speaker vetting processes.
- Enhanced campus safety amid protests.
- Advocacy for equitable HBCU funding.
Ultimately, it reaffirms student voices as higher ed catalysts, urging constructive paths forward.





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