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COLLEGE STATION — A month into this year’s fall semester, Texas A&M University senior Ben Fisher got an email that took him by surprise. It was an invitation to the College Station home of interim President Mark Welsh III for a barbecue dinner with other student leaders.
When Fisher arrived, Welsh and his wife, Betty, ushered the students into their massive, white stone home, where they had set tables around the house for students to sit and eat. The couple gave tours of their home and invited other administrators from across campus to come and mingle with the students.
Over brisket and sausage, Welsh reiterated that he wanted to better understand students’ perspectives and priorities.
“It was incredibly personable,” Fisher said.
At one point, a student knocked a bunch of utensils and toothpicks onto the floor. Welsh — a four-star general and former leader of the U.S. Air Force — quickly got down on his hands and knees to clean.
“He’s helping scrub some mess up to take care of it so that someone else didn’t have to,” Fisher recalled. “For the president of your institution to kneel down to help clean something up is a pretty strong statement that he really values selfless service,” referring to one of the “Aggie Core Values,” guiding principles that current and former Aggies hold dear.
This summer, Texas A&M University System Chancellor John Sharp called on Welsh, then-dean of the Bush School of Government and Public Service, to help him clean up another mess: the state of the flagship university, which found itself embroiled in two employment scandals, one of which led the former president, M. Katherine Banks, to resign.
In July, The Texas Tribune reported that under Banks, the school watered down its job offer to journalism professor Kathleen McElroy after some board members raised concerns about her perceived liberal credentials. She ultimately turned down the job and settled with the system for $1 million after the hiring fiasco.
Soon after, the Tribune reported that the school placed a pharmacology professor on paid leave hours after she was accused by a politically connected student of criticizing Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick during a lecture, sparking concerns of political interference in university operations and threaten academic freedom.
Faculty were distraught, with professors going as far as to open a faculty meeting this summer with a moment of silence to recognize that a part of the university had “died.” Angry alumni were clamoring for answers.
Welsh, who was one of four finalists for the president’s role when Banks was hired in 2021, was tapped to lead the university as it conducted a national search for a new president. Ever since the university system’s Board of Regents appointed him interim president three and a half months ago, the former combat pilot has largely navigated the 77, 000-student university out of turbulent airspace and into clearer skies.
Since July, Welsh has been on a nonstop tour to try to rebuild the trust that slowly eroded over the past few years and reinstill the sense within students, faculty and staff that their voice is necessary to move A&M forward.
“The short-term goals were to make sure that I did everything I could to kind of get the university reconnected with itself,” Welsh told the Tribune on Wednesday. “Open up lines of communication that I think we’re a little bit frayed, and try and help relieve some of the frustration that was in place because of that less than ideal communication.”
This week, Sharp recommended that the regents name Welsh as the permanent president, forgoing a national search as originally planned. The board is scheduled to meet Friday morning to consider naming him the sole finalist for the position, kicking off a 21-day mandatory waiting period before regents can officially appoint him.
If approved, Welsh would come to the permanent position having built up a tremendous amount of goodwill among many faculty and students, who say he has provided a much-needed steady hand during a time of uncertainty.
Faculty say they appreciate that he seeks out their input. When he makes a decision they disagree with, he explains his rationale, they say. Students say they’ve appreciated his regular email updates — an average of at least one per week since he started — and they notice the increased level of transparency about university operations.
“It’s amazing to see how much he actually cares about the students and how much he’s trying to make a change for A&M,” senior Katie Hornick said.
While some faculty feel the system should commit to conducting a national search the next time it needs a president — and guarantee more room for faculty feedback in the hiring process — many professors and students agree with the decision to appoint Welsh as permanent president now.
“General Welsh has almost uniform positive evaluations from those who know him, who worked with him, who agree with him, who disagree with him,” medical professor Mark Sicilio said at a Faculty Senate meeting this week. “This is the best of a situation, and I wouldn’t even call it a bad situation because he is truly — based on my exposure and interaction with him — a remarkable individual.”
A military background
Welsh, a San Antonio native, is quick to say he is not an Aggie — a clarification meant as a show of respect toward those who did go to the university — though he was raised by an Aggie father, watched five of his siblings graduate from A&M and raised four children to bleed maroon and white. Instead, he attended the U.S. Air Force Academy.
“The only reason he didn’t come to Texas A&M was because he wanted to fly jets,” said Frank Ashley III, acting dean of the Bush School, who worked closely under Welsh for the past seven years.
After graduating in 1976, Welsh built a more than four-decade career in the Air Force before retiring from military service in 2016.
Welsh started out as a command pilot, then served in various roles like training commander and adviser to the director of the Central Intelligence Agency on military issues. He served as commander of NATO’s Air Command and was the 34th Commander of the U.S. Air Forces in Europe before heading to Washington, D.C., where President Barack Obama appointed him Chief of Staff of the Air Force and a member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff in 2012. He moved to College Station to serve as the dean of the Bush School the same year he retired.
Welsh had zero experience working in academia when he arrived. But he understood Aggieland, a place steeped in military customs that values its traditions and where there is a deep commitment to upholding the university’s core values — loyalty, integrity, excellence, leadership, selfless service and respect — which resonate with the armed forces’ mentality.
University leaders “don’t have to be an academic, but they have to have an appreciation of what the academics do,” Ashley said. “I think that’s very, very important. And I think if there’s one thing that Mark learned very fast, it was that appreciation.”
Welsh said he saw similarities between how to work with those in the military and faculty.
“Walk into a room full of Navy SEALs, or Army Rangers, or Air Force fighter pilots and tell them how they’re going to risk death tomorrow, and see how that goes for you,” Welsh said. “They need a voice, they need to be part of the discussion leading up to what we plan to do. Their expertise needs to be considered in planning. They are the pros.”
As dean, Welsh increased the Bush School endowment by 20% and added a teaching site in Washington, D.C. He would often walk the halls of the Bush School proactively seeking out faculty and students, Ashley said. It became customary for him to pop his head in the open door of a faculty office to check in, or he would plop down next to a group of students to ask what they were working on.
Reed Russell, a graduate student in the Bush School, said he appreciated how often Welsh made himself available to students during public forums, where he took questions directly.
At a recent event with alumni, Welsh repeated the comment that he is not an Aggie, but this time someone interrupted him to say he was just as much an Aggie as anyone else there.
“For an Aggie to say that of another person who’s serving this institution is very high praise,” said Fisher, the senior class president. “That is not lip service.”
Putting out fires
When Welsh became interim president this summer, he immediately assembled a group of administrators to review one of the major sticking points of the Banks administration: The Path Forward, a set of 41 changes Banks initiated across the university that reorganized administrative offices, merged certain colleges, centralized services and added new academic programs.
Faculty and staff have largely criticized the changes as poorly conceived and hastily executed, causing confusion among students and employees, and negatively affecting morale.
The group assembled by Welsh held more than 100 listening sessions across campus in a matter of weeks. Then, Welsh spent one morning in October taking questions from hundreds of employees and students, explaining why he was making changes to Banks’ plans or staying the course.
But Welsh also has had to tackle larger, more intangible issues — like the pervasive sense that political actors have overly influenced the university’ decision-making and threatened academic freedom, the long-standing principle meant to protect faculty and researchers from outside influences interfering in their work.
In his early days as interim president, Welsh made frank comments about how he would handle interference from regents or outside groups. He laid down clear lines of demarcation between university business and the board of regents that oversees the system’s 11 universities.
“Somebody can call and offer an opinion on something, but that doesn’t mean you have to accept it,” Welsh told the Faculty Senate in August. “I’ll just tell you that if a regent calls me and says, ‘Hey, I really am worried about this,’ I’ll say ‘Thank you for the call.’ But I’m not going to call the department head and tell them who to hire.”
Faculty said it was a welcome change from the communication style of his predecessor whose decisions and rationale they felt were shrouded in secrecy.
Shortly after he was named interim president, the university organized a task force on academic freedom and faculty protection to review the university’s policies. The task force was created after faculty raised concerns with how the university treated pharmacology professor Joy Alonzo earlier this year when she was accused of criticizing the lieutenant governor in a lecture.
As of last week, the task force was still considering possible solutions, including a new committee to handle academic freedom complaints. Welsh said it was important to have those conversations and to make sure everyone, from university leaders to the board of regents, is on the same page.
“Let’s get back to actually showing how we use academic freedom in the classroom, let’s get our students to understand both sides of the issues that a professor might be presenting to us in my classroom, do that research that shows both sides of every potential solution,” he said. “That’s what we do at universities. And I think we’re on track to do all those things.”
Dealing with DEI
While Welsh has garnered broad support from faculty and students during his time as interim president, some outside groups have raised questions about him by accusing him of supporting diversity, equity and inclusion efforts. In recent months, Texas Scorecard, a website run by far-right activist Michael Quinn Sullivan, has labeled Welsh as a “DEI sympathizer,” emphasizing that he’s a former Obama appointee in an apparent attempt to paint him as left-leaning.
On Wednesday, Welsh dismissed those characterizations.
“I always find it entertaining when someone who has never met a person, or even been in contact with a person, gives an assessment of who that person is or what they are,” Welsh said. He described himself as a “conservative who really values traditional values, the corny stuff like faith and family and loyalty and respect, and honor and integrity, and courage, and all those things that really matter deep down to people.”
This spring, Texas Scorecard wrote a similar post about McElroy, the Black journalism professor whose hiring fell through at A&M. McElroy teaches at the University of Texas at Austin and was a long-time editor at The New York Times. Emails and text messages between A&M regents released by the system this summer revealed that Texas Scorecard’s article about McElroy’s past comments about diversity and her prior work experience struck a chord among the regents, who are appointed by Gov. Greg Abbott.
According to an internal report A&M released in August, Banks received calls from six to seven regents after the website published its piece. Board member Sam Torn emailed a quote from the article to board Chair Bill Mahomes stating he wanted an explanation about why McElroy was being considered to revive the university’s journalism program before he could approve her tenure.
It’s unclear if the website’s attempt to paint Welsh — a white man with a strong military background — as a “DEI sympathizer” is raising the same kind of concerns among the Abbott appointees. Regents did not respond to requests for comment.
But Russell said he appreciated Welsh’s comments that he would not be swayed by outside influence. He feels A&M needs that kind of strong leadership.
The university needs “someone who’s on it and has integrity and is really going to step up and involve everyone in the process of making a difference,” the graduate student said.
One of the first tasks Welsh will oversee if he becomes permanent president will be to oversee the implementation of Senate Bill 17, which bans diversity, equity and inclusion offices in public universities. The law goes into effect at the start of 2024. School administrators at A&M and other Texas universities have spent this fall shuttering DEI offices, relocating those employees and crafting legal guidance. Yet faculty and students across the state have expressed concerns that the law will lead to censorship of anything related to diversity, including within the classroom, despite stipulations in the law that teaching and research will not be impacted.
“It would serve the faculty well to have a permanent president in place to provide the guidance that the members of the faculty and librarians need to make sure we don’t do a disservice to our students,” Faculty Senate President Tracy Hammond said. “I believe Interim President Welsh understands both the importance of following the law and the value of academic freedom as it applies to research and the classroom.”
On Wednesday, Welsh said he agreed with the intent of the law.
“The intent is to make sure that we bring the most qualified people into Texas A&M regardless of where they come from,” he said. “I think that’s our job. And so find the best talent, bring it to campus and give it the best possible educational and life experience we can give them. And I think that’s all that bill is attempting to do.”
On Wednesday evening, Welsh tried to reiterate that point to seniors preparing for graduation when he made a surprise appearance at an A&M annual event, known as the Elephant Walk.
As he introduced himself, one student shouted “I love you” as others cheered. Welsh shot back, “Not as much as I love you.”
“This [tradition] is really about you taking the reputation of this university and of every Aggie and taking it out into the world and doing great things with it,” he said. “The core values go with you. Continue to act like you believe in them.”
Senior Ethan Finney said Welsh’s presence at one of the university’s lesser-known traditions is telling.
“He did not have to come out to this,” Finney said. “A speech like that shows what kind of Aggie and man and president he will be.”
Caroline Wilburn contributed to this article.
The Texas Tribune partners with Open Campus on higher education coverage.
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