In fall 2018, Campus Reform reported exclusively that Rider University in New Jersey had made the decision to ban Chick-fil-A from becoming a restaurant on campus despite being voted one of the top fast food choices in student surveys. Now, Cynthia Newman, who is currently the dean of Rider's College of Business, has announced that she will be resigning over the university's opposition to the fast-food chain.

Newman explained her reasoning to the faculty and staff of the College of Business in her Feb. 14 resignation announcement, a copy of which Campus Reform obtained exclusively. In the announcement, Newman recalled the university rejecting students wanting to bring a Chick-fil-A restaurant to campus because the fast-food chain's "corporate values have not sufficiently progressed enough to align with those of Rider."

"I am a committed follower of Jesus Christ. As such, I endeavor every day to do exactly what Chick-fil-A puts forward as its overarching corporate value: to glorify God by being a faithful steward of all that is entrusted to me and to have a positive influence on all who come into contact with me."

"As some of you already know, I am a committed follower of Jesus Christ," Newman says in her announcement. "As such, I endeavor every day to do exactly what Chick-fil-A puts forward as its overarching corporate value: to glorify God by being a faithful steward of all that is entrusted to me and to have a positive influence on all who come into contact with me."

[RELATED: EXCLUSIVE: Rider Univ refuses to bring Chick-Fil-A to campus, despite students' demands]

Campus Reform's Cabot Phillips spoke with Newman on Monday about the school's decision, her resignation, and her message to others.

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"Everything positive about me and everything I have ever achieved -- whether in my personal or my professional life -- that is viewed as being good, I fully attribute to God's working in and through me," the dean continued. "Anytime I am kind or patient or wise, it is a result of God's goodness and mercy and my yielding to His presence in my life."

Saying that she "felt as though I had been punched in the stomach," Newman noted she met with "those in authority positions over me" about the school's decision. She said she asked administrators to apologize for Rider's statement about Chick-fil-A and its "corporate values." But, she added, that didn't happen. In fact, the school doubled down.

The dean mentioned in her resignation announcement that she did not want to attract any attention to the matter until the school sent out an email containing talking points, a copy of which Campus Reform also obtained, for her to use when confronted by individuals upset by Rider's decision.

For Newman, this was the last straw.

“I could not, in good conscience, as a committed Christian, adhere to those talking points," Newman said in her resignation announcement. "I am not willing to compromise my faith and Christian values and I will not be viewed as being in any way complicit when an affront is made to those values."

According to the talking points that the university provided Newman, “the university’s mission seeks to prepare ‘responsible citizens who embrace diversity, support the common good, and contribute meaningfully to the changing world in which they live and work.'" Another talking point cited the university's commitment to the "LGBTQ community": "openness to different views and beliefs is a fundamental value of the university, as is our belief to be inclusive of all cultures and ways of life, including those in the LGBTQ community."

[RELATED: UC Berkeley group disavows own student senator over conservative Christian views]





Brett Buttler, a sophomore accounting major and treasurer of the Turning Point USA chapter at Rider, responded to this development.

“The fact that fellow conservatives feel scared to share their views says a lot about the political climate on campus," Buttler told Campus Reform. "Given that it’s 2019, people should feel free to engage in political discussion, without worrying about what their peers will think and say."

Professor Robert Murray, a faculty member of the College of Business Administration, called Rider's decision to denounce Chick-fil-A "a significant movement by the left to take front stage in any way and manner that they can to move their thoughts forward with nothing more than statements and NO actions to follow up, justify, or plan to implement them and at what cost to society."

Murray went on to call the decision "not fair."

Newman spoke with Campus Reform exclusively regarding what she plans to do now that she has announced her resignation, effective Aug. 31.

“I plan to return to my faculty position at Rider, as a Professor of Marketing, at the end of the summer," she said. "From that position, I will be able to continue to contribute to the future success of the College of Business Administration and University while advocating for a campus community where truly, as our Statement of Community Values says, ‘we celebrate our differences’ and ‘respect our common pursuit for understanding.'"

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