Betsy DeVos changed the standard of evidence required in cases where there are allegations of rape on campus. The change will make it more difficult to sustain a claim of rape.

The most controversial part of the Obama-era guidance was that the outcome of investigations should rely on the preponderance of the evidence in each case to determine guilt. Critics said that was too low a standard, and DeVos has said that some innocent men were falsely accused under the standard.

Victims will have a harder time meeting the new standard because there are seldom witnesses to rape.

Common in civil law, the preponderance standard is lower than the “clear and convincing evidence” threshold that had been in use at some schools. Victim advocates viewed the April 2011 letter as a milestone in efforts to get schools to heed the longstanding problem of campus sexual assault, punish offenders and prevent violence.

DeVos has made it clear for several weeks, as has her Acting Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights Candace Jackson (who opposes affirmative action and feminism), that they believe that many men have been unfairly accused of rape. They have expressed sympathy for those accused of rape, not their accusers.