Trump administration bars Harvard from enrolling foreign students
[May 23, 2025]
By COLLIN BINKLEY and MICHAEL CASEY
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Trump administration revoked Harvard University's
ability to enroll international students in its escalating battle with
the Ivy League school, saying thousands of current students must
transfer to other schools or leave the country.
The Department of Homeland Security announced the action Thursday,
saying Harvard has created an unsafe campus environment by allowing
“anti-American, pro-terrorist agitators” to assault Jewish students on
campus. It also accused Harvard of coordinating with the Chinese
Communist Party, saying it hosted and trained members of a Chinese
paramilitary group as recently as 2024.
“This means Harvard can no longer enroll foreign students and existing
foreign students must transfer or lose their legal status,” the agency
said in a statement.
Harvard enrolls almost 6,800 foreign students at its campus in
Cambridge, Massachusetts, accounting for more than a quarter of its
student body. Most are graduate students, coming from more than 100
countries.
Harvard called the action unlawful and said it's working to provide
guidance to students.
“This retaliatory action threatens serious harm to the Harvard community
and our country, and undermines Harvard’s academic and research
mission,” the university said in a statement.
The Trump administration's clash with Harvard, the nation’s oldest and
wealthiest university, has intensified since it became the first to
openly defy White House demands for changes at elite schools it has
criticized as hotbeds of liberalism and antisemitism. The federal
government has cut $2.6 billion in federal grants to Harvard, forcing it
to self-fund much of its sprawling research operation. President Donald
Trump has said he wants to strip the university of its tax-exempt
status.

The administration has demanded records of campus protests
The threat to Harvard's international enrollment stems from an April 16
request from Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, who demanded that
it provide information about foreign students that might implicate them
in violence or protests that could lead to their deportation.
In a letter to Harvard on Thursday, Noem said the school's sanction is
“the unfortunate result of Harvard's failure to comply with simple
reporting requirements.” It bars Harvard from hosting international
students for the upcoming 2025-26 school year.
Noem said Harvard can regain its ability to host foreign students if it
produces a trove of records on foreign students within 72 hours. Her
updated request demands all records, including audio or video footage,
of foreign students participating in protests or dangerous activity on
campus.
“This administration is holding Harvard accountable for fostering
violence, antisemitism, and coordinating with the Chinese Communist
Party on its campus,” Noem said in a statement.
The action revoked Harvard's certification in the Student and Exchange
Visitor Program, which gives the school the ability to sponsor
international students to get their visas and attend school in the
United States.
Harvard President Alan Garber earlier this month said the university has
made changes to its governance over the past year and a half, including
a broad strategy to combat antisemitism, but warned it would not budge
on its “its core, legally-protected principles” over fears of
retaliation. He said he wasn’t aware of evidence to support the
administration's allegation that its international students were “more
prone to disruption, violence, or other misconduct than any other
students.”
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The Harvard University logo is displayed on a building at the
school, Tuesday, April 15, 2025, in Cambridge, Mass. (AP
Photo/Charles Krupa, File)

Students in Harvard College Democrats said the Trump administration
is playing with students' lives to push a radical agenda and to
quiet dissent. “Trump's attack on international students is text
book authoritarianism — Harvard must continue to hold the line,” the
group said in a statement.
The administration drew condemnation from free speech groups,
including the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression, which
said Noem is demanding a “surveillance state.”
"This sweeping fishing expedition reaches protected expression and
must be flatly rejected," the group said in a statement.
The revocation opens a new front in a closely watched battle
Many of Harvard's punishments have come through a federal
antisemitism task force that says the university failed to protect
Jewish students from harassment and violence amid a nationwide wave
of pro-Palestinian protests.
Homeland Security officials echoed those concerns in their Thursday
announcement. It offered examples, including a recent internal
report at Harvard, finding that many Jewish students reported facing
discrimination or bias on campus.
It also tapped into concerns that congressional Republicans have
raised about ties between U.S. universities and China. Homeland
Security officials said Harvard provided training to the Xinjiang
Production and Construction Corps as recently as 2024. As evidence,
it provided a link to a Fox News article, which in turn cited a
letter from House Republicans.
Asked for comment on the alleged coordination with the Chinese
Communist Party, a Harvard spokesperson said the university will be
responding to the House Republicans' letter.
Ted Mitchell, president of the American Council on Education, called
the latest action an “illegal, small-minded” overreach.
“I worry that this is sending a very chilling effect to
international students looking to come to America for education," he
said.

The Trump administration has leveraged the system for tracking
international students’ legal status as part of its broader attempts
to crack down on higher education. What was once a largely
administrative database has become a tool of enforcement, as
immigration officials revoked students’ legal status directly in the
system.
Those efforts were challenged in court, leading to restorations of
status and a nationwide injunction blocking the administration from
pursuing further terminations.
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Associated Press writers Annie Ma in Washington and Cheyanne
Mumphrey in Phoenix contributed to this report.
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