Trump admin threatens Harvard’s ability to host international students

Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem looks on as President Trump signs executive orders in the Oval Office on April 9. Photo: Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

The Trump administration threatened to revoke Harvard University’s eligibility to host foreign students, tightening its squeeze on the school after campus leadership refused to cave in to its demands.

The big picture: The heightened pressure comes after the Trump administration cut $2.2 billion in grants and $60 million in contracts to the university amid a broader campaign against elite higher education institutions.

  • Trump said earlier this week that Harvard should lose its tax exempt status, accusing the Ivy League school of pushing politics and ideology.

Driving the news: Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem warned Harvard that its certification to enroll foreign students is “contingent upon” it complying with federal immigration rules, in a Wednesday letter to the university obtained by the New York Times.

  • Noem wrote, “It is a privilege to have foreign students attend Harvard University, not a guarantee,” and accused the university of creating “a hostile learning environment” for Jewish students.
  • U.S. schools that host international students must be certified by the federal Student and Exchange Visitor Program (SEVP).

If the school fails to respond to record requests she made concerning student visa holders by April 30, “SEVP will automatically withdraw the school’s certification,” Noem wrote, noting the withdrawal will not be subject to appeal.

  • Noem demanded information on student visa holders’ known “illegal activity,” “dangerous or violent activity” and “known threats to other students or university personnel,” among other data.
  • She also sought information “regarding each student visa holder’s maintenance of at least the minimum required coursework to maintain nonimmigrant student status.”

What they’re saying: A Harvard spokesperson confirmed in a statement to Axios that the university is aware of the DHS letter.

  • The letter, coupled with other actions against the school, “follows on the heels of our statement that Harvard will not surrender its independence or relinquish its constitutional rights,” the spokesperson said. “We continue to stand by that statement.”

Zoom out: In a Wednesday release announcing Noem’s “scathing letter demanding detailed records on Harvard’s foreign student visa holders’ illegal and violent activities,” DHS also said it revoked two grants totaling over $2.7 million to Harvard.

Catch up quick: Other American higher education institutions have complied with Trump administration demands in recent weeks.

  • But Harvard’s president, Alan Garber, turned the administration down, saying Harvard is committed to fighting antisemitism but that no government should stifle academic freedom.
  • In its Friday letter to Harvard, the Trump administration outlined a series of demands, which included reforming governance and leadership, shuttering DEI offices and adjusting international admissions to “prevent admitting students hostile to the American values and institutions.”

Go deeper: Trump’s pressure campaign against universities hits a Harvard-sized snag

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