US President Donald Trump’s administration revoked Harvard University’s ability to enrol international students yesterday, and is forcing existing students to transfer to other schools or lose their legal status, while also threatening to expand the crackdown to other schools.
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem ordered the department to terminate Harvard University’s Student and Exchange Visitor Programme certification, the department said in a statement. Noem accused the university of “fostering violence, antisemitism, and co-ordinating with the Chinese Communist Party.”
Harvard said the move by the Trump administration – which affects thousands of students – was illegal and amounted to retaliation.
The clampdown on foreign students marks a significant escalation of the Trump administration’s campaign against the elite Ivy League University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, which has emerged as one of Trump’s most prominent institutional targets. The move comes after Harvard refused to provide information that Noem had previously demanded about some foreign student visa holders who attend the university, the department said.
Harvard enrolled nearly 6,800 international students in the 2024-2025 school year, amounting to 27 per cent of its total enrolment, according to university statistics.
“It is a privilege, not a right, for universities to enrol foreign students and benefit from their higher tuition payments to help pad their multibillion-dollar endowments,” Noem said in a statement.
Harvard rejected the allegations and pledged to support foreign students.
“The government’s action is unlawful,” the university said in a statement. “This retaliatory action threatens serious harm to the Harvard community and our country, and undermines Harvard’s academic and research mission.”
The university said it was “fully committed” to educating foreign students and was working on producing guidance for affected students.
In a separate lawsuit related to Trump efforts to terminate the legal status of hundreds of foreign students across the US, a federal judge ruled yesterday that the administration could not end their status without following proper regulatory procedures. It was not immediately clear how that ruling would affect the action against Harvard.
During an interview with Fox News’ “The Story with Martha MacCallum,” Noem was asked if she was considering similar moves at other universities, including Columbia University in New York.
“Absolutely, we are,” Noem said. “This should be a warning to every other university to get your act together.”
Trump, a Republican, has undertaken an extraordinary effort to revamp private colleges and schools across the US that he says foster anti-American, Marxist and “radical left” ideologies. He has criticised Harvard in particular for hiring prominent Democrats to teaching or leadership positions.
Trump has frozen some $3 billion in federal grants to Harvard in recent weeks, leading the university to sue to restore the funding.
The US Department of Health and Human Services said on Monday that it was terminating $60 million in federal grants to Harvard because the Ivy League institution failed to address antisemitic harassment and ethnic discrimination on campus.
In a legal complaint filed earlier this month, Harvard said it was committed to combating antisemitism and had taken steps to ensure its campus is safe and welcoming to Jewish and Israeli students. It said the administration’s actions were a threat to academic freedom.
A senior fellow with the American Immigration Council Aaron Reichlin-Melnick, a pro-immigration advocacy group, said the action against Harvard’s student visa programme “needlessly punishes thousands of innocent students.”
“None of them have done anything wrong, they’re just collateral damage to Trump,” he said on the social media site Bluesky.