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Trump administration widens crackdown, revoking hundreds of student visas

The Trump administration has reportedly revoked hundreds of student visas amid a widening crackdown on the U.S. Palestine movement, with one attorney estimating as many as 1,000 visas have been canceled at universities across the country.

The Trump administration has reportedly revoked hundreds of student visas, amid a widening crackdown on the U.S. Palestine movement.

In recent days, dozens of schools have announced that draconian measures by the Trump administration have targeted some of their students. The list includes UC Berkeley, UCLA, Stanford, Ohio State, Minnesota State University, the University of Kentucky, Northeastern, and Harvard.

Last month Secretary of State Marco Rubio guessed that he had revoked about 300 visas since arriving in office.

“I don’t know actually if it’s primarily student visas,” Rubio told reporters. “It’s a combination of visas. They’re visitors to the country. If they’re taking activities that are counter to our foreign, to our national interest, to our foreign policy, we’ll revoke the visa.”

“My standard: If we knew this information about them before we gave them a visa, would we have allowed them in?” he continued. “And if the answer is no, then we revoke the visa.”

“Campus officials are committed to doing what they can to support all members of our community as they exercise their rights under the law,” said University of California Berkeley in a statement. “In doing so, the university will continue to follow all applicable state and federal laws.”

Ami Hutchinson, an attorney representing students at Arizona State University, says that at least 50 students have had their visas revoked at the school. She also estimated that roughly 1,000 student visas had been revoked, much higher than Rubio’s assertion.

“We are not aware of the details of the revocations or the reasons for them, but we understand that comparable numbers of students and scholars in institutions across the country have experienced similar status changes in roughly the same timeframe,” said the Harvard International Office.

“These are troubling times, and this situation is unlike any we have navigated before,” Minnesota State President Edward Inch told students and faculty in an email.

Ami Hutchinson, an attorney representing students at Arizona State University, says that at least 50 students have had their visas revoked at the school. She also estimated that roughly 1,000 student visas had been revoked, much higher than Rubio’s assertion.

Hutchinson says many students are confused about their sudden predicament.

“They still seem to think that someone made a mistake. That it shouldn’t have happened and this was just all a misunderstanding,” she explained. “They’re really, really afraid.”

Student protest crackdowns

Since the arrest and detention of Gaza activist and former Columbia University graduate Mahmoud Khalil on March 8, the Trump administration has revoked the student visas of multiple student protesters, but it’s unclear how directly this issue is connected to this current wave of revocations.

Multiple schools say they do not believe that their students were targeted over activism or protest.

The Trump administration has also begun targeting students over other political developments, like the fact that South Sudan has not cooperated with the United States on accepting deported individuals back into their country.

However, alleged threats to U.S. foreign policy seem to predominant motivation behind the surge of student repression.

“We gave you a visa to come and study and get a degree, not become a social activist that tears up our university campuses,” explained Rubio. “And if we’ve given you a visa and you decide to do that, we’re going to take it away. We don’t want it in our country. Go back and do it in your country. But you’re not going to do it in our country.”

Last week, Tufts University became the first school to issue a public display of support for a detained student, filing a declaration in federal court seeking relief for Rumeysa Ozturk, who was detained by ICE for writing an Op-Ed encouraging her school to divest from Israel.

Ozturk is currently being held at an immigration facility in Louisiana.

The declaration, which was executed by Tufts President Sunil Kumar, points out that Ozturk is a hard-working student and that the school has no information that she was engaged in activities that would warrant an arrest.

Kumar also points out that the Op-Ed did not violate any of Tufts’s policies and was consistent with the school’s Declaration on Freedom of Expression, which trustees adopted in 2009.

On social media, many criticized other universities for failing to stand up for students in the way that Tufts has.

“Mahmoud Khalil has been kidnapped for almost one month. While Tufts provided legal support for their kidnapped student, Columbia students had to chain to a fence in order to highlight that our own administration turned him over,” tweeted Columbia University senior Maryam Alwan. “Columbia STILL hasn’t said his name in an email.”

“Asserting support for your student being held as a political prisoner should be a low bar, and yet only Tufts has cleared it,” wrote journalist Natalie Shure.

“Is Tufts the first school to put its legal weight behind supporting a foreign student who was abducted and sent to ICE detention?,” asked media critic Sana Saeed. Do you mean to say colleges can do more than simply send out statements of ‘Oh wow we didn’t know, damn that sucks. We can’t do much here tho’? Crazy.”

In an appearance on Democracy Now former Columbia law professor Katherine Franke, who was forced to resign from her position over her criticisms of Israel, said that the revocation of student visas and illegal detention of students represented a kind of ethnic cleansing.

“I can’t overstate how terrified our students are,” said Franke. “And it’s not just the students who are on visas or even green cards. It’s all of our students who come from other countries, who may even be citizens at this point, because it seems there’s no limit to the ways in which this administration is going to both test and violate the law in cleansing — it feels like a kind of racial and ethnic cleansing that is happening on our campuses.”

“One of the reasons I loved being a Columbia professor was that in many of my classes, half of the students came from other countries..and when I talk to my colleagues now.. I’m hearing that those students are not saying a word,” she continued. “And some of them are not even coming onto campus anymore, because they’re afraid of getting nabbed and of having the administration actually turn over their cellphones and home addresses. So, the classes are actually being emptied of those voices and of those bodies.”

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# Remember Chomsky not being allowing into Israel. No lectures about facts by Chomsky. No way.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2010/may/16/israel-noam-chomsky-palestinian-west-bank

# Finkelstein banned even earlier. Back in 2008.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2008/may/26/israelandthepalestinians.usa

# Medea Benjaman banned from Israel

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/jan/15/i-am-american-jewish-and-banned-from-israel-for-my-activism

# I have a dear activist friend banned from going into Israel. He has been arrested twice in Israel

# Was always surprised that Mondoweiss’s creator Phil Weiss was never banned from getting into Israel.

https://airmail.news/issues/2024-8-24/rebel-with-a-cause

# Quite a few groups and their members banned from going into Israel.

https://www.jewishcincinnati.org/news-israel-update/israel-bans-20-groups-that-boycott-it-israel-update

# Wondering if any journalist will access the list that Betar and other pro Israel shut down free speech groups handed to Trump and team of individuals to deport.

Important read:

https://theintercept.com/2025/02/06/betar-palestine-school-activists-target-deport-trump/

I think about Trump every time I flush the toilet, especially if any ‘residue’ remains after the flush!
Mike Malloy ( https://www.mikemalloy.com/ ) refers to Trump as “the toilet rat”, perhaps hearkening back to the time of outhouses.

In a rare fit of sanity the Anti-Defamation League, which originally supported Trumps program to deport ‘pro-Palestinian’** foreign students, reversed their original position – Jonathan Greenblatt, leader of the ADL, recently wrote –

…it was shocking to see the images of plainclothes officers stealing people off the streets in an act of rendition that seems straight out of a movie. No matter how nefarious the suspect may be and how odious their actions, this is not normal. In a recent case in Massachusetts, the detainee was not a dangerous, violent repeat offender; this was an unarmed graduate student. While there may be a legal basis to deport her or any student here on a visa for a viewpoint that so many of us abhor, doing so because of an expression of these views is not congruent with the constitutional norms of free speech that have elevated America for centuries….

https://ejewishphilanthropy.com/we-must-fight-for-jewish-students-and-our-values/?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Your%20Daily%20Phil%20April%203%202025&utm_content=Your%20Daily%20Phil%20April%203%202025+CID_e74284b4372aa4226bf862326cd5bd3e&utm_source=Email%20marketing%20software&utm_term=Read%20the%20full%20piece%20here

Also see –

The ADL reversed its support for Trump’s student deportations. You should too

https://forward.com/opinion/710017/adl-trump-student-deportations-jonathan-greenblatt/

** I’m not ‘pro-Palestinian’, I’m anti-genocide and anti-colonization.

AIPAC leader boasts of special ‘access’ to top Trump natsec officials in leaked audio

Max Blumenthal

April 9, 2025

During an off-the-record panel, AIPAC’s CEO detailed his organization’s grooming of Trump’s top national security officials, and how his group’s “access” ensures they continue to follow Israel’s agenda.

“The Grayzone has obtained audio of an off-the-record session from the 2025 Congressional Summit of AIPAC, the main US lobbying arm of the state of Israel. Recorded by an attendee of the panel discussion, the audio features AIPAC’s new CEO, Elliott Brandt, describing how his organization has cultivated influence with three top national security officials in the Trump administration – Secretary of State Marco Rubio, National Security Director Mike Waltz, and CIA Director John Ratcliffe – and how it believes it can gain “access” to their internal discussions.

Joining Brandt on the panel was Dana Stroul, formerly the highest ranking civilian overseeing Middle East issues in the Biden administration’s Department of Defense. Stroul made it clear that defending Israel’s strategic imperatives from within the US government was a top priority, arguing that Washington should deepen its “mutually beneficial” special relationship with its “strong partner” in Tel Aviv.

Stroul dismissed the bloodbath in Gaza as the result of supposed Hamas tactics which supposedly aim to maximize the amount of children killed by Israel. At the same time, she and her fellow Israel lobbyists fretted about the impact of the post-October 7 war on public support for the self-proclaimed Jewish state. She was particularly troubled by Sen. Bernie Sanders’ attempts to force votes on military aid packages to Israel which, in her view, should never be debated in the open. Another unidentified AIPAC panelist worried that pro-Palestinian academics could eventually influence AI knowledge systems, leading to a dangerous shift in national security policy unless they were decisively suppressed. 

The Congressional Summit was permeated with anxiety, as AIPAC leaders told rank-and-file members to hide their badges when they left the Marriott Hotel for fear they would be confronted by anti-genocide protesters.”

https://thegrayzone.com/2025/04/09/aipac-access-trump-natsec-officials-leaked/