DHS threatens no more foreign students to Harvard, cancels $2.7 million grants

“If Harvard cannot verify it is in full compliance with its reporting requirements, the university will lose the privilege of enrolling foreign students,” said the DHS.

 A PALESTINIAN FLAG is displayed as graduating students at Commencement Exercises at Harvard University rise in support of 13 students not allowed to graduate because of their participation in pro-Palestinian protests last May. (photo credit: BRIAN SNYDER/REUTERS)
A PALESTINIAN FLAG is displayed as graduating students at Commencement Exercises at Harvard University rise in support of 13 students not allowed to graduate because of their participation in pro-Palestinian protests last May.
(photo credit: BRIAN SNYDER/REUTERS)

Harvard University would no longer be able to host international students if the Ivy League school did not provide information on foreign students’ illegal or violent activities, the Department of Homeland Security said on Wednesday as it canceled $2.7 million in grants to the university on top of the Joint Task Force to combat antisemitism’s freeze of $2.2 billion in grants and over $255m. in contracts.

DHS Secretary Kristi Noem issued a demand for information on foreign students by April 30 and threatened that ICE’s Student and Exchange Visitor Program (SEVP) certification to Harvard could immediately be revoked, according to the department.

The SVEP, per a 2015 DHS explanation on its website, monitors student visa holders while in the US and certifies schools to allow them to enroll international students. Foreign students in the US “can only attend a SEVP-certified school,” explained the DHS website.
“If Harvard cannot verify it is in full compliance with its reporting requirements, the university will lose the privilege of enrolling foreign students,” the DHS said.
Meanwhile, the DHS cut two grants, the $800,303 Implementation Science for Targeted Violence Prevention grant and the $1,934,902 Blue Campaign Program Evaluation and Violence Advisement grant.
The government agency asserted that the violence prevention program had “branded conservatives as far Right dissidents in a shockingly skewed study” and the blue program “funded Harvard’s public health propaganda.”
 Graduating students hold a sign reading ''There Are No Universities Left in Gaza'' during the 373rd Commencement Exercises at Harvard University, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas, in Cambridge, Massachusetts, US, May 23, 2024. (credit: REUTERS/BRIAN SNYDER)
Graduating students hold a sign reading ''There Are No Universities Left in Gaza'' during the 373rd Commencement Exercises at Harvard University, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas, in Cambridge, Massachusetts, US, May 23, 2024. (credit: REUTERS/BRIAN SNYDER)

“Both undermine America’s values and security,” said the DHS. “Since Hamas’s October 7, 2023, attack on Israel, Harvard’s foreign visa-holding rioters and faculty have spewed antisemitic hate, targeting Jewish students. With a $53.2b. endowment, Harvard can fund its own chaos – DHS won’t.”

The agency said that the grant cuts followed the antisemitism task force’s decision on Monday to cut grants and contracts after Harvard had rejected the terms of a Friday letter addressed to the university that updated it on the federal government’s antisemitism and radicalism reform demands.
“Harvard bending the knee to antisemitism – driven by its spineless leadership – fuels a cesspool of extremist riots and threatens our national security,” Noem said in the statement. “With anti-American, pro-Hamas ideology poisoning its campus and classrooms, Harvard’s position as a top institution of higher learning is a distant memory. America demands more from universities entrusted with taxpayer dollars.”

Trump threatened Harvard's tax-exempt status

US President Donald Trump threatened Harvard University’s tax-exempt status on Truth Social on Tuesday, saying that the university promoted radical ideologies and politics and that the tax-exempt status was based on acting in the public’s best interests.

When asked to clarify the matter, the White House explained that the president wished for the university to follow federal law and apologize for campus antisemitism.
“When it comes to Harvard, as I said, the president has been quite clear: They must follow federal law,” White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said at a press briefing.
“He also wants to see Harvard apologize, and Harvard should apologize for the egregious antisemitism that took place on their college campus against Jewish American students,” she added.
Harvard University President Alan Garber said in response on Monday that the canceled grants and contracts paid for work that led to innovations in medical, engineering, and scientific fields that have made the country safer and healthier.
The threats of ending financial relationships between the government and Harvard indicated that the task force was not interested in working cooperatively against antisemitism, Garber said.
He added that the university rejected the terms, which replaced an April 3 proposal, because they gave the government unprecedented control over the university.
The proposed reforms included ending Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) programs, requiring merit-based hiring and admissions, and requesting the auditing of hiring and admissions practices. There would have also been audits of faculty viewpoints and of plagiarism. The federal government had also demanded the banning of certain radical student groups, as well as more disciplinary procedures and investigations into specific incidents.
Tensions between the federal government and Harvard have been on the rise amid a crackdown by the Trump administration on campus radicalism and antisemitism. Student activists have been deported, and grants and contracts of institutions such as Columbia University under review pending agreements.

Last week, the Harvard International Office reported that the visas of three Harvard students and two recent Harvard graduates had been revoked. The university reportedly learned of the revocations during a routine records review and subsequently notified the students and referred them to legal assistance.

In January, Trump issued an executive order threatening to revoke the visas of students who participated in pro-Palestinian protests during the Israel-Hamas War.

Harvard said that it was not aware of “the details of the revocations or the reasons for them.

“We understand that comparable numbers of students and scholars in institutions across the country have experienced similar status changes in roughly the same time frame,” it said.