Foreigners seeking permanent residency status in the US and foreign students with antisemitism or terrorism support on their social media accounts may have their benefit requests denied, the US Citizenship and Immigration Services said.USCIS said it would consider social media content that indicates that “foreign citizens endorse, promote, or support antisemitic terrorism, antisemitic terrorist organizations, or other antisemitic activity” as a negative factor when adjudicating benefit requests.The terrorist groups considered under scrutiny include Hamas, Palestinian Islamic Jihad, Hezbollah, and Ansar Allah.
“There is no room in the United States for the rest of the world’s terrorist sympathizers, and we are under no obligation to admit them or let them stay here,” DHS Assistant Secretary for Public Affairs Tricia McLaughlin said on Wednesday.“Secretary Kristi Noem has made it clear that anyone who thinks they can come to America and hide behind the First Amendment to advocate for antisemitic violence and terrorism – think again. You are not welcome here.”USCIS said the new guidance, to be implemented immediately, was consistent with President Donald Trump's executive orders against antisemitism.
The Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (FIRE) warned on X/Twitter on Wednesday that the administration’s monitoring of green card and visa holders would trade “America’s commitment to free and open discourse for fear and silence.”crackdown on radicalism at American universities. The administration has threatened the grants and contracts of institutions it suspected of violating the civil rights of Jewish students and promoting radicalism, and sought to deport foreign nationals such as Columbia University Apartheid Divest leading member Mahmoud Khalil.
“Unfortunately, that chill appears to be the administration’s aim,” said FIRE.Progressive Jewish group Bend the Arc took to social media in response to the announcement, accusing the Trump administration of using Jews “as an excuse to move a cruel, anti-immigrant, authoritarian agenda.”The USCIS announcement, which noted that it would impact foreign students and others “affiliated with educational institutions linked to antisemitic activity,” comes amid aDozens of visas cancelled
OVER THE weekend, dozens of students had their visas canceled at institutions such as Columbia, Harvard, Stanford, and University of California schools, but for the most part, the administration did not inform the academic institutions of the reasons for the terminations.The University of Washington announced Monday that five current students and four recent graduates are in post-graduation training but noted that they had “no indication these actions are due to activism or other protected free speech.”Reuters reported Wednesday that the administration had frozen over $1 billion in funding for Cornell University and $790 million for Northwestern University while investigating alleged civil rights violations.