logo
Harvard under investigation over participation in visa program for foreign students and researchers

Harvard under investigation over participation in visa program for foreign students and researchers

Independent6 days ago
In the latest in series of Trump administration inquiries targeting Harvard University, the State Department said Wednesday it is investigating whether the Ivy League school will remain part of a government program that provides American visas for students and researchers from other countries.
Harvard has faced mounting sanctions and scrutiny from Washington since rejecting demands from a federal antisemitism task force in April. Harvard has filed a lawsuit challenging $2.6 billion in federal cuts and has accused the Republican administration of waging a retaliation campaign.
The statement from Secretary of State Marco Rubio did not say why his department was examining Harvard's eligibility to take part in the Exchange Visitor Program, which allows foreign nationals to study or work in the United States through cultural and education exchange programs.
It said all sponsors, such as Harvard, 'are required to fully comply with exchange visitor regulations, transparency in reporting, and a demonstrated commitment to fostering the principles of cultural exchange and mutual understanding upon which the program was founded.'
A spokesman for Harvard did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The department said the investigation will seek to ensure that its programs "do not run contrary to our nation's interests.'
The administration also has tried several times to prevent the school in Cambridge, Massachusetts, from hosting foreign students, and President Donald Trump has threatened to revoke Harvard's tax-exempt status.
Last month, his administration issued a finding that Harvard tolerated antisemitism, a step that could jeopardize all of Harvard's federal funding, including student loans or grants. The penalty is typically referred to as a 'death sentence.'
Harvard's president, Alan Garber, has said the university has made changes to combat antisemitism and will not submit to the administration's demands.
___
The Associated Press' education coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP's standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

John Swinney urged Donald Trump to remove whisky tariffs as hopes rise for iconic industry
John Swinney urged Donald Trump to remove whisky tariffs as hopes rise for iconic industry

Daily Record

time21 minutes ago

  • Daily Record

John Swinney urged Donald Trump to remove whisky tariffs as hopes rise for iconic industry

The First Minister had dinner and breakfast with the President during a five day trip to Scotland. John Swinney has made a personal plea to President Trump to rethink the 10% tariffs planned for the whisky industry. ‌ The First Minister made his pitch during a dinner with the Republican politician on the site of his golf course in Balmedie, Aberdeenshire. ‌ Trump is on the last leg of a five day trip to Scotland which included visits to his golf clubs at Turnberry and in the North East. ‌ Swinney, who backed the Democrat candidate Kamala Harris in last year's presidential contest, had two separate sets of discussions with the President. He is understood to have spoken to Trump for around two hours at the private dinner on Monday evening. With the UK in line for 10% tariffs on imports to the US, the First Minister lobbied an exemption for whisky. ‌ An SNP Government source said a 'window of opportunity' exists between now and Trump's state visit to the UK in September to rethink the tariffs on whisky. The insider said: 'It is certainly on the President 's radar in a way it was not before'. Trump himself said at Turnberry on Monday that he would 'look' at concerns over tariffs on the iconic Scottish product. ‌ The First Minister previously said the tariffs were currently costing the local whisky industry £4m a week. On Tuesday morning, ahead of the President opening a second course at Balmedie, he and Swinney met for breakfast. They were joined by Trump 's sons Eric and Don Jnr where the crisis in Gaza was raised by the First Minister. ‌ He welcomed the aid provided for Gaza by the US and told Trump he is uniquely placed to intervene in the humanitarian crisis. In a sign of the warm relations between Trump and Swinney during the trip, the President singled him out for praise before he cut the ribbon on the new course. He asked Swinney to stand up in front of assembled guests and referred to him as a 'very special guy'.

A Trump-shaped elephant
A Trump-shaped elephant

New Statesman​

time21 minutes ago

  • New Statesman​

A Trump-shaped elephant

Photo byWhen Donald Trump's around it's the only story in town – even if that town is Westminster and the President of the United States is nearly 500 miles away (Proclaimers, eat your heart out) on his Turnberry golf course in Ayrshire, Scotland. There has been loads to pore over in terms of Keir Starmer's attempts to play nice with the most unpredictable man in the world. There's his awkward response to Trump's revelation that he's 'not a fan' of the London mayor – a shame, as Sadiq Khan told a podcast last November that he would love Trump to come to London: 'Let me show him around our wonderfully diverse communities. Let me take him to a Pride march… Let me take him to a mosque'. There's the will-he-won't-he about Trump addressing Parliament during his state visit in September which falls during recess ('Maybe we should save it for another time' was the assessment of the former TV host, who knows how to leave an episode on a cliffhanger). And, of course, there are the tariffs on steel and pharmaceuticals Starmer is hoping to avoid with this meticulous diplomatic performance. No news on that yet – although at least the Prime Minister can console himself that the UK's position is better than that of the EU, which has been forced to accept a 15 per cent tariff deal with the US. Megan Gibson and Tom McTague dissect it all on the latest New Statesman podcast. The Trump show even managed to dominate Nigel Farage's address (now seemingly a weekly event) to the Westminster faithful on Monday morning. From the Reform HQ's brand new 'press briefing room' on the twenty-fourth floor of the Millbank Tower (once home to the Labour Party – and, more recently, Farage's Brexit referendum campaign group journalists were invited to hear all about how 'Britain is lawless', again. What Farage wanted to talk about was his latest champion, retired DCI Colin Sutton (of the Levi Bellfield serial killer case fame), who will lead a new task force on law and order for Reform, and also how crime – in particular, sexual violence against women and girls – is linked to uncontrolled immigration. What he was mostly asked about was Donald Trump. There was a particularly uncomfortable moment when Farage, having just railed about not letting dangerous sex offenders into the UK, was questioned on whether Trump – convicted of several criminal offences and found liable for sexual abuse in a civil court – was 'the right sort of person to be letting into this country'. 'I think there was a civil case, not a criminal case, am I right or am I wrong? Thank you,' the Reform leader replied testily, before quickly moving on. This is delicate territory for Farage. As we all know, Trump is not a popular figure in the UK: around 70 per cent of Brits have an unfavourable view of him. Crucially, this unpopularity extends across the political spectrum. Following the infamous Oval Office meeting with Zelensky in February, Trump's favourability in the UK went negative even amongst Reform supporters. Farage's affinity with the US President is one of the few attack lines against his party which actually seems to work (just listen to this exclusive podcast with polling analyst Steve Akehurst). Back in March, More In Common found that '50 per cent of Britons see Farage as 'in Trump's pocket' – something that 69 per cent of Britons see as a negative thing for a politician to be, including 47 per cent of Reform voters'. This might explain why Farage was so keen to dodge questions about his former buddy – which he did, every time a journalist tried to press him on why he hadn't been invited up to Turnberry or what he made of the Trump-Starmer talks. And yet, there in the front row of the Reform press conference were two very visible reminders of the links Farage has with the Maga movement: US conservative pundit Ann Coulter and James Orr, the right-wing Cambridge theology professor who just happens to be a close friend of JD Vance. Their presence was noted but skirted over, with Coulter described intriguingly as an 'observer'. On Friday, when Trump landed in the UK and announced 'Immigration is killing Europe', she tweeted simply 'I hope Nigel Farage is taking notes'. There she was in the room three days later taking her own. Subscribe to The New Statesman today from only £8.99 per month Subscribe What is going on? As has become a theme, Farage is trying to have it both ways, flirting with the Maga movement – for attention, ideas, and support from US sources – while aiming to keep just enough distance to avoid repelling mainstream Brits. Trump isn't the only example of Reform experimenting with pushing the populist boundaries. Monday's conference kicked off with Zia Yusuf offering a diatribe against the Online Safety Act which came into force at the weekend, suggesting it was so 'dystopian' it would make Xi Jinping blush (which, to be totally honest, seems a bit unlikely). But a strong majority of British adults support age verification to view pornographic content online, and after last summer's riots two-thirds wanted social media companies to be held responsible for post inciting violence – the very thing Yusuf was raging against. The British public love banning things, and appear to be less along the libertarian free speech spectrum when it comes to online safety than Reform. Then there was the moment I asked Farage (and Sutton) how scrapping all police DEI roles would affect efforts to tackle the kind of toxic misogyny within forces that enabled officers like David Carrick and Wayne Couzens to abuse their positions to rape women, and what this said about Reform's purported focus on reducing sexual violence. Sutton blamed the conduct of both men on the austerity of Theresa May's Home Office, which didn't quite answer the question (not least because Carrick became a Met Police officer in 2001), while Farage dodged the question entirely. It's an area where two of Reform's stated aims – tackle violence against women and girls, and wage war with 'woke' – are in obvious conflict. The solution is to duck and fudge, hoping voters won't notice the contradictions. But Trump is the biggest risk, where Farage's position puts him outside the realm of popular opinion in the UK. Reform is going into the second year of this parliament leading the polls, with both Labour and the Conservatives struggling to cut through and show the unworkable 'cakeism' of it promises to invest huge amounts in public services like policing while simultaneously cutting taxes, all supposedly paid for by scrapping a few items like HS2 and net zero. Pointing out the numbers don't add up doesn't seem to be working to neutralise Farage. Would pointing at the Trump-shaped elephant in every room he walks into be more effective? After all, it worked in Canada. This piece first appeared in the Morning Call newsletter; receive it every morning by subscribing on Substack here [See also: Will Keir Starmer recognise Palestine?] Related

Trump's wrath looms as Nikki Haley backs presidential critic
Trump's wrath looms as Nikki Haley backs presidential critic

Daily Mail​

time21 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Trump's wrath looms as Nikki Haley backs presidential critic

Former Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley (pictured) has weighed in on the 2026 Republican primary race for governor in South Carolina, inserting herself into a high-octane campaign that could pique the interest of President Donald Trump. Haley endorsed Congressman Ralph Norman, a member of the conservative House Freedom Caucus who supported her run for the White House when she challenged the former president in 2024. 'Ralph Norman (pictured) is a strong conservative, a principled leader, and a friend who helped me take on the Columbia establishment and never stopped,' said Haley, herself a former governor of the Palmetto state. 'Ralph will finally clean up Columbia, pass term limits, and prepare South Carolina for the next generation. When Ralph Norman is governor, it will once again be a great day in South Carolina' Haley added. Despite Haley's eventual backing of Trump in the 2024 general election race, her forceful challenge to him has left their relationship damaged. Last November Trump said that his former ambassador to the United Nations would not be invited to serve during his second term. It remains to be seen if Haley's endorsement of Norman could hurt him with Trump, who is known to hold a grudge. Norman joins a field of Lieutenant Governor Pamela Evette, Attorney General Alan Wilson and state Senator Josh Kimbrell already in the GOP primary contest, and Rep. Nancy Mace is expected to enter the race in the coming days. Mace is already teasing her candidacy, taking to social media to post photos of her with Trump. Like Haley, Mace similarly had a complex relationship with the president. After the January 6 Capitol riot, she declared his legacy was 'wiped out,' causing him to back her ouster in a Republican primary. But since Trump's victory Mace has worked to cozy back up to the commander in chief. 'I believe I may be forced to run for governor because I can't watch my beautiful red state of South Carolina go woke. It's gone woke over the last couple of years,' Mace told FOX Report host Jon Scott. Mace (pictured) appeared at the New Hampshire Institute of Politics breakfast Friday, posting on X that trips to the Granite State is 'where serious campaigns get started,' a curious statement for someone about to launch a campaign for governor in a different state. During her visit, Mace said while New Hampshire 'picks presidents ... maybe you can pick the next South Carolina governor too.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store