
Judge to continue blocking Trump's move on Harvard's foreign students enrollment
A federal judge said on Wednesday that she would issue an order that would continue to block the Trump administration from immediately revoking Harvard University's ability to enroll international students.US District Judge Allison Burroughs in Boston announced her intention to issue a broad preliminary injunction shortly after the administration revealed it plans to pursue a new, lengthier administrative process to block the students' enrollment.advertisementThe US Department of Homeland Security changed course ahead of a hearing before Burroughs over whether to extend a temporary order blocking President Donald Trump's administration from revoking the Ivy League school's right to host international students.
The department in a notice sent to Harvard near midnight on Wednesday said it would give the school 30 days to contest its plans to revoke its certification under a federal program allowing it to enroll non-US students.The Justice Department filed a copy of the notice in court two hours before Thursday's hearing. Harvard's lawyers and the judge said at the hearing that they were still processing it and assessing its impact on the school's lawsuit.When Burroughs asked if the notice acknowledged that procedural steps were not taken, Justice Department attorney Tiberius Davis replied that this wasn't necessarily the case. Instead, he said, the notice recognised that adopting the procedures Harvard advocated for would be better and simpler.advertisementDavis said the notice made Harvard's arguments at this time moot. However, Burroughs, an appointee of Democratic former President Barack Obama, expressed skepticism about that, saying "Aren't we still going to end up back here at the same place?"Ian Gershengorn, a lawyer for Harvard, told Burroughs that an injunction protecting Harvard during the administrative process was necessary, saying the school was worried about the administration's efforts to retaliate against it."The First Amendment harms we are suffering are real and continuing," he said.Burroughs said a preliminary injunction was needed to stop any immediate changes and protect international students arriving to attend Harvard.The Cambridge, Massachusetts-based university says DHS's action is part of an "unprecedented and retaliatory attack on academic freedom at Harvard," which is pursuing a separate lawsuit challenging the administration's decision to terminate nearly $3 billion in federal research funding.Harvard argues the Trump administration is retaliating against it for refusing to accede to its demands to control the school's governance, curriculum and the ideology of its faculty and students.Harvard filed the lawsuit a day after Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem on May 22 announced she was revoking its certification with the Student and Exchange Visitor Program.advertisementHarvard said the decision was "devastating" for the school and its student body. The university, the nation's oldest and wealthiest, enrolled nearly 6,800 international students in its current school year, about 27% of its total enrollment.Harvard had argued that the revocation not only violated its free speech and due process rights under the U.S Constitution but also failed to comply with DHS regulations. The regulations require it to receive 30 days to challenge the agency's allegations and an opportunity to pursue an administrative appeal.In announcing the initial decision to revoke Harvard's certification, Noem, without providing evidence, accused the university of "fostering violence, antisemitism, and coordinating with the Chinese Communist Party."In a letter that day, she accused the school of refusing to comply with wide-ranging requests for information on its student visa holders, including about any activity they engaged in that was illegal or violent or that would subject them to discipline.The department's move would prevent Harvard from enrolling new international students and require existing ones to transfer to other schools or lose their legal status. Trump on Wednesday said that Harvard should have a 15% cap on the number of non-US students it admits.Tune InMust Watch
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Time of India
26 minutes ago
- Time of India
India-US trade pact: Effort on to facilitate preferential market access for both sides, says Piyush Goyal
Live Events (You can now subscribe to our (You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel India and the United States are keen on providing preferential market access to each other's businesses, with teams from both nations collaborating on a proposed bilateral trade agreement, Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal said on June 2. In February, Donald Trump and Narendra Modi underlined the two sides' intentions to negotiate the initial phase of a mutually advantageous multi-sector Bilateral Trade Agreement (BTA) by the fall of 2025, specifically targeting agreement aims to increase bilateral trade from the current figure of $191 billion to $500 billion by the year told reporters in Paris, during an official visit, that both nations are dedicated to collaborating and that there is a mutual desire to provide preferential access to each other's response to a question regarding Trump's announcement to raise tariffs on steel and aluminum to 50 per cent, Goyal stated that both countries will continue to work on resolving such issues through bilateral discussions."Let's wait and see; both the US and India share a positive relationship and will persist in resolving these matters through dialogue," Goyal specialists have indicated that the Trump administration's potential increase in import duties could adversely affect Indian exporters, particularly those involved in value-added steel products and auto May 30, Trump declared his plan to raise the existing 25 per cent tariffs on steel and aluminum imports, effective June 4. The initial tariffs were invoked in 2018, with a 25 per cent tariff on steel and 10 per cent on aluminum, which was later raised to 25 per cent on aluminum in February the fiscal year 2024-25, India exported iron, steel, and aluminum products worth $4.56 billion to the US, with key exports including $587.5 million in iron and steel, $3.1 billion in iron or steel articles, and $860 million in aluminum and related has also lodged a formal complaint with the World Trade Organization (WTO), asserting its right to impose retaliatory tariffs on American goods in reaction to the previous steel tariffs. This week, a delegation of US officials is visiting India to discuss the proposed interim trade agreement between the two significance of this visit is heightened by the expectation that India and the US may reach an interim trade agreement by the end of June, with India advocating for a complete exemption from the 26 per cent reciprocal tariff on domestic Agrawal, India's chief negotiator and Special Secretary in the Department of Commerce, concluded a four-day visit to Washington last month, where he engaged in discussions with his US counterpart regarding the proposed agreement. Goyal was also in Washington to further advance trade negotiations. There is a possibility that both nations might finalize an interim trade deal prior to the first phase the fourth consecutive year in 2024-25, the US maintained its status as India's largest trading partner, with bilateral trade reaching $131.84 billion. The US contributes approximately 18 per cent to India's total goods exports, 6.22 per cent to imports, and 10.73 per cent to the overall merchandise trade of the India's free trade agreement with the four-nation European bloc EFTA, Goyal clarified that the $100 billion foreign direct investment (FDI) commitment under this agreement does not account for funds entering the stock market through foreign institutional investors (FIIs)."This represents solid FDI coming into the nation... This $100 billion in FDI is accompanied by technologies... It will likely catalyze approximately $500 billion in investments," he stated. He emphasized that such investments would foster the development of a comprehensive ecosystem, leading to the establishment of hotels, infrastructure, and the utilization of power and water resources, thus significantly contributing to the economy. The implementation of this pact is advancing rapidly, with expectations for it to be operational by the year's Trade and Economic Partnership Agreement (TEPA) was signed by the two sides on March 10, 2024. Under this agreement, India has secured an investment pledge of $100 billion over 15 years from the grouping, while allowing several products, including Swiss watches, chocolates, and cut and polished diamonds, to be imported at lower or zero members of the European Free Trade Association (EFTA) include Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, and Switzerland. When queried about the possibility of a similar arrangement in the proposed trade pact with the 27-nation EU bloc, Goyal remarked, "The member countries are significant investors in India, so we may not pursue that avenue in our FTA with the EU."

Hindustan Times
27 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
Bill Clinton's dig at Donald Trump over ‘my way or highway' style governance: 'Never seen…'
Former US president Bill Clinton has slammed Donald Trump's ignorance of the American legal system, saying he had never seen a leader who says, 'Whatever I want should be the law of the land". He added that most Americans 'don't agree with that". Bill Clinton was in an interview with CBS Sunday Morning, when he said Trump is acting in ways that go against American values and 'We've never seen anything like this before in my lifetime – somebody that says, 'Whatever I want should be the law of the land. It's my way or the highway.' he added. The ex-President then discussed Donald Trump's behaviour, which includes 'calling people names' and using forceful tactics. He said, 'I like to think that he's paid a price for this, you know, name-calling and throwing his weight around. I think it's made him less popular,' Clinton said. Clinton believes that while Trump can lead however he wants, the courts and elections will decide if his actions are acceptable. 'Only elections are going to change this,' he said. 'He (Trump) is looking for ways to basically defy all these court orders. But I think he'll have a hard time doing that. And if he does, I think it will hurt him in America,' Bill Clinton said. The former President added that the courts, including judges appointed by Trump himself, are pushing back. 'I do think the courts are getting their dander up,' he added. He then went on to criticise the republican President's attempts to block law firms from representing clients in federal buildings because of political disagreements. 'That ain't America. We've never done that,' Clinton said. 'The whole purpose of having a legal system is to have both sides be heard.' Clinton also urged Americans to work together and avoid division. 'Someone needs to stand up and say, 'Damn it, what we have in common matters more. We cannot destroy other people's trust in us. We need to preserve that and find a way to work together,' he said. 'We gotta just calm down and try to pull people together again,' CBS quoted former US President as saying. When asked about a recent book that questions Joe Biden's mental abilities, Clinton dismissed the claims. He said he had never seen Biden struggle. 'I thought he was a good president… I had never seen him and walked away thinking, He can't do this anymore. He was always on top of his briefs.' Clinton said he hadn't read the book, explaining, 'I didn't want to. 'Cause he's not president anymore, and I think he did a good job.' He also warned that some people might be using the book to blame Biden for Trump's return.


Mint
41 minutes ago
- Mint
China hits back against Trump claims that it broke trade truce as tensions simmer
China has pushed back against President Trump's accusation that it broke a trade truce reached just weeks earlier, as a re-escalation of tensions dim hopes of a resolution. Beijing has acted responsibly and upheld the consensus reached at the economic and trade talks in Geneva, the Commerce Ministry said in a statement on its website Monday. Washington and Beijing agreed in mid-May to temporarily lower tit-for-tat tariffs after talks in Geneva, sending a wave of relief across global markets that had been hammered by fears of a trade war since Trump took office and started raising tariffs on China and other countries. Recent developments have damped optimism that the two superpowers will reach a lasting deal, with tensions flaring up over issues such as China's exports of rare-earth minerals and the Trump administration's crackdown on student visas. On Monday, the Chinese Commerce Ministry said it is the U.S. side that has 'seriously undermined" the consensus reached in Geneva. It alleged that Washington introduced multiple 'discriminatory and restrictive measures" against China, such as issuing export-control guidelines for artificial-intelligence chips and revoking visas for Chinese students. The Office of the U.S. Trade Representative didn't immediately respond to a request for comment. The Commerce Ministry's statement came after Trump said in a social-media post on Friday that China 'has totally violated its agreement with U.S." He repeated the accusation later on, telling reporters at the Oval Office that he was certain he would speak to Chinese leader Xi Jinping about the matter. 'They violated a big part of the agreement we made," Trump said. 'I'm sure that I'll speak to President Xi, hopefully we'll work that out. It's a violation of the agreement." He didn't provide details. The latest signs of a breakdown in progress toward a deal soured the mood in markets, with Chinese companies falling again in Hong Kong on Monday. That followed declines on Friday after comments from U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent describing U.S.-China talks as 'a bit stalled." The benchmark Hang Seng Index led declines in holiday-thinned Asia trading, falling 2.2% by midday. The Hang Seng Tech Index was down 2.4%. Chinese state-owned steel manufacturers added to the downward pressure, reacting to Trump's threat to double tariffs on steel and aluminum imports. Write to Tracy Qu at