
Harvard Taught This British Student About Democracy. Now Trump May Force Him Out.
In mid-April, as he hit his stride in his first year at Harvard, Alfred Williamson felt a stirring of unease. The Trump administration's latest threats against his university were now focused on blocking international students from attending it.
Mr. Williamson, from Wales, consulted his American friends: Should he be worried?
'They said, 'There's no way he would do that,'' Mr. Williamson, 20, recalled in an interview. 'They said it was just a scare tactic. But they were wrong.'
Five weeks later, just after the end of the spring semester, Mr. Williamson, now at a summer abroad program, picked up his phone and saw a pileup of missed calls and messages. The threat his friends had dismissed had become a searing reality: The federal government had effectively blocked Harvard's ability to enroll foreign students — abruptly thrusting Mr. Williamson and others into an excruciating limbo.
As anxious messages pinged on his phone, Mr. Williamson scrolled through texts from worried family members ('I hope you're OK') and from classmates unmoored by uncertainty ('What are we going to do?'). He spoke to one close friend who called him in tears, devastated at the potential loss of financial help from Harvard — money that had not been matched by British universities and that had put college within reach.
A judge has issued temporary restraining orders pausing the Trump administration's efforts. But Mr. Williamson and thousands of other international students are still dogged by uncertainty, wondering what will come next.
In the country's raging debates over immigration, someone with Mr. Williamson's profile — a white, British man in the United States to study science — would not usually be the focus of debate. But like all kinds of students from all over the world, he, too, has been swept up in the Trump administration's fight over higher education.
Want all of The Times? Subscribe.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Fox News
8 minutes ago
- Fox News
WATCH LIVE: President Trump attends UFC event in Newark, New Jersey
All times eastern FOX News Saturday Night with Jimmy Failla FOX News Radio Live Channel Coverage WATCH LIVE: President Trump attends UFC event in Newark, New Jersey


Fox News
8 minutes ago
- Fox News
National security expert warns why it's ‘critical' to care about Iran and nuclear weapons
All times eastern FOX News Saturday Night with Jimmy Failla FOX News Radio Live Channel Coverage WATCH LIVE: President Trump attends UFC event in Newark, New Jersey
Yahoo
14 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Escobar: GOP budget bill would cut health care, give breaks to rich
EL PASO, Texas (KTSM) — The Republican budget bill — often called the 'big, beautiful bill' by supporters of President Donald Trump — would cut health care, nutrition programs and explode the national debt, said U.S. Rep. Veronica Escobar, D-Texas. The bill, which has passed the U.S. House and is being discussed by the Senate, would also give 'massive tax breaks' to the 'millionaire and billionaire class,' Escobar said. That was one of the messages that Escobar delivered during a town-hall meeting Saturday, June 7 at Horizon High School in Horizon City. Escobar said that the town-hall meeting was an opportunity to listen to consituents, talk to them and answer their questions. She said the Republican budget bill is the big topic of converstation and concern. 'It passed out of the House a couple of weeks ago. The Senate is working on it now,' said Escobar, who voted against the bill when it came up before the U.S. House in late May. 'It will result in cuts to health care benefits, cuts to nutrition programs. It will explode the national debt, all of this in order to give the millionaire and billionaire class massive tax breaks,' Escobar said. 'It is important for people to understand what is in the bill,' Escobar continued. 'We still have an opportunity to stop it and kill it on the Senate side and come up with a bipartisan product that reflects our nation's values.' The Trump Administration's plans to 'pause' the Job Corps program, including a center here in El Paso, is 'devastating news,' she added. 'The reason they gave for the pause in the program were financial issues that happened with the program during the pandemic,' Escobar said. She added that she wasn't sure why the Trump Administration was targeting the program. A lawsuit has been filed against the 'pause' and the move is likely to be found illegal by the courts, she added. Michael Aboud, the chairman of the El Paso County Republican Party, called Escobar a 'tax-and-spend Democrat.' 'I don't understand why she would want El Pasoans or anyone to pay more taxes,' Aboud said. 'Our taxes are already way too high. She is upset because President Trump is cutting waste and is going to reduce our taxes. 'I don't see how you can be against that. I think it is nonsensical, unless you are greedy and just want to spend the people's money,' he added. Escobar has represented Texas' 16th Congressional District since 2019. She announced in April that she will be seeking another two-year term. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.