The Trump administration asked a federal judge to throw out Harvard University’s lawsuit over a proposed ban on international students, saying the president has broad authority to issue rules restricting the entry of non-citizens into the country.
The Justice Department said in a court filing in Boston Friday that Harvard doesn’t have the legal right to challenge the restrictions.
The dispute involves Harvard’s certification with the Student Exchange and Visitor Program — a requirement for any university to enroll international students. In June, President Donald Trump signed an executive action that prevents foreign nationals from entering the US to study at Harvard, accusing the school of failing to implement discipline on campus and fostering a dramatic rise in crime.
Trump has made Harvard the main target of his effort to force universities to reshape higher education by cracking down on alleged antisemitism, removing perceived political bias among the faculty and eliminating diversity programs. Judge Allison Burroughs is expected to rule soon in another dispute over whether the government can terminate more than $2 billion in federal research funding for the school.
Harvard sued the administration over the international students in May, arguing that the enrollment ban violates its due process rights and fails to follow federal regulations.
Burroughs, who is overseeing multiple lawsuits between the school and the Trump administration, granted the university’s request for a preliminary injunction blocking the policy, and then issued another order saying the government can’t enforce Trump’s ban on its international students entering the US.
The Harvard lawsuit related to foreign students addresses both sections of the Trump policy.
Compliance with the program “is an important requirement for hosting foreign student visa holders to ensure they are adequately monitored, disciplined, and reported on,” the US said in the filing. “Harvard was not complying with its obligations. This raised serious national security and public safety concerns, of which the President’s determination is due the utmost deference.”
A Harvard spokesperson said that the government’s motion Friday has has no impact on the school’s ability to enroll international students.
“The university will continue to defend its rights — and the rights of its students and scholars,” the spokesperson said.
The Justice Department didn’t immediately return a message seeking comment.
The Trump administration has been trying for months to stop foreign students from enrolling at Harvard, one of several levers that could hurt the university’s finances. In the last academic year, 27% of Harvard students came from abroad.
Harvard, the oldest and richest US college with an endowment of $53 billion, and the government have been negotiating toward a global settlement but have yet to come to a deal. Ivy League peers the University of Pennsylvania, Columbia and Brown have reached agreements in recent weeks.
The White House views a payment of $500 million by Harvard University as a floor in negotiations, and the cost of a deal could climb far higher if the school doesn’t submit to government oversight provisions, according to people with knowledge of the matter.
Justice Department lawyers said earlier this week that the US would no longer rely on a May 22 letter by Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem to justify the near-immediate ban on foreign students it sought, but plans to move forward through an administrative process to “simplify this case and narrow the issues.”
The case is Harvard v. US Department of Homeland Security, 25-cv-11472, US District Court, District of Massachusetts .
With assistance from Janet Lorin.
This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.