Trump Administration Faces Court Over Ideological Deportations
The Trump administration faced a Massachusetts federal court on Monday, forced to defend its policy of revoking the legal status of international students based solely on their political speech. The lawsuit, brought by a coalition of academic organizations, represents a rare challenge to the administration's use of targeted deportation.

The case, spearheaded by Columbia University’s Knight First Amendment Institute on behalf of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP), challenges the government's practice of stripping visas and green cards from students who express pro-Palestine views. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, the lead defendant, has previously acknowledged that the administration revoked legal status for hundreds of protesters because their speech conflicted with U.S. foreign policy objectives.
The litigation follows the high-profile detention of Columbia graduate student Mahmoud Khalil, who was taken into custody by plainclothes ICE officers and held for nearly three months. Plaintiffs argue that the administration’s actions constitute an unconstitutional effort to punish speech and coerce silence. According to court filings, the policy has triggered widespread self-censorship, with professors scrubbing social media accounts and abandoning research to avoid government scrutiny.
Andrew Manuel Crespo, a Harvard Law professor and general counsel for the AAUP-Harvard chapter, emphasized that government power cannot be used to suppress dissenting viewpoints. While this specific challenge focuses on non-citizens, AAUP President Todd Wolfson warned that the precedent poses a broader threat to academic freedom. He suggested the administration’s tactics could eventually target those teaching sensitive topics, such as the history of slavery or reproductive health, effectively widening the scope of ideological enforcement on American campuses.
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