Harvard University v. Department of Homeland Security
Case Overview
After Harvard refused to hand over student protester records or restructure its diversity programs, the Trump administration revoked the university's certification to host international students, a move that would have forced thousands of enrolled students to transfer or leave the country mid-semester. Harvard went to court within hours and got a TRO, with the judge finding the revocation arbitrary and the harm plainly irreparable. The case turns on whether the government's authority over the student visa program, a real administrative power, can be deployed as a lever to coerce university admissions and governance decisions, or whether statutory and constitutional limits apply when that power is used as political pressure rather than program administration.
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The Application
The visa revocation appears disconnected from any deficiency in Harvard's administration of the student visa program itself; instead it targets unrelated university governance matters (diversity policy and student records). Using visa authority as leverage to coerce compliance with demands outside the visa statute's scope constitutes arbitrary administrative action. The court found irreparable harm from forced mid-semester transfers and concluded Harvard likely succeeds on the merits of its arbitrary and capricious claim.
The Conclusion
Harvard secured a TRO and preliminary relief appears likely because the revocation constitutes arbitrary administrative action that impermissibly uses visa authority as political coercion beyond the government's statutory mandate, triggering heightened APA scrutiny and potentially implicating unconstitutional conditions doctrine.
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