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Opinion: The human cost of Trump’s visa war on education

With the recent outbreak of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) around the nation, fear has spread throughout the country, and even into education.
<a href="https://highschool.latimes.com/author/2027dodo/" target="_self">Doyoon Lee</a>

Doyoon Lee

April 8, 2026

Waking up in the morning to pack your bag for school. Waking up the next day to pack your suitcase to go back to your home country. Or being admitted into your dream college and having no way to get there. This is the shocking reality of many international students.

After Donald Trump’s return to office in January 2025, the following months have been filled with visa revocations, application freezes, and visa anxiety. A similar situation occurred in 2020 when the Trump administration declared not to issue visas to students taking courses fully online. However, this policy was quickly reversed due to immense public outrage.

This time, many are worried that the policy won’t be reversed that easily. The 2020 policies were able to be reversed because they were sudden and clearly harmful during the pandemic. However, these policies have specific reasons and targets like national security and ideological threats, and there are currently no pandemics like COVID that make it urgent to reverse them.

At universities across the states, many have rushed forward to help their international students, but most ended up feeling helpless. According to an article published by NPR, the federal government has cut $11 billion in research funding at universities in just the past four months. This cut has impacted research regarding cancer, diabetes, and domestic violence at dozens of universities. Although universities are fighting back in court, serious damage has already been done. 

The financial losses that Trump has brought on universities do not stop here. International students often pay higher tuition compared to domestic students. However, with the limitation placed on international students by the Trump administration’s policies, there has been an 11.33% decline in the number of international students in the US.

Because of the stacking financial cuts, some universities are facing budget shortfalls. The University of Waterloo, for example, is expected to have a $75 million deficit due to the declining number of international students. Financial instabilities like these may lead to global partnerships falling as higher education in the US becomes an unstable prospect for international students in the future.

Beyond economic impacts, the cultural and social contributions of international students are being lost. They don’t just bring high academic achievements, but cultural depth and lived experiences from diverse backgrounds. Losing these means losing a unique perspective to look at the world from. Diversity has been a strong suit of education in the US, but as students face these immense barriers, universities are losing their unique color.

The policies of the Trump administration are doing more than just a temporary disruption to US universities and students – they are shifting identities. Whether this change will define a new chapter in education or be reversed is unclear. However, for many universities and students, the cost is already felt not just through the number of visas but through a loss of voice.

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