US resumes visas for foreign students but demands access to social media accounts
Share this @internewscast.com

The U.S. State Department announced on Wednesday that it is resuming the halted process for foreign applicants seeking student visas. However, all applicants must now make their social media accounts accessible for government examination.

The department noted that consular officers will monitor posts and communications looking for content that might be considered antagonistic towards the U.S., its government, culture, institutions, or foundational principles.

Chinese students wait outside the U.S. Embassy for their visa application interviews, in Beijing on May 2, 2012.

Chinese students wait outside the U.S. Embassy for their visa application interviews, in Beijing on May 2, 2012.

AP Photo/Alexander F. Yuan, File

In a public notice released Wednesday, the department revealed it had lifted its May suspension of student visa processing. However, it specified that new applicants who decline to adjust their social media accounts to “public” for review could be denied. The department indicated that such refusal might suggest an attempt to circumvent the requirement or conceal their online activities.

The Trump administration last month temporarily halted the scheduling of new visa interviews for foreign students hoping to study in the U.S. while preparing to expand the screening of their activity on social media, officials said.

Students around the world have been waiting anxiously for U.S. consulates to reopen appointments for visa interviews, as the window left to book their travel and make housing arrangements narrows ahead of the start of the school year.

On Wednesday afternoon, a 27-year-old Ph.D. student in Toronto was able to secure an appointment for a visa interview next week. The student, a Chinese national, hopes to travel to the U.S. for a research internship that would start in late July. “I’m really relieved,” said the student, who spoke on condition of being identified only by his surname, Chen, because he was concerned about being targeted. “I’ve been refreshing the website couple of times every day.”

Students from China, India, Mexico and the Philippines have posted on social media sites that they have been monitoring visa booking websites and closely watching press briefings of the State Department to get any indication of when appointment scheduling might resume.

In reopening the visa process, the State Department also told consulates to prioritize students hoping to enroll at colleges where foreigners make up less than 15% of the student body, a U.S. official familiar with the matter said. The official spoke on condition of anonymity to detail information that has not been made public.

Foreign students make up more than 15% of the total student body at almost 200 U.S. universities, according to an Associated Press analysis of federal education data from 2023. Most are private universities, including all eight Ivy League schools. But that criteria also includes 26 public universities, including the University of Illinois and Pennsylvania State University. Looking only at undergraduate students, foreign students make up more than 15% of the population at about 100 universities, almost all of them private.

International students in the U.S. have been facing increased scrutiny on several fronts. In the spring, the Trump administration revoked permission to study in the U.S. for thousands of students, including some involved only in traffic offenses, before abruptly reversing course. The government also expanded the grounds on which foreign students can have their legal status terminated.

As part of a pressure campaign targeting Harvard University, the Trump administration has moved to block foreign students from attending the Ivy League school, which counts on international students for tuition dollars and a quarter of its enrollment. Trump has said Harvard should cap its foreign enrollment at 15%.

This latest move to vet students’ social media, the State Department said Wednesday, “will ensure we are properly screening every single person attempting to visit our country.”

In internal guidance sent to consular officers, the department said they should be looking for “any indications of hostility toward the citizens, culture, government, institutions, or founding principles of the United States.”

Jameel Jaffer, executive director at the Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University, said the new policy evokes the ideological vetting of the Cold War, when prominent artists and intellectuals were excluded from the U.S.

“This policy makes a censor of every consular officer, and it will inevitably chill legitimate political speech both inside and outside the United States,” Jaffer said.

The Trump administration also has called for 36 countries to commit to improving vetting of travelers or face a ban on their citizens visiting the United States. A weekend diplomatic cable sent by the State Department says the countries have 60 days to address U.S. concerns or risk being added to a travel ban that now includes 12 nations.

Copyright © 2025 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

Share this @internewscast.com
You May Also Like
Pope Leo XIV lends star power to Swiss Guards swearing-in ceremony as his army struggles to find recruits

Pope Leo XIV Boosts Swiss Guards’ Enrollment Ceremony Amid Recruitment Challenges

Pope Leo XIV officiated on Saturday at the induction ceremony of 27…
Members of international organized residential burglary ring arrested after posing as Amazon drivers, Irvine, CA break-in | Video

Montgomery, Alabama Tragedy: Two Killed and Twelve Injured in Downtown Shootout

MONTGOMERY, Ala. — Amid a bustling downtown nightlife scene in Alabama’s capital…
Kennedy Expressway construction: All outbound lanes reopened Sunday, ending lane closures ahead of IDOT Thanksgiving schedule

Kennedy Expressway Construction: All lanes heading out of the city reopened on Sunday, completing the lane closures before IDOT’s planned schedule for Thanksgiving.

CHICAGO (WLS) — The Illinois Department of Transportation announced that all outbound…
Chicago police ordered not to respond after car-ramming attack on federal agents: sources

Sources claim Chicago police instructed not to respond following car-ramming attack on federal agents

Chicago police officers faced a directive from their chief of patrol not…
Trial begins for men charged with killing Prince Holland, 13

Trial Commences for Suspects Accused of Killing 13-Year-Old Prince Holland

Prince was killed in 2022 while in a car driving home from…
Trial for FSU shooting suspect postponed till 2026

FSU Shooting Suspect’s Trial Delayed to 2026

Phoenix Ikner’s court-appointed public defender recently bowed out of the case, citing…
At America's national parks in the Trump era, the arc of history bends toward revisionism

How America’s National Parks Are Being Redefined in the Trump Era

HARPERS FERRY, W.Va. (AP) — At the turbulent meeting point of rivers,…
Mike Waltz sees Trump's Gaza plan as 'once-in-a-generation opportunity for peace'

Mike Waltz views Trump’s Gaza proposal as a ‘unique opportunity for peace in a generation’

U.S. ambassador to the United Nations Mike Waltz stated that President Donald…
Man dies from gunshot wounds after Jacksonville shooting

Jacksonville Shooting: Man Fatally Injured by Gunshots

Detectives with the JSO Homicide Unit and the Crime Scene Unit are…
Prosecutors plan to 'dirty up' Kirk suspect Tyler Robinson to sway jury toward death penalty: fmr US atty

Former US Attorney Claims Prosecutors Aim to Tarnish Tyler Robinson’s Image to Influence Jury Toward Death Penalty

Tyler Robinson’s motive for why he allegedly assassinated TPUSA founder Charlie Kirk…
GIF of suspect being rolled away

ICE Video Gains Attention as Agents Use Cart to Transport Uncooperative Portland Protester: ‘Won’t Walk? We’ll Take You Along’

Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) recently released a video featuring a suspect…
Israeli woman becomes first to conceive child fathered by IDF soldier killed in Hamas war

Israeli Woman Conceives Child with IDF Soldier Killed in Conflict with Hamas

On June 11, Hadas Levy made history as the first woman to…