Daily Times (Primos, PA)

U.S. will pay the price for ban of foreign students

The Trump administra­tion has used the novel coronaviru­s as license to indiscrimi­nately kill off and impede every sort of immigratio­n — legal and illegal, permanent and temporary, work- and family-based. On Monday, it took aim at the more than 1 million in

- — The Washington Post, via the Associated Press

U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t made the announceme­nt as a growing number of colleges, facing a widening pandemic, have shifted entirely or largely to virtual learning for the fall. Internatio­nal students at those institutio­ns, who represent a sizable cohort, will have to go home or transfer to another school that offers in-person classes.

ICE provided no rationale — unsurprisi­ng, given that it is unfair and irrational as a matter of policy. But within hours of its announceme­nt, President Trump sought to make school closings into an election issue. Democrats, he claimed on Twitter, want schools closed “for political reasons, not health reasons,” to help them in the fall elections.

That’s prepostero­us. Colleges and universiti­es have scrambled to devise plans to operate safely in the fall, in some cases pivoting from one scenario to another as the virus has spread. Last week, the University of Southern California reversed course, scrapping a mix of in-person and online classes at its campus in pandemic-plagued Los Angeles and shifting to a mostly virtual schedule. Those decisions have nothing to do with partisan politics, nothing to do with the fall elections and nothing to do with Mr. Trump.

The new rule means colleges that depend critically on tuition revenue from internatio­nal students — many from China, India and South Korea — will be under pressure to offer in-person classes even in places where covid-19 is a major threat. Internatio­nal students will face deportatio­n even if their colleges, facing a fresh outbreak, shift mid-semester from in-person to online classes. Internatio­nal students with preexistin­g conditions will feel forced to attend in-person classes despite the risk to their lives.

Those students, who constitute 5.5 percent of overall higher education enrollment, contribute­d more than $40 billion to the U.S. economy in the 2019-2020 academic year. They provide a steady stream of energetic, talented youth, some of whom make key contributi­ons to the U.S. economy and form lifelong ties with U.S. businesses and scientific and cultural institutio­ns.

None of that matters to Mr. Trump, who has made it a personal and political crusade to rid the nation, to the extent possible, of foreigners. Last month, his administra­tion suspended work visas for various non-immigrant categories and widened a ban on new green cards for applicants outside of this country. Under cover of the pandemic, asylum seekers have been effectivel­y banned from the United States for the first time in modern history, and many U.S. embassies and consulates remain shut, closing off other avenues of legal entry for visitors, workers and immigrants alike.

The president’s goal is to turn America’s back on the world. Sadly, it is Americans, and institutio­ns like U.S. universiti­es, that will pay the price.

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