Rubio may have revoked thousands of visas as crackdown continues

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U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio gestures as he testifies at a Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing on U.S. President Donald Trump's State Department budget request for the Department of State, on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., U.S., May 20, 2025. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said in March that the State Department may have revoked over 300 visas.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said on May 20 that the number of visas he has revoked was probably in the thousands, adding that he believed there was still more to do.

Republican President Donald Trump’s administration has

sought to ramp up deportations

and revoke student visas as part of its wide-ranging efforts to fulfil his hardline immigration agenda.

“I don’t know the latest count, but we probably have more to do,” Mr Rubio told a Senate appropriations subcommittee that oversees foreign affairs.

When asked to give an estimate, he said it was probably in the thousands at this point, an increase from March, when he said the State Department may have revoked more than 300 visas.

Mr Rubio said the 300 revoked visas were a combination of student and visitor visas. He said he signed each action.

“A visa is not a right. It’s a privilege,” Mr Rubio said on May 20.

Trump administration officials have said student visa and green card holders are subject to deportation over their support for Palestinians and criticism of Israel’s conduct in the war in Gaza, calling their actions a threat to US foreign policy and accusing them of being pro-Hamas.

Mr Trump’s critics have called the effort an attack on free speech rights under the First Amendment of the US Constitution.

“I know this will be adjudicated in court, but the idea that one individual could on their opinion of someone’s future activity or expected activity... toss somebody’s visa, seems to me an extraordinary violation of due process,” Democratic Senator Jeff Merkley told Mr Rubio at the hearing.

Earlier in May, a Tufts University student from Turkey was

held for over six weeks in an immigration detention centre

in Louisiana after co-writing an opinion piece criticising her school’s response to Israel’s war in Gaza. 

She was released from custody after a federal judge granted her bail.

US District Judge William Sessions during a hearing in Burlington, Vermont, ordered the immediate release of Ms Rumeysa Ozturk, who is at the centre of one of the highest-profile cases to emerge from Mr Trump’s campaign to deport pro-Palestinian activists who are on American campuses. REUTERS

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