GU, DC Student Governments Organize Protest Against DOE Gutting
What to know: The “Hands Off Our Schools” rally, organized by student governments at five universities, including Georgetown, protested outside the DOE in an April 4 rally opposing President Donald Trump’s moves to dismantle the agency. Students protested Trump’s March 20 decision to “gut” the department as well as the administration’s crackdowns on campus free speech, diversity programs, civil rights protections, student loan forgiveness, academic programs and deportation of student visa holders.
Links Between ICE Deportation Flights, GU Men’s Basketball Travel Suggested
What to know: Publicly available flight data suggested the Georgetown men’s basketball team used the same planes to travel for away games that U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) uses to transport detainees and deport migrants, a story The Hoya published for the first time. The data suggested the team flew round-trip flights to and from eight away games between Dec. 12 and March 8 with GlobalX, otherwise known as Global Crossing Airlines, an airline that has become the single largest federal subcontractor of ICE deportation flights. Georgetown and the men’s basketball team use a third-party contractor to book travel.
Federal Government Terminates About Six GU Community Members’ Immigration Statuses
What to know: The federal government terminated about six Georgetown University community members’ immigration statuses, according to an update posted on a university webpage April 9. The government terminated four more by April 15. An unspecified number of visas were reinstated April 30. See this webpage for university updates on U.S. immigration policy.
GU Students Endorse Divestment From Israel in Referendum
What to know: Georgetown undergraduate students voted to approve a referendum calling on the university to divest from and disclose engagement with companies with ties to Israel’s government, the Georgetown University Student Association (GUSA) election commission announced April 29. The referendum was nonbinding and passed with 67.9% of the vote — 1,447 students voting in favor, and 685 against — with a turnout of 2,132 students, or 29.5% of the student body.
Less than an hour after the results were announced, Groves announced the university would not implement the referendum.