Harvard Has Trained So Many Chinese Communist Officials, They Call It Their Party School 1/3
June 1, 2025 12:02 am
Harvard, which held its commencement Thursday,has long been popular among rising stars in Chinese politics.
U.S. schools—andone prestigious institution in particular—have long offered up-and-coming Chinese officials a place to study governance, a practice that the Trump administration could end with a new effort to keep out what it says are Chinese students with Communist Party ties.
For decades, the party has sent thousands of mid-career and senior bureaucrats to pursue executive training and postgraduate studies on U.S. campuses, with Harvard University a coveted destination described by some in China as the top “party school” outside the country.
Alumni of such programs includea former vice president and Chinese leader Xi Jinping’s top negotiatorin trade talks with the first Trump administration.
In an effort announced Wednesday by Secretary ofState Marco Rubio, U.S. authorities will tighten criteria for visa applications from China and “aggressively revoke visas for Chinese students, including those with connections to the Chinese Communist Party or studying in critical fields.”
The statement didn’t say how the Trump administration would assess Communist Party ties or what degree of connection would result in revocation of visas.In China, party membership is widely seen as helpful for career advancement—in government and the private sector—and is typically a prerequisite for officials seeking high office.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Mao Ning said Thursday that the U.S. move “seriously damaged the legitimate rights and interests of Chinese students.”
President Trump said Harvard should cap the amount of foreign students it admits at 15%, and ensure that those it does accept “are people that can love our country.”
Alleged ties with the Communist Party have emerged as a leading line of attack in President Trump’s pressure campaign against Harvard.The Trump administration said on May 22 it was revoking Harvard’s authorization to enroll foreign students, accusing the university of working with the Communist Party, though it later gave Harvard 30 days to contest the decision. Harvard has filed a lawsuit to keep its foreign enrollments.
Harvard didn’t respond to questions for this article.
Some U.S. politicians have saidthat China’s Communist Party is harvesting expertise in American academia to ultimately harm U.S. interests. The Trump administration has cited these criticisms among others to back its efforts to force a major cultural shift in U.S. colleges, which many conservatives regard as bastions of liberal and left-wing ideology.
American universities have played leading roles in shaping China’s overseas training programs for mid-career officials, which Beijing started arranging at scale in the 1990sas a way to improve governance by exposing its bureaucrats to Western public-policy ideas and practices.
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