Several House committee chairmen have urged secretary of state Marco Rubio to designate the Chinese Students and Scholars Association (CSSA) as a “foreign mission” of the Chinese government, requiring federal approval of public meetings and advance notice of events.
“These nominally student-led groups on US college campuses are receiving direction and funding from China while also engaging in harmful and disruptive activities that chill free expression, undermine academic freedom and raise serious national security concerns,” wrote three Republican House chairmen in a March 5 letter to Rubio.
They expressed “grave concerns” that the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) was using the CSSA to “monitor, control, manipulate and direct Chinese students abroad”, and advance Beijing’s interests on US campuses.
But experts have said the move would cause a “chilling effect” on normal student programming and warned of the unintended consequences of treating nationality-linked student groups as suspicious.
“This strikes me as a pretty McCarthyist move,” Sunrise International co-founder David Weeks told The PIE News.
“Even if there are legitimate concerns about some CSSA chapters having overly close relationships with Chinese consulates, designating an entire category of student groups as effectively foreign missions would flatten a lot of variation into one political label,” Weeks said.
The letter states there are roughly 200 CSSA branches across US colleges – with each one operating as an independent campus group. As such, critics of the proposed change have said any increased regulation needs to be on a chapter-by-chapter basis.
At Harvard, the CSSA represents the largest international student group and has the stated aim of “promoting social, intellectual and cultural activities for Chinese students and scholars” and other interested members of Harvard’s community.
But the lawmakers allege foreign adversarial countries use such organisations as cover for “malign activities” including “acting as an undeclared agent, transnational repression, and even espionage”.
They are calling on Rubio to designate all CSSAs “foreign missions” under the control of an overseas state, subjecting them to disclosure agreements and requiring government authorisation to hold public events.
The State Department said it didn’t comment on congressional correspondence.
If a congressional committee is looking for the biggest threat to academic freedom in 2026, it would be better spent examining the administration’s political attacks on the independence of American universities
David Weeks, Sunrise International
While the associations wouldn’t be outrightly banned, Weeks said the proposed move would lead to more scrutiny and have “real consequences” for campus life.
He acknowledged there was some credence to the chairmen’s claim that some branches receive funding or guidance from Chinese consulates but that those cases were very different from proving that every CSSA chapter was meaningfully controlled by the CCP.
The letter identifies six chapters that have received funding from Chinese consulates and multiple others recognised by or working with the embassy – agreements that are openly disclosed on their websites.
“The real question is whether a specific chapter is being directed, financed or used to monitor and pressure students, and that should be shown chapter by chapter,” said Weeks, highlighting existing university regulations that terminate or suspend clubs breaking the rules.
He said the move risked creating a precedent where student associations are judged less by what they do and more who they are symbolically associated with, emphasising the need for “clear evidence of control and consistent principles, not a sweeping political narrative”.
“If congress normalises treating nationality-linked student groups as presumptively suspect, that logic will not stay neatly confined to one country.”
“Frankly, if a congressional committee is looking for the biggest threat to academic freedom in 2026, it would be better spent examining the administration’s political attacks on the independence of American universities,” Weeks added.
The request is the latest strain on US-Chinese educational ties under Trump’s second administration, which has seen US colleges step back from Chinese partnerships amid heighted federal scrutiny, alongside multiple unmaterialised threats to restrict study visa issuance to Chinese nationals.
It follows the state department’s launch of a new dashboard to “improve the transparency of foreign funding in US higher education, including a label for funding of “concern” coming from China, Cuba, Iran, North Korea, Russia or Venezuela.
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