Social Democrats TD Jen Cummins has described the US embassy’s new social media vetting requirements for Irish applicants seeking education and exchange visas as a serious overreach.
Deputy Cummins, who is the party’s spokesperson on higher education, said:
“Asking visa applicants to set their social media accounts to public to allow their posts to be scrutinised sets a deeply troubling precedent. Applicants will also be required to list all social media usernames or handles of every platform they have used in the last five years.
“It undermines personal privacy, freedom of expression, and the longstanding educational relationship between Ireland and America.
“This policy effectively invites a foreign authority to comb through the private lives and political expressions of Irish citizens. It is invasive, excessive, and incompatible with the values of academic freedom and open exchange that should underpin international education.
“I am particularly alarmed by the chilling effect such a requirement could have on students and young people, who may now feel compelled to censor their opinions or delete their online history to avoid being refused entry to the US.
“Students should not have to second-guess everything they’ve posted online for fear it will be used against them in a visa interview. President Trump is creating a culture of self-censorship at a time when we should be encouraging critical thinking and democratic engagement.
“This policy could also have a disproportionate impact on marginalised communities and politically active students. Social media is a platform for self-expression and activism. Making that expression a test for access to education abroad is profoundly wrong as it risks silencing the very voices we should be empowering.
“I now urge the government to raise this issue directly with the US administration. We must defend the rights of our citizens, particularly young people, to study abroad without compromising their dignity or autonomy.
“This new requirement does not make anyone safer – it only makes international education less accessible, less fair, and less free.”
June 24, 2025