By Wilbert Ramirez, politics reporter
Student protests were frequently observed during the 2025 Spring Semester at Virginia Tech in response to rapid changes made by federal and university administrations.
The protests were from a large variety of different student organizations that had different goals in mind against university policy regarding Virginia Tech’s policy changes due to the new Presidential administration in the United States.
On Jan. 20, President Donald J. Trump enacted executive order 14151 titled “Ending Radical And Wasteful Government DEI Programs And Preferencing,” which stirred confusion among universities and educational institutions around the United States – Virginia Tech included.
Student researchers at the university underwent a “chilling effect” regarding speaking publicly about their research in fear of retaliation from the Presidential administration. Virginia Tech students questioned from the Diplomacy Lab and other social science research requested The Newsfeed for anonymity to speak freely without fear of retaliation to themselves or their colleagues.
A protest by the Students United Front began on Feb. 21 with students protesting any future action of letting U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement or ICE on to Virginia Tech’s campus. The SUF’s worries were propelled by earlier emails sent out by university admin on Feb. 18 discussing what staff such as professors should do if an ICE officer is seeking a student in their classes with bulleted topics regarding “points of contact, private spaces, and communications and rights.”
The situation regarding student protests was then galvanized following the arrest of Mahmoud Khalil on March 8 of a pro-Palestinian student leader at Columbia University who was detained by ICE officers after his green card was revoked.
The next protest of many at Virginia Tech was an emergency protest march by the organization “Students for Justice in Palestine,” which met and marched from the Pylons memorial at the university to the townhall in downtown Blacksburg. The organization called for Virginia Tech to divest from Israel and weapons manufacturing organizations that supply the Israeli military.
The protest was in response to the ceasefire between Hamas and Israel being broken by the state of Israel.

Shahed Sanuri (seen left holding megaphone) and pro-Palestinian student Protesters gather at the Pylons memorial at Virginia Tech, in Blacksburg, VA. Wednesday March 19, 2025 (Photo, Wilbert Ramirez)
“There’s no time for us to debate whether we should be fighting for Palestine or fighting against injustice because it’s Palestinians today and it’s happening to us today, but it could be anybody else tomorrow.”
Shahed Sanuri
Shahed Sanuri, a first-year graduate student at Virginia Tech and co-president for Students for Justice in Palestine is an ardent supporter of the Palestinian rights and recognition.
The largest and most diverse of the protests organized was the march for civil and human rights in response to the board of visitors decision to eliminate the DEI office at Virginia Tech on March 25. The march involved a wide coalition of many organizations such as Black mindedness, Students United Front, Students for Justice in Palestine, and students from varieties of backgrounds. Approximately upwards of 1000 people participated in the march according to organizers of the march.

Protesters gather in front of the Skelton Inn at Virginia Tech, in Blacksburg, VA. Tuesday March 25, 2025 (Photo, Wilbert Ramirez)
“It’s one thing to be able to get 1000 people to show up one day, and it’s when you’re comparing it like qualitatively, how does getting 1000 people to show up one day compare to getting 50 to 100 people to show up every single week, you know, for months, right?,” said Cameron Baller, a PhD student in Sociology at Virginia Tech with a Bachelors in Natural Resources and Environmental Science, Minors in Gender and Women’s studies and Economic with an interest in researching social movements. “That’s another kind of lens in which I would be thinking about the history, the recent history of protest on this campus.”
The board of visitors at Virginia Tech went through with the vote to eliminate the DEI office at Virginia Tech in a 12 to 2 vote.
Another moment that galvanized students at Virginia Tech to protest involved the sudden revoking of international student visas around the country including seven Virginia Tech students and 2 alumni on April 9.
President Tim Sands of Virginia Tech released a statement issuing information to assist those who may have been affected.
The following day on April 10 the “Latino Association for Student Organizations” carried out a protest marching through campus against ICE enforcement and student speakers noted the revocation of the international student visas as one their largest grievances in speaking out against the U.S. presidential administration’s decision.

Student protesters gather at the Pylons memorial at Virginia Tech, in Blacksburg, VA. Thursday April 10, 2025 (Photo, Wilbert Ramirez)
“It’s very heartbreaking and disheartening to see how higher education administrations don’t really give mind to why students are protesting and they’re not really trying to find an active solution towards that,” said Tiffany Suarez the newly elected president of Latino’s for Student Organizations at Virginia Tech and an undergraduate majoring in environmental policy and planning and political science. “I feel like I’ve been seeing a lot of protests, almost every week, and the result of that has honestly just been the administration, turning their back on us not being responsive, not wanting to be at the table and constantly making up excuses about their unwillingness to cooperate with the students.”
The Trump administration reversed the decision of revoking the student visas on April 25 following numerous lawsuits contesting the terminations of visas.
The organization “VTforClimateJustice” held a climate protest on Earth Day, April 22, in front of Burruss Hall that then proceeded to march across campus and ended at the Pylons. The grievances by the organizers consisted of calls for Virginia Tech’s administration to be more transparent regarding Virginia Tech’s climate goals and where the university was currently at in meeting said goals.
In one of the final major protests on Virginia Tech’s campus this semester, Students for Justice in Palestine had a 1-year anniversary protest remembering the arrest of 82 pro-Palestinian protestors that included 53 students the year prior on April 29, 2024 following their 3-day encampment.
The protestors called for the need to stay strong to their cause of getting Virginia Tech to divest from Israel and weapons manufacturers at a time in which rapid changes are shifting against protesting on college campuses around the nation and at Virginia Tech.
The protests and their frequency at Virginia Tech this spring semester signaled an immediate resistance to the rapid, uncertain, and wide range of changes that began with the Trump administration and its combativeness against higher education institutions that challenge the president.
The largest of the educational institutions to rally against the U.S. president is Harvard in Boston Massachusetts, which sued the administration for freezing $2.2 billion in funding to the university. The Joint Task Force to Combat Antisemitism of the Trump administration announced the freeze in funding because of the university’s failing to protect its Jewish students after Harvard refused to comply with a list of demands from the administration.
Student protests around the nation culminated under a time of great uncertainty for their rights and causes depending on their citizenship, international status, and background.
“I think to be a protester, especially during this administration is to have the courage to stand up for something, knowing that there could be legal implications involved.”
Tiffany Suarez
“I think there’s a level of courage that we haven’t seen beforehand in the student protesters on campus – people knowingly going out and protesting given that people are getting their visas revoked.” Said Suarez. “People are actively getting targeted by ICE officials because of their support for either Palestine or criticism of the current administration. I think that shows a new level of courage that I don’t think we haven’t seen in college campuses in quite a while.”