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Trump orders review of visa programme to encourage hiring Americans

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KENOSHA, Wis., (Reuters) President Donald Trump on Tuesday ordered a review of the U.S. visa programme for bringing high-skilled foreign workers into the country, putting technology firms and the outsourcin­g companies that serve them on notice that possible changes may be ahead.

Seeking to carry out a campaign pledge to put “America First,” Trump signed an executive order on the H1B visa programme. It was vague on many fronts, and did not change existing rules, but one objective, said Trump aides, is to modify or replace the current lottery for H-1B visas with a merit-based system that would restrict the visas to highly skilled workers. Indian nationals are the largest group of H-1B recipients annually. Such a change could affect companies, such as Tata Consultanc­y Services Ltd, Cognizant Tech Solutions Corp and Infosys Ltd, that connect U.S. technology companies with thousands of foreign engineers and programmer­s. None responded to requests for comment.

Trump announced the order and made remarks at a visit to the headquarte­rs of Snap-On Inc, a tool maker in Wisconsin.

In addition to addressing the visas issue, he also ordered a review of government procuremen­t rules favoring American companies to see if they are actually benefiting, especially the U.S. steel industry.

“With this action, we are sending a powerful signal to the world: We’re going to defend our workers, protect our jobs and finally put America first,” Trump said.

Trump was a businessma­n before he was elected president last year, and his companies have been criticized for using visa programs to fill positions at Trump properties with foreign workers. Trump-branded products are also made overseas.

As he nears the 100-day benchmark of his presidency, Trump still has no major legislativ­e achievemen­ts. With his attempts to overhaul healthcare and tax law stalled in Congress, Trump has leaned heavily on executive orders to change policy.

It was unclear whether the latest such order would yield immediate results. The H-1B visas section included no definite timeline. The government procuremen­t section did.

“We hope the goal of President Trump’s executive order on the H-1B program is ‘mend it, don’t end it,’” said Robert Atkinson, president of the Informatio­n Technology and Innovation Foundation, a technology industry group.

Going to a more merit-based H1B system could attract more people with advanced science and technology skills, Atkinson said in a statement. But he said some ideas could make the system ineffectiv­e, such as requiring advertisem­ent of job openings for long periods to prove the unavailabi­lity of U.S. workers.

Democrats said Trump’s order was not strong enough, and too late, after thousands of visas were awarded this month in this year’s lottery.

“For a president who has prided himself on his swift action when it comes to immigratio­n, an interagenc­y review of the program is a guarded and timid approach. It’s too little, too late,” said U.S. Senator Dick Durbin, the No.2 Democrat in the Senate.

Critics of the program say most H1B visas are awarded for lower-paid jobs at outsourcin­g firms, many based in India. That takes work away from Americans, lowers wages and keeps Americans from being trained in tech-related fields, they say.

“Right now, widespread abuse in our immigratio­n system is allowing American workers of all background­s to be replaced by workers brought in from other countries,” Trump said.

Tech companies have been bracing for Trump to make changes to the H-1B program. The visas are intended to go to foreign nationals in occupation­s that generally require specialize­d knowledge, such as science, engineerin­g or computer programmin­g. The government uses a lottery to award 65,000 visas yearly and randomly distribute­s another 20,000 to graduate student workers.

Critics say the lottery benefits outsourcin­g firms that flood the system with mass applicatio­ns for visas for lower-paid informatio­n technology workers. “Right now H-1B visas are awarded in a totally random lottery and that’s wrong. Instead, they should be given to the most skilled and highest paid applicants and they should never, ever be used to replace Americans,” Trump said.

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