The Asian Age

We should only allow people with great track record to enter US: Don

US President pushes for merit- based immigratio­n in new policy move

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Washington, Jan 10: US President Donald Trump on Wednesday pushed for merit- based immigratio­n system, saying we should only allow people, having “great track record”, to enter the US.

“I would like to add the words “merit” into any bill that’s submitted because I think we should have merit- based immigratio­n like they have in Canada, like they have in Australia.

“So we have people coming in that have a great track record, as opposed to what we’re doing now, to be honest with you,” he said during his meeting with a bipartisan group of lawmakers at the White House.

Mr Trump’s comments found support from several lawmakers.

“I want to get a meritbased immigratio­n system to make sure we can succeed in the 21st century, and I’m willing to be more than fair to the 11 million. I just don’t want to do this every 20 years,” Senator Lindsay Graham said.

When House Majority Leader Congressma­n Kevin McCarthy said the reform would focus on three pillars –- Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals or DACA, border security and ending chain migration, Trump interrupte­d, asking him to “add merit” in any immigratio­n legislatio­n.

“I think you should add merit. I mean, if you can, add merit- based. I don’t think — I don’t know who is going to argue with merit- based? Who can argue with merit- based?” he asked amid laughter from those present in the room.

A legislatio­n in this regard is expected to be presented in the next few days.

Reiteratin­g his call for border security — of which a wall along the Mexico border is an integral part — Trump said it also has to be a bill to end chain migration.

“Chain migration is bringing in many, many people with one, and often it doesn’t work out very well. Those many people are not doing us right,” he said and called for ending the visa lottery system.

“I’m appealing to everyone in the room to put the country before party, and to sit down and negotiate and to compromise, and let’s see if we can get something done,” the US president said.

White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders described the meeting as “successful”.

“The president just concluded what we felt was a very successful

and productive bipartisan and bicameral meeting on immigratio­n reform,” she said.

Sanders said the leadership, during the close- door session, agreed to negotiate and narrow down the focus to four issues — border security, chain migration, visa lottery, and DACA.

“They all agreed the four things would be part of the negotiatio­n.

And beyond that, they could move into additional scope,” she said.

 ?? — AP ?? President Donald Trump in the Oval Office of the White House, in Washington on Tuesday.
— AP President Donald Trump in the Oval Office of the White House, in Washington on Tuesday.

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