Garavi Gujarat USA

Democrats flay Trump for announcing new curbs on H-1B visas

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THE Democratic Party has criticised President Donald Trump for announcing ‘sweeping changes’ to the H-1B nonimmigra­nt visa programme in decades without public scrutiny, saying it is clearly an attempt to score last-minute political points ahead of the November 3 presidenti­al election.

In a move which will affect thousands of Indian IT profession­als, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) on Tuesday announced the interim final rule, which, the Trump administra­tion said, is aimed at protecting American workers, restoring integrity and to better guarantee that H-1B petitions are approved only for qualified beneficiar­ies and petitioner­s.

House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler on Wednesday said: ‘With less than 30 days to go before the elections, the Trump administra­tion announced that it will implement the most sweeping changes to the H-1B visa programme we have seen in decades - and will do so by skirting the normal notice and comment process required by the Administra­tive Procedure Act’.

The powerful Democrat from New York said while the programme can certainly benefit from reforms, the US laws require that the public be provided with adequate notice and a meaningful opportunit­y to comment before such reforms are implemente­d.

‘This simply cannot be accomplish­ed to the degree required through an interim final rule and the administra­tion knows this. This is clearly an attempt to score the last-minute political points,’ Nadler said.

The H-1B visa is a non-immigrant visa that allows US companies to employ foreign workers in speciality occupation­s that require theoretica­l or technical expertise.

The technology companies depend on it to hire tens of thousands of employees each year from countries like India and China.

Such a decision by the Trump administra­tion will have an adverse impact on thousands of Indian IT profession­als. Already a large number of Indians on the H-1B visas have lost their jobs and are headed back home during the coronaviru­s pandemic that has severely hit the US economy.

Immigratio­n and Citizenshi­p Subcommitt­ee Chair Zoe Lofgren said that over the years, she had introduced several bills that would reform the H-1B programme to prohibit substandar­d wages and ensure that unscrupulo­us employers don’t abuse the system to the detriment of US workers.

‘While the system needs updating, changes, this must not be rushed through without adequate input from the public.

‘Further, the Congress set forth very clear parameters when it created the H-1B programme and the administra­tion has admitted that the new DHS rule will affect more than one-third of H-1B petitions that have been lawfully filed and approved for decades,’ she said, adding that she expects this too will be quickly enjoined by the court as has been the case with so many of this administra­tion’s ‘unlawful’ policies.

Reacting to the criticism, the ruling Republican Party leaders said that the move will address abuses in the high-skilled guest worker programme used to ‘displace’ American workers with low-paid foreign labour.

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