Los Angeles Times

Trump orders review of visas

He orders review of H-1B program he said has undercut American workers

- By Michael A. Memoli and Don Lee

The White House says the current guestworke­r program allows lower-skilled immigrants to fill jobs intended for higherskil­led workers.

WASHINGTON — Returning to a favorite campaign theme at a time when his domestic agenda has stalled, President Trump on Tuesday ordered a review of a visa program that he said has undercut American workers, declaring his move a “powerful signal” of his administra­tion’s commitment to “finally put America first.”

The White House said the executive action taken by Trump was designed to return the H-1B visa program to its original goal: attracting high-skilled immigrants to the United States in highwage fields including the tech sector. Currently, administra­tion officials say, the program has been “abused to the point of being rendered ... inoperativ­e.”

The order that Trump signed would not make immediate changes in the program but would set up a longer-term review of how it works.

The administra­tion’s critique of the H-1B program echoed complaints by some in the tech industry that too

many of the 85,000 visas allowed each year are scooped up by outsourcin­g firms that hire relatively lower-skilled tech workers, preventing firms from getting visas that they could use for higherskil­led applicants.

Ultimately, however, the administra­tion would like to take the changes further. The review of the H-1B program would be a “transition­al step” toward a revamped immigratio­n system, officials said.

Critics noted, however, that Trump was not cutting back on other guest-worker visa categories, such as the H-2B program for lowskilled nonagricul­tural workers under which foreigners have been hired to work at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida.

Trump, who spoke at a Wisconsin manufactur­ing plant, said his trip was in part to thank voters who had supported him in November. The state had been in the Democratic column for three decades in presidenti­al elections until that point. As he spoke, Trump looked out at an audience dotted with the red “Make America Great Again” hats that were a symbol of his upset victory.

“Those are good hats,” he said.

Trump has struggled to regain his footing since his bid to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act stalled out in Congress. The administra­tion initially had planned that in April, Trump would be pivoting from success on healthcare to another major initiative: tax reform.

But instead of signing legislatio­n that has long been a goal of his party, Trump is in the position of issuing another primarily symbolic executive directive championed by nationalis­t advisors.

Trump, though, said he hadn’t given up on big-ticket items, saying that Republican­s were “in very good shape on tax reform.”

In fact, the administra­tion has not yet come up with a proposal, House and Senate Republican­s are not close to agreement and Treasury Secretary Steven T. Mnuchin admitted Monday that his goal of a tax reform bill by August was unlikely to be achieved.

Trump also repeated that he has not give up on repealing Obamacare.

“Healthcare — we have to get the healthcare taken care of,” he said, urging those in the audience to press their members of Congress on the issue. “As soon as healthcare [is] taken care of, we’re going to march very quickly. We’re going to surprise you.”

The order that Trump signed also initiates a separate review of government purchasing practices with the goal of more strictly enforcing “buy American” requiremen­ts that officials said have been diluted over time by exemptions.

“The policy of our government is to aggressive­ly promote and use Americanma­de goods and to ensure that American labor is hired to do the job,” Trump said at the Kenosha, Wis., plant. “It’s America first, you better believe it.”

A senior administra­tion official, briefing reporters Monday on the condition of anonymity ahead of the president’s event, said the goal of the H1-B program review would be to shift the process for awarding the visas to put a priority on higher-skilled and higherpaid workers, making it more difficult to use it to replace American workers.

Trump’s plan is consistent with the “buy American, hire American” credo that was a staple of his campaign, featured prominentl­y in his inaugural address and outlined in his address to Congress in February.

Previewing the announceme­nt, the White House distribute­d polling data demonstrat­ing the breadth of public support — from members of both parties — for the concept. (The informatio­n was attributed to a Democratic pollster, the Mellman Group; a Mellman executive expressed surprise upon being told that the White House had distribute­d the firm’s data).

“Working-class voters ... Republican, Democrat, independen­t, are going to be the most enthusiast­ic to have guest worker reform,” one senior administra­tion official told reporters Monday.

Indeed, the action was cheered by organized labor while the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, a staple of the Republican coalition, was more circumspec­t.

“It would be a mistake to close the door on highskille­d workers from around the world who can contribute to American businesses’ growth and expansion,” the group’s senior vice president, Neil Bradley, said in a statement, while conceding that the program “can be improved.”

The Trump administra­tion’s proposals and comments on changing the temporary worker visa program were met with some wariness by policy analysts and economists.

They generally agreed that the existing H-1B rules need better enforcemen­t to thwart abuse and ensure that requiremen­ts on worker qualificat­ions and salaries are being met. These experts also favor replacing the existing lottery system with a merit-based system to attract more highskille­d workers.

At the same time, analysts found that some of the analysis and statistics provided by the White House to be simplistic and unsupporte­d.

Robert D. Atkinson, president of the Informatio­n Technology and Innovation Foundation, a nonpartisa­n research group in Washington, took issue with an administra­tion official’s claim that about 80% of H-1B visa workers are paid less than the median wage in their fields. “We’ve shown that the typical H-1B worker is better paid, by occupation, than native workers,” he said.

Other academic and government studies have found more mixed results. A 2011 report by the U.S. Government Accountabi­lity Office, the investigat­ive arm of Congress, said H-1B visa holders working as systems analysts and computer programmer­s tended to earn less than U.S. workers, but some of that gap was explained by difference­s in age.

There was no statistica­l difference in median pay between visa holders and U.S. workers for electronic­s and electrical engineers or college and university educators, that report found.

 ?? Scott Olson Getty Images ?? PRESIDENT TRUMP speaks at a Wisconsin plant Tuesday. “The policy of our government is to aggressive­ly promote and use American-made goods,” he said.
Scott Olson Getty Images PRESIDENT TRUMP speaks at a Wisconsin plant Tuesday. “The policy of our government is to aggressive­ly promote and use American-made goods,” he said.

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