Porterville Recorder

Trump backs GOP plan to push legal immigratio­n changes

- By KEN THOMAS and JILL COLVIN

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump on Wednesday embraced legislatio­n from two Republican senators that would place new limits on legal immigratio­n and seek to create an system based more on merit and skills than family ties.

Trump joined with Sens. David Perdue of Georgia and Tom Cotton of Arkansas to trumpet the bill, which has so far gained little traction in the Senate. The president said if approved the measure would represent “the most significan­t reform to our immigratio­n system in half a century.”

The president has made cracking down on illegal immigratio­n a hallmark of his administra­tion and has tried to slash federal grants for cities that refuse to comply with federal efforts to detain and deport those living in the country illegally.

But he has also vowed to make changes to the legal immigratio­n system, arguing that immigrants compete with Americans for muchneeded jobs and drive wages down.

Trump’s public support of the bill puts him at the center of efforts to make changes to the legal immigratio­n system, with a focus on a skills-based system that the bill’s supporters say would make the U.S. more competitiv­e, raise wages and create jobs.

Perdue and Cotton introduced the legislatio­n in February. It would change the 1965 law to reduce the number of legal immigrants, limiting the number of people able to obtain green cards to join families already in the United States.

The bill would also aim to slash the number of refugees in half and eliminate a program that provides visas to countries with low rates of immigratio­n.

Cotton told reporters the bill would double the number of green cards available to high-skilled workers and would not affect other high-skilled worker visa programs such as H1-B and H2-B visas. The Trump Organizati­on has asked for dozens of H-2B visas for foreign workers at two of Trump’s private clubs in Florida, including his Mar-a-lago resort.

The White House said that only 1 in 15 immigrants comes to the U.S. because of their skills, and the current system fails to place a priority on highly skilled immigrants.

But the Senate has largely ignored the measure, with no other lawmaker signing on as a co-sponsor. GOP leaders have showed no inclinatio­n to vote on immigratio­n this year, and Democrats quickly dismissed it.

“The bottom line is to cut immigratio­n by half a million people, legal immigratio­n, doesn’t make much sense,” said Senate Democratic leader Charles Schumer of New York, who called it a “nonstarter.”

Trump said the bill would create a new points-based system for applicants seeking to become legal permanent residents, or green card holders, favoring those who can speak English, financiall­y support themselves and offer skills that would contribute to the U.S. economy. A little more than 1 million green cards were issued in 2015.

In a nod to his outreach to blue-collar workers during the campaign, Trump said the measure would prevent new immigrants from collecting welfare and help U.S. workers by reducing the number of unskilled laborers entering the U.S.

“This legislatio­n demonstrat­es our compassion for struggling American families who deserve an immigratio­n system that puts their needs first and puts America first,” Trump said during an event in the White House’s Roosevelt Room.

During a much-hyped speech last August in Phoenix, Trump talked tough on illegal immigratio­n — warning that “no one” who entered the country illegally would be safe from deportatio­n.

Lost in the bluster was a vow to reform the legal immigratio­n system “to serve the best interests of America and its workers.”

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