Deccan Chronicle

US green card dreams may turn sour

US senators seek to slash number of legal immigratio­ns by half

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Washington, Feb. 8: Two top US senators have proposed a legislatio­n to cut the number of legal immigrants to the US by half within a decade, a move that could adversely hit those aspiring to get a green card or permanent residency in the United States, including a large number of Indians.

The Reforming American Immigratio­n for Strong Employment, or RAISE Act, introduced by Republican senator Tom Cotton and his Democratic colleague David Perdue, would alter the US immigratio­n system to significan­tly reduce the number of foreigners admitted to the country without a skills-based visa.

The Bill proposed to reduce the number of green card or legal permanent residency issued every year from currently about a million to half a million.

The passage of the Bill, which is said to have the support of the Trump administra­tion, will have a major impact on hundreds and thousands of Indian Americans who are currently painfully waiting to get their green cards on employment-based categories. Notably, the current wait period of an Indian to get a green card varies from 10 years to 35 years and this could increase if the proposed bill becomes a law. The bill, however, does not focus on H-1B visas.

Mr Cotton argued that the growth in legal immigratio­n in recent decades had led to a “sharp decline in wages for working Americans” and that the Bill represente­d an effort to move the US “to a more merit-based system like Canada and Australia”.

“It's time our immigratio­n system started working for American workers,” Mr Cotton said.

“The RAISE Act would promote higher wages on which all working Americans can build a futurewhet­her your family came over here on the Mayflower or you just took the oath of citizenshi­p,” he added.

The RAISE Act would lower overall immigratio­n to 6,37,960 in its first year and to 5,39,958 by its tenth year. — PTI

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