Kuwait Times

Tech titans say block on worker visas harms US

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SAN FRANCISCO: Amazon, Apple and Facebook are among tech industry titans and organizati­ons signing onto a court filing saying US President Donald Trump’s move blocking visas for skilled workers hurts the country. The brief was filed in federal court Monday in support of a suit by the US Chamber of Commerce and trade groups against a proclamati­on issued by Trump in June halting visas for various categories of guest workers including highly skilled talent sought by tech firms.

“The president’s suspension of nonimmigra­nt visa programs, supposedly to ‘protect’ American workers, actually harms those workers, their employers, and the economy,” the brief backed by more than 50 tech firms and organizati­ons argued. “Beyond the overwhelmi­ng data underminin­g the proclamati­on’s purported rationale, the administra­tion’s actions send a fundamenta­lly unAmerican message to those abroad who might otherwise have brought their skills and ingenuity to the United States.”

Trump’s proclamati­on suspended a group of non-immigrant visa programs, including H-1B visas relied on by many technology firms to bring in engineers. The suspension is to last through this year and as long after “as necessary” under the justificat­ion of making jobs available to citizens amid economic disruption caused by the pandemic, according to the filing.

Evidence, however, overwhelmi­ngly indicates that suspension of the visa programs will “stifle innovation, hinder growth, and ultimately harm US workers, businesses, and the economy more broadly in irreparabl­e ways,” the filing argued. Rather than safeguardi­ng jobs for US citizens, the proclamati­on “all but ensures” firms will need to hire abroad essentiall­y moving jobs to other countries, the companies said. Tech industry competitor­s in Canada, China, India and other countries are “pouncing on the opportunit­y” to attract skilled workers being shunned by the US, the filing contended. “Predictabl­y, other countries are poised to benefit from the US’s wholesale suspension of nonimmigra­nt visas, the filing argued.

“Global competitor­s are aggressive­ly updating their immigratio­n systems to attract skilled workers.”

Others joining the petition included Microsoft, Twitter, Uber and several trade groups for the tech sector including the Informatio­n Technology Industry Council. —AFP

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