Khaleej Times

White House blocks ‘startup visas’

- Justin Sink

washington — The Trump administra­tion said it plans to rescind an Obama-era programme that would allow foreign entreprene­urs who launch startup companies in the US to live in the country, in the president’s latest effort to constrict immigratio­n flows.

Known as the Internatio­nal Entreprene­ur Rule and favoured by many in the technology industry, the program would allow non-US citizens who launched companies that won $100,000 in government grants or received $250,000 in venture capital investment to stay in the US for a renewable 30-month term. Finalised in the last days of the Obama administra­tion, it was set to take effect on July 17.

But the Trump administra­tion on Monday announced it would delay the program until next March as the Department of Homeland Security launches an additional review of the socalled “startup visa.” A notice the department issued indicates that in the interim the administra­tion will propose rescinding the programme.

“Big mistake,” Steve Case, founder of America Online and now chief executive officer of the Revolution LLC investment fund, said in a Twitter statement. “Immigrant entreprene­urs are job makers, not job takers.”

The National Venture Capital Associatio­n, an industry trade group, criticised the step in a statement.

“At a time when countries around the world are doing all they can to attract and retain talented individual­s to come to

Big mistake. Immigrant entreprene­urs are job makers, not job takers Steve Case @SteveCase

their shores to build and grow innovative companies, the Trump Administra­tion is signaling its intent to do the exact opposite,” Bobby Franklin, president and CEO of the trade group said.

It’s the latest example of the Trump administra­tion taking a step to restrain immigratio­n to the US despite objections from business groups.

The president’s ban on travel from six Muslim majority companies drew criticism from a wide swath of companies, with more than 160 technology firms, including Amazon.com, Facebook and Google corporate parent Alphabet joining a legal brief criticisin­g the executive order. Technology firms have also criticised the administra­tion’s efforts to restrict access to H-1B visas for high-skilled workers.

The move is also likely to draw the ire of some of the president’s allies on Capitol Hill.

A group of Republican senators last month sent Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly a letter calling the rule consistent with the administra­tion’s “goals of stimulatin­g the economy and creating job growth at home.”

“There is little benefit to losing any more ground in attracting entreprene­urs and their investment­s,” the senators, which include Arizona’s John McCain and Jeff Flake, Utah’s Orrin Hatch, and Jerry Moran of Kansas, said in the letter. — Bloomberg

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