US President Donald Trump on Monday signed an executive order preventing federal agencies from contracting or subcontracting foreign workers mainly those on H-1B visa from hiring, as the administration is addressing a major economic fallout, including high unemployment among Americans, amid the coronavirus pandemic.
In a huge blow to Indian IT professionals eyeing the US job market, the proclamation comes into effect from June 24 and will expire on December 31. These curbs are expected to impact a large number of them and several American and Indian companies who were issued H-1B visas by the US government for the fiscal year 2021 beginning October 1.
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H-1B is a non-immigrant visa that allows companies in the US to employ foreign workers in speciality occupations that require theoretical or technical expertise. The technology companies depend on it to hire tens of thousands of employees each year from countries like India.
Nearly 500,000 migrant workers are employed in the US in the H-1B status.
The technology companies depend on it to hire tens of thousands of employees each year from countries like India and China.
“Today I am signing an executive order to ensure that the federal government lives by a very simple rule, higher American,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office of the White House before signing the order against hiring H1B visa holders for federal contracts.
Trump told reporters that his administration will not tolerate firing of hardworking Americans in the pursuit of cheap foreign labour.
“As we speak, we’re finalising the H-1B regulation so that no American workers be replaced ever again. H-1B should be used for top highly paid talent to create American jobs, not as inexpensive labour programmes and destroy American job,” said the President.
He was who was accompanied at the the Cabinet Room table with individuals campaigning against job outsourcing. Prominent among them were Sara Blackwell, founder and president of Florida-based Protect US Workers organisation; Jonathan Hicks, a software engineer in the Tennessee Valley Authority; and Kevin Lynn, founder of Pennsylvania-based US Tech Workers.
The executive order requires all federal agencies to complete an internal audit and assess whether they are in compliance with the requirement that only US citizens and nationals are appointed to the competitive service. As a result, the Department of Labour will also finalise guidlines to prevent H-1B employers from moving H-1B workers to other employers’ job sites to displace Americans workers.
Meanwhile, soon after Trump’s order the federally-owned Tennessee Valley Authority’s (TVA) announced that it will outsource 20 per cent of its technology jobs to companies based in foreign countries.
TVA’s action could cause more than 200 highly-skilled American tech workers in Tennessee to lose their jobs to low-wage foreign workers hired on temporary work visas, the president said.
“Outsourcing hundreds of workers is especially detrimental in the middle of a pandemic, which has already cost millions of Americans their jobs,” the White House said in a statement.
“Given the current climate of rampant intellectual property theft, outsourcing IT jobs that involve sensitive information could pose a national security risk, “it said.
According to the White House, Trump’s actions will help combat employers’ misuse of H-1B visas, which were never intended to replace qualified American workers with low-cost foreign labour.
One of the participants present during the signing of the order told the president that as many as 70 per cent of the H-1B visa goes to people from India.
Trump, in reply to a participant present told him that as many as 70 per cent of the H-1B visa goes to people from India,said he favours a merit-based immigration system that brings in high-skilled people that creates jobs inside the US and not take jobs of Americans.
“We are going to be discussing very shortly an immigration bill, which covers this and many other things. It will be a very, very comprehensive bill. It’s a word that some people love, and some people hate. But it’d be very comprehensive only in the sense that it covered just about everything. It will be based on merit. It will cover territory that nobody would have thought could have ever been agreed to,” Trump said.
The bill, he said, will be signed after the convention.
“Immigration will be very merit based, but it’ll be, it’ll be great for the worker. And it’ll be great for people coming into our country, but coming into our country legally and loving the country and wanting to help our country as opposed to people coming in. And they don’t like our country,” Trump said.
Meanwhile, earlier Google CEO Sunder Pichai had expressed disappointment over the proclamation and said he would stand with immigrants and work to expand opportunity for all.
Human rights bodies, in particular those working among immigrant communities, as well many American lawmakers had also urged Trump to revoke the suspension, earlier.