CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, MARCH 25, 2025 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“TECH VISAS GETTING A NEEDED CRITICAL LOOK”
President Trump
does not often clash with his base supporters’ most essential beliefs, one of
which is that most immigration to this country is destructive.
But even as
many in Trump’s base push for elimination or at least reductions in the number
of H-1B immigration visas mostly used by high technology workers, their leader
has leaned the other way, even recalling that in his businesses “I have used
(H-1Bs) many times. It’s a great program.”
That puts him
at odds not only with many of those who voted him back into office, but also
with far-left independent Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont, who describes H-1Bs
as a program “to replace good-paying American jobs with indentured servants
from abroad…” Of course, H-1B workers are not indentured, but can switch jobs
if a new employer gets a transfer approved.
Nevertheless,
it’s high time this program, which enables American companies to hire as many
as 85,000 highly educated foreign workers per year (20,000 slots are reserved
for foreign workers with American master’s or Ph.D degrees), gets a more
intense look.
There’s also
the possibility that Trump’s positive view of the 35-year-old program has been
influenced by his well-publicized “bromance” with Elon Musk, the world’s
richest man, whose companies including Tesla and Space X last year employed
just short of 1,800 H-1B workers. Musk, a native of South Africa, spent more
than $250 million helping Trump get elected in 2024.
H-1B workers’
average six-figure pay puts them among the top 10 percent of American wage
earners, but critics maintain their immigration status compels docility in the
workplace and that they are often hired at the expense of similarly qualified
American workers.
This longtime
contention was backed by a striking statement inserted into the Federal
Register in 2006 by the U.S. Labor Department during the George W. Bush
presidency. “The (H-1B) statute does not require employers to demonstrate that
there are no available U.S. workers or to test the labor market for U.S.
workers.” The statement was never retracted, revised or revoked.
In 2023 (the
last full year for which figures are available) the U.S. Immigration and
Customs Enforcement agency approved about 24 percent of applications from
companies wanting to hire H-1B workers.
Even with
unemployment in the science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM)
categories at only about 2.5 percent last year, there’s no way to contradict
with certainty claims that equally qualified American workers are routinely
denied jobs in favor of foreign workers guaranteed to cause no trouble and work
for somewhat less money.
Of one thing
there can be no doubt: H-1B workers, who can usually stay here legally no
longer than six years unless they become citizens during that time, often
overstay their limits by several years. After their permits expire, many work
in industries that routinely employ large numbers of the undocumented,
including hotels and ridesharing.
A significant
share of all this occurs in the San Francisco Bay area, whose high tech
companies employ about one-third of all H-1B visa holders.
At the same
time, those and similar firms over the last two years laid off thousands of
American workers while holding on to almost all their H-1B employees, a reality
that supports the claims of those who contend immigrants take jobs away from
Americans.
Of course, 35
percent of U.S. graduate school students in STEM areas are now foreign born,
most wanting to stay here after getting their advanced degrees. The H-1B
program is a convenient way to accomplish this legally.
Said Musk on
his X (formerly Twitter) social media service, “Of course, my companies and I
would prefer to hire Americans and we do…however, there is a dire shortage of
extremely talented and motivated engineers in America.”
Whether that’s
correct or merely an excuse for hiring somewhat lower-paid workers at the
expense of qualified Americans remains open to dispute, as it has been for
almost 20 years. The current debate over H-1Bs will prove healthy if it
provides a reliable solution to that argument and leads to reality-based
improvements in the program.
-30-
Email Thomas
Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough, The Most
Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It,"
is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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