Close X
Wednesday, December 18, 2024
ADVT 
International

Merit-Based Immigration Will End Green Card Backlog: White House

The Canadian Press, 09 Feb, 2018 04:13 PM
    US President Donald Trump’s immigration framework will end the diversity lottery visa to help reduce Green Card backlog of high-skilled workers, the White House said on Thursday amid growing demands by Indian H-1B visa holders to remove the per country-limit on its allotment.
     
     
    Indian-Americans, most of whom are highly skilled and come to the US mainly on H-1B work visas, are the worst sufferers of the current immigration system which imposes a 7 per cent per country quota on allotment of Green Cards or permanent legal residency.
     
     
    As a result, the current wait period for Indian skilled immigrants for Green Card can be as long as 70 years.
     
     
    Over the last one week, many Indian skilled immigrants gathered in Washington DC from various parts of the US to ask the Trump Administration and Congress to remove this major anomaly in the immigration system.
     
     
    “President Trump’s framework would end the visa lottery programme and reallocate some of the visas to help reduce backlog of high-skilled, employment-based immigrant cases,” the White House said in a fact sheet titled ‘ending the economic harm caused by our immigration system’.
     
     
    Later in the evening, Trump called for ending the visa lottery system.
     
     
    “Time to end the visa lottery. Congress must secure the immigration system and protect Americans,” he tweeted.
     
     
    The White House said Trump favoured a merit-based immigration system, which attracts the best and the brightest from across the world.
     
     
    “I think the President wants to see legal immigration reform. He wants to see us move from a process that currently exists in law of extended family chain migration toward merit-based immigration reforms,” White House Deputy Press Secretary Raj Shah told reporters during his first ever White House press conference.
     
     
    He said the Trump administration wanted to ensure that people coming into the country are the best and the brightest, regardless of nationality, creed, religion, or anything else in between.
     
     
    “We want to look at the educational backgrounds, ability to contribute to the workforce in a way that helps American workers. So the President wants to see reforms that improve America’s economy,” Shah said.
     
     
    According to Senate Republican Policy Committee, every year the US on an average allocates some 50,000 green cards through lottery for people from countries who do not get an opportunity to come to the US through the merit-based employment visas.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Hyderabad Student Shot In Chicago: Victim's Family Receives Visa To Travel To US

    Hyderabad Student Shot In Chicago: Victim's Family Receives Visa To Travel To US
    The parents of the Indian student from Hyderabad, who was shot in Chicago, United States, have been granted visa to meet their ailing son.

    Hyderabad Student Shot In Chicago: Victim's Family Receives Visa To Travel To US

    21-Year-Old Indian Paras Jha Pleads Guilty To Launching Cyberattack On US University

    21-Year-Old Indian Paras Jha Pleads Guilty To Launching Cyberattack On US University
    "Paras Jha has admitted his responsibility for multiple hacks of the Rutgers University computer system," Acting US Attorney Fitzpatrick said. 

    21-Year-Old Indian Paras Jha Pleads Guilty To Launching Cyberattack On US University

    Indian-Origin Student Jailed For Hiring Underage Sex Worker In Singapore

    Indian-Origin Student Jailed For Hiring Underage Sex Worker In Singapore
    A 25-year-old Indian-origin student has been sentenced to 10 months jail after he was found guilty of taking the services of an underage sex worker in May last year.

    Indian-Origin Student Jailed For Hiring Underage Sex Worker In Singapore

    H-1B Visa Holders May Work For More Than One Employer, Clarifies US Agency

    H-1B Visa Holders May Work For More Than One Employer, Clarifies US Agency
    H-1B workers may work for more than one employer but must have approved I-129 for each, says the US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS)

    H-1B Visa Holders May Work For More Than One Employer, Clarifies US Agency

    In A First, Sikh-American Gurbir S Grewal Nominated To Be New Jersey's Attorney General

    In A First, Sikh-American Gurbir S Grewal Nominated To Be New Jersey's Attorney General
    In a historic first, a distinguished Sikh public prosecutor "who has experienced hate and intolerance first-hand" has been nominated to be the next attorney general of the US state of New Jersey.

    In A First, Sikh-American Gurbir S Grewal Nominated To Be New Jersey's Attorney General

    Indians Get More British Work Visas Than Others

    Indians Get More British Work Visas Than Others
    Stating that there has been a sharp increase in the number of British visas issued to Indians, the British High Commission said on Tuesday that Indians get more work visas than all other nationalities combined.

    Indians Get More British Work Visas Than Others