Setback for Trump’s H-1B plan? Lawsuit filed in San Francisco challenges $100,000 visa fee

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Setback for Trump’s H-1B plan? Lawsuit filed in San Francisco challenges $100,000 visa fee


A group of unions, higher education professionals and a staffing agency, among others, have sued the Donald Trump administration over its decision to charge a $100,000 fee for H-1B visas that allowed skilled foreign workers to work in the US.

India is the largest beneficiary of H-1B visas, accounting for over 70% of the approved beneficiaries.(Reuters)

The lawsuit, the first major challenge to Trump’s H-1B visa plan, was filed in a federal court in San Francisco on Friday. The plaintiffs include the Justice Action Center, the Democracy Forward Foundation and South Asian American Justice Collaborative, the New York Times reported.

Also Read: Impact of $100,000 H1-B visa fee on Indians: How Trump’s move shatters dreams

Trump had signed a proclamation last month requiring the $100,000 fee payment for a new H-1B visa application. The White House had argued of an “abuse” of the visa programme and said it historically hurt domestic workers, adding that the new fee will help discourage companies to hire foreign workers to replace Americans.

The move is set to affect Indian nationals, who make up around 70% of these visa holders. There are currently around 3 lakh high-skilled Indian workers on H-1B visas in the US.

What does the lawsuit say?

The lawsuit has claimed that Trump’s move is unlawful and alleged that he changed the H-1B program, forcing employers to either “pay to play” or seek a “national interest” exemption, which “opens the door to selective enforcement and corruption”, according to Bloomberg.

Also Read: ‘No new H-1B unless…’: How US govt shutdown will impact Indians, hitting visa

“Most fundamentally, the president has no authority to unilaterally impose fees, taxes or other mechanisms to generate revenue for the United States, nor to dictate how those funds are spent,” the lawsuit read.

“The Constitution assigns the ‘power of the purse’ to Congress, as one of its most fundamental premises. Here, the president disregarded those limitations, asserted power he does not have, and displaced a complex, Congressionally specified system for evaluating petitions and granting H-1B visas,” it further said.


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