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High-skilled Indian workers rally for Trump’s merit-based immigration plan

 
Anonymous Coward
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02/03/2018 07:25 PM
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High-skilled Indian workers rally for Trump’s merit-based immigration plan
[link to www.washingtonpost.com (secure)]

About 200 Indians rallied in front of the White House on Saturday in support of a Trump administration plan for a “merit-based” immigration system that they argue would benefit thousands of high-skilled visa holders who’ve waited years to become legal permanent residents.

The demonstrators, many of them software engineers and other technical workers from South Asia who hold H1-B visas, said a backlog in green card applications has kept them in limbo while their children face the risk of becoming too old to benefit from the immigration process as dependents.

At the rally, organized by the Illinois-based Republican Hindu Coalition, they urged President Trump to cut through the backlog and place a higher priority on the problems faced by immigrants in the United States legally.

“When I came here, my daughter was 6 years old,” said Nandu Konduri, 45, a software engineer in North Carolina who has been waiting for his green card application to be processed since 2007. “Many kids have already aged out. We feel stuck.”

Indians are among the country’s fastest-growing immigrant populations, with about 3.5 million people nationwide and nearly 137,000 Indian immigrants in the Washington region, according to U.S. Census estimates.

With Trump also believed to be considering reforms that would prevent H1-B holders from extending their three-year visas, some anxiety has rippled through that community as well as others with large numbers of high-skilled workers in the country.

Some groups have found hope in a Trump proposal, announced last month, that calls for assigning points to green card applicants based on such factors as age, education and English skills. Under that plan, family-based immigration — in which U.S. citizens and legal permanent residents can sponsor their family members — would be limited to spouses and minor children.





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