Headline
More Confusion As Trump Further Bans Work Visas, Green Cards

Outgoing United States President, Donald Trump on Thursday extended the restriction on work visas and green cards issuance.
Causing more troubled hope for millions across the world of starting life in the US.
The president’s decision is seen as his last-minute immigration move before leaving office.
April last year, the Trump administration issued the suspension of work visas and green cards to protect job opportunities for Americans amid a pandemic-stricken economy with a steep in unemployment rate, halting temporary work programmes for immigrants in June.
READ ALSO: UK Finally Seals Exit From EU
According to CNBC network, the order prohibits the issuance of certain immigrant visas to people abroad who want to move to the U.S. permanently through green card petitions filed by their U.S. family members or prospective employers.
Spouses and children, 21 or younger of U.S. citizens are not subject to the restrictions, which also exempt some healthcare workers who intend to combat the coronavirus and immigrant investors who agree to invest more than $1 million in the U.S.
They include new H-1B visas for mostly workers in tech companies, H-2B visas for seasonal workers, J work and education exchange visitor visas and L executive transfer visas.
Last October, a San Francisco-based U.S. District Judge, Jeffrey White, barred the Trump administration from applying the temporary work visa restrictions to foreign workers hired by several major U.S. companies, CNBC reported.
The bans, originally set to expire on December 31, 2020, had been prolonged to elapse in March, extending to the first term of President-elect Joe Biden.
Trump defended the move as necessary to prevent new immigrants and temporary workers from competing with Americans for jobs during the pandemic-induced recession.
READ ALSO: US To Issue Citizenship To 11 Million Immigrants
“Allowing immigrant workers into the country will pose a risk of displacing and disadvantaging U.S. workers during the economic recovery following the covid-19 outbreak,” Trump wrote in Thursday’s proclamation.
“The effects of COVID-19 on the United States labor market and on the health of American communities is a matter of ongoing national concern.”
The surge in COVID-19 cases in the U.S. since June, he said, had put a strain on businesses in the country, cutting jobs for American citizens.
Though during his campaigns, Biden had pledged to overturn some of Trump’s immigration agenda, he had yet to say whether he intends to rescind the visa restrictions anytime soon.
Then according to a report by CNN, advocates for immigrants are calling on Biden to revoke the visa limits and other “unnecessary” immigration policies starting in January.
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