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Republican presidential front- runner Donald Trump for the first time acknowledged that he uses the much sought after H-1B visas at his own businesses but sought to end the program which he claimed was “very unfair” to American workers as it took away their jobs.
The last Republican presidential debate in Miami began with all the four White House aspirants slamming the H-1B visa system - used to employ highly-skilled foreign workers and popular among Indian techies, with Florida Senator Marco Rubio even naming Tata and India as part of his anti-H-1B rhetoric.
The real estate tycoon’s properties are spread over in Virginia, Illinois, Florida, New Jersey, Nevada, New York, California, Connecticut and Hawaii in the US and in Canada, Turkey, Panama, South Korea, the Philippines, India and Uruguay. IT professionals from India and major Indian IT companies are major beneficiary of H-1B, a non-immigrant visa in the US which allows US employers to temporarily employ foreign workers in specialty occupations.
Marco Rubio also said it is illegal under the H-1B program to use it to replace American workers. The current structure of the program is such that a lot of these companies are not directly hiring employees from abroad.
Rubio argued that no consulting business should be allowed to hoard up all of the visas and that the visas should only be available for companies to directly hire workers and that we should be stricter in how they enforce it.
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