This new study confirms it: Companies aren't using H-1B visas to bring in the "best and brightest"; many are using them to import cheap foreign labor and undercut US wages.
We must end this abuse and protect the American worker.
The study found companies pay H-1Bs 16% LESS than comparable American workers.
So over the 6-year term of an H-1B visa, employers save more than $100,000 by hiring foreigners instead of Americans.
That's why President Trump put a $100k filing fee on new H-1B applications.
The companies pay H-1B visa holders less than Americans because they have significantly more leverage over visa holders than American workers:
Their ability to stay in the US depends on the company employing them.
They rely on employer sponsorship to get green cards.
For years, blue-collar American workers got hit with a double whammy:
Jobs exported overseas — wages undercut here at home.
American workers are still feeling the impact.
US layoffs from outsourcing; importing cheap labor via visas like H-1B.
According to the Public Interest Legal Foundation, its client is challenging the Illinois Voting Rights Act of 2011’s redistricting mandates under the Fifteenth Amendment and federal Voting Rights Act.
That is exactly the kind of litigation Callais invites.
Illinois did not hide the ball.
When Gov. Pritzker signed the maps, he invoked the Illinois Voting Rights Act and praised redistricting plans designed to preserve “clusters of minority voters” with “collective electoral power.”
Virginia's map just got struck down. Is California next?
California's "mapmaker" drew its new maps to "ensure" that racially gerrymandered "VRA seats are bolstered in order to make them most effective." That's illegal under Callais.
@AAGDhillon: Here's how we can do it. 🧵
California state law requires an "independent" Commission to draw its district maps.
But Newsom and state Legislature Dems overrode the Commission last year to gerrymander.
That meant hiring a "mapmaker"—Paul Mitchell—to do it.
But he drew an illegal racial gerrymander.
Before SCOTUS's recent Callais decision, courts interpreted the VRA to effectively *require* racial quotas in gerrymandering.
As Justice Thomas explained, that was “repugnant to any nation that strives for the ideal of a color-blind Constitution.”
Today—as Chairman of the Subcommittee on the Constitution—I urged @DAGToddBlanche and @AAGDhillon to act on the Supreme Court’s ruling in Louisiana v. Callais.
DOJ has the power to enforce this decision nationwide and must use it to end illegal racially-gerrymandered districts.
My Subcommittee has oversight responsibility for constitutional rights, civil-rights enforcement, and DOJ's Civil Rights Division.
We are going to use it.
It's time to enforce our laws and our color-blind Constitution. We must undo prior race-based actions.
The Supreme Court has now made clear: "Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act . . . was designed to enforce the Constitution—not collide with it."
That means DOJ cannot keep treating Section 2 as a license to force States to sort Americans into districts by race.