Two Republican lawmakers to seek H-1B cap increase

U.S. Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.) and U.S. Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) plan to re-introduce new versions of old bills that raise the visa cap.

President Donald Trump may have no more luck reforming the H-1B visa than he did with healthcare. If he relies on the GOP alone for support, he may fail.

Trump, who repeatedly criticized the H-1B program during his campaign, faces sharp divisions in his own party over the visa program.

U.S. Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.) and U.S. Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) plan to re-introduce new versions of old bills that raise the visa cap.

These lawmakers appear willing to meet Trump at least part of the way on visa reform, but they also want to increase the 85,000 visa cap. This could be a problem.

"I do not think Trump is going to go for an increase in the cap," said John Miano, a programmer turned attorney. "If he did, that would be the end of his support. I believe that Trump is committed to cleaning up H-1B," he said.

"We are seeing here why the Republicans have such a hard time governing," said Miano "They get elected on cleaning up these visa programs, and yet Issa and Hatch are actively undermining the policies that got them elected." Miano and columnist Michelle Malkin co-authored a recent book on the impact of the H-1B visa, Sold Out.

Issa's actions so far illustrate what's ahead for Trump.

Issa recently reintroduced legislation to close the so-called H-1B visa loophole. This refers to a 1998 provision that allows large IT services firms to avoid complying with regulations intended to protect U.S. workers from displacement. These firms avoid non-displacement requirements if they pay a salary of at least $60,000 or if the employee has a master's degree.

The $60,000 wage level hasn't increased since 1998. Issa's bill, the Protect and Grow American Jobs Act, will hike it to $100,000. That may seem like a big jump, but had the law allowed for an annual inflation adjustment this salary would be near $90,000 today. The Issa bill will also end the master's-degree exemption.

Issa has cited the IT layoffs at Southern California Edison for the legislation. Ron Hira, an associate professor of public policy at Howard University, has pointed out that Edison's own salary data showed its IT workers were paid an average of $110,500 a year, above the Issa bill minimum.

Issa last week, at a Washington forum, said he plans to reintroduce his Skills Visa Act. The initial version of this bill increased the 65,000 cap to 155,000 and creates "a special pool" of 40,000 visas for foreign graduates of U.S. universities.

U.S. Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-Calif) said the $100,000 salary wouldn't do a "damn thing." She has introduced legislation to raise nondisplacement and recruitment attestation exemption to $130,000. Her High-Skilled Integrity and Fairness Act seeks to raise salaries overall with a visa distribution system that favors high-paying employers.

The IEEE-USA wants the salary exemption eliminated and it asks why allow U.S. workers to be replaced at any salary level.

For his part, Hatch will reintroduce a new version of his I-Squared bill. This bill in 2015 increased the H-1B cap from 65,000 to 115,000. It allowed the cap to rise as high as 195,000, depending on demand. It also "uncapped" the U.S. advanced degree exemption, which is now at 20,000.

Hatch's chief opponents are Senators Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) and Dick Durbin (D-Ill.).

Grassley/Durbin recently reintroduced a reform bill that resorts the way the H-1B visas are distributed. Instead of a random lottery, the visas would go first to advanced degree graduates of U.S. schools, then to employees that paid the highest wages, and then to those who have "valuable skills."

It also prohibits a firm from having more than 50% of their workers on an H-1B or L-1 visa. It doesn't limit the number of H-1B/L-1 visa holders, only the ratio of visa holders to permanent residents and U.S. citizens. For instance, if an H-1B-dependent firm has 2,000 employees, no more than 1,000 of their employees can be on work visas.

The Grassley/Durbin bill also "explicitly prohibits" replacing U.S. workers with visa holders, and requires all employers to "make a good-faith effort" to recruit American workers before hiring a visa holder.

Hatch, in a recent op-ed published in the San Jose Mercury News, says his updated bill will include "strict penalties for companies that use H-1B workers to displace American employees."

It's worth noting that Hatch is introducing his own bill instead of joining Grassley and Durbin. These lawmakers fought over their approaches in 2013 during Senate comprehensive immigration reform debate.

There's no indication that Hatch is any closer to agreeing with Grassley/Durbin on the H-1B visa issue. The differences between the two bills may be too wide to bridge.

Trump may have to muster a coalition of Democrats and Republicans to win H-1B reform legislation.

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