[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 67 (Tuesday, May 6, 2014)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2713-S2714]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
IMMIGRATION RULE CHANGE
Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, today, the Departments of Homeland
Security and Commerce announced a proposed rule change that would
extend employment authorizations to spouses of certain H-1B workers.
The rule says that spouses who have already begun the process of
seeking legal permanent resident status through employment, or those
who have been granted an extension beyond their 6-year limit of stay in
the country, are eligible for employment authorizations.
[[Page S2714]]
On a call with media today, Homeland Security Deputy Secretary
Mayorkas said that the intent of this regulation is to make it more
attractive for foreign workers to come to and stay in the United
States. Under current law, Congress authorized 85,000 H-1B visas to be
available each year for high-skilled workers. Yet, with this sweeping
rule, more workers will be allowed to come, work, and compete with U.S.
workers in high-skilled fields despite the well-documented fraud in the
H-1B program. The Department believes that the rule change will allow
more than 97,000 people to obtain employment authorization in the first
year alone.
While we're all interested in attracting the best and the brightest
foreign workers to the United States, the Obama administration clearly
doesn't seem concerned with the millions of unemployed Americans, and
those who have been forced out of their jobs because companies prefer
to hire lower-paid workers from abroad.
In addition to their lack of compassion and understanding for
American workers, it is disturbing that the administration is once
again circumventing Congress and implementing their own rules. As with
other unilateral actions this administration has taken, I question
their legal authority to issue this rule.
In 2001, Congress explicitly laid out in statute that the Secretary
could provide work authorizations to certain spouses of foreign
workers. Congress said that work authorizations could be given to
spouses of L1, intercompany transfers, and E, treaty traders/investors,
visa holders. Congress did not, at that time, give spouses of H-1B visa
holders the permission to work. It could have, but it did not.
The administration may claim that it has broad authority to issue
work authorizations to anyone in the United States. If the executive
branch has such broad authority, then why would Congress explicitly lay
out the category of visa holders and foreign nationals who could work
in the U.S.?
And, what will come next? Where will this administration stop? What
other categories of individuals will be granted work authorizations?
The rule allows spouses of ``certain'' H-1B visa holders to work. What
about the others? Why didn't the administration do a more comprehensive
rule for all H-1B spouses? Maybe the Department realized they were
already pushing the envelope with its authority. Will the
administration push back against advocates of other nonimmigrant
categories, or refuse to expand the rule to all spouses of H-1B visa
holders?
What is frustrating about this rule is that it flies in the face of
the immigration bill that the Senate passed last summer. The bill, if
passed, would allow spouses of H-1B holders to work. Section 4102 of S.
744 would give the Secretary of Homeland Security the authority to
issue work authorization to those who are accompanying or following to
join a principal H-1B worker. Inclusion of this provision signals that
the Secretary does not currently have authority.
Originally, the bill written by the Gang of Eight, only gave that
authority to the Secretary if the home country of the foreign national
did the same for U.S. workers. The Gang of Eight's bill said, ``The
Secretary of Homeland Security shall authorize the alien spouse to
engage in employment in the United States only if such spouse is a
national of a foreign country that permits reciprocal employment.''
The intent of the authors of the Senate bill was to ensure that
American spouses were treated equally. The rule does not take this into
consideration.
The Obama administration claims it wants immigration reform, but they
can not wait for Congress. They act on their own. And, they do it to
the detriment of American workers. We need to get immigration reform
right, and doing ad-hoc rules that fly in the face of the statute are
not helpful to the process. What is next? Will the President
unilaterally legalize the undocumented population because he can not
have his way with Congress? President Obama has to prove that he can be
trusted. Otherwise, American workers and the American people will
continue to lose out because of his policies.
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