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Politics & Government

Trump at Center of Dust-up Between Musk and MAGA Supporters

Gloves Come off in Battle over H-1Bs

Elon Musk, President-elect Donald J. Trump and Vivek Ramaswamy
Elon Musk, President-elect Donald J. Trump and Vivek Ramaswamy

In the days immediately following his decisive victory, President-elect Donald J. Trump was cruising right along. His avowed enemies like Meta’s Mark Zuckerburg, MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” co-hosts Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski, who had reiterated over and again that Trump is a racist, a fascist and a threat to democracy, and embattled Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, all scurried to Mar-a-Lago to kiss and make up. Mar-a-Lago is, Trump said, the “center of the universe,” and the location to which those seeking to grow their influence, flock.

Then, the unlikely happened. During the Christmas and Hanukkah seasons, a brouhaha broke out about the H-1B visa’s future between immigration expansionists Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy versus the MAGA loyalists. Trump, to his base’s horror, sided with Musk, Ramaswamy, India-born venture capitalist Sriram Krishnan, the incoming senior Artificial Intelligence policy advisor, and ex-PayPal COO David Sacks, recently nominated to become Trump’s AI “czar.” Sacks said, “it was time to move forward”, which means that multi-millionaire and billionaire Silicon Valley tycoons are in accord that issuing tens of thousands more H-1B visas is essential.

Musk defended the H-1B program, arguing misleadingly that the U.S. has a “dire shortage of extremely talented engineers” and compared importing IT workers to the NBA drafting international hoopsters. That’s quite a stretch of Musk’s imagination since each year U.S. universities graduate thousands of citizens with STEM degrees and only a handful of 7’ athletes who can shoot, pass and defend on a professional level.

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Adding fuel to the fire, Trump spoke glowingly about the H-1B workers he hired at his properties and echoed the expansionist’s theme that the U.S. needs “exceptional talent,” a common misnomer used to describe foreign-born visa employees who may have only average IT skills. Trump’s affinity for H-1B workers is a dramatic about-face from the position he held during his first term when he emphasized the importance of hiring Americans first. To his supporters, Trump’s siding with the expansionists was not only a cataclysmic betrayal but also brought into question whether Musk had supplanted the president as the administration’s supreme potentate. Musk is Trump’s most important donor, his most influential social media contributor, a key policy advisor and a Mar-a-Lago regular. But Musk’s most critical role: he was vital to Trump’s re-election campaign. As the “who’s the president gossip?” continued, Trump, speaking at the conservative Turning Point USA’s AmericaFest conference in Phoenix, deflected the question and stated, tongue-in-cheek, that it would be unconstitutional for the South Africa-born Musk to become president.

Trump has a golden opportunity to fulfill his vow to defend American workers and test the elitists’ deception that H-1Bs are the most qualified workers and essential to their corporations’ successes. The scrum between the elitists and the MAGAs might be resolved definitively if Trump could muster up the courage to cancel the next H-1B visa lottery. By definition, a lottery cannot exclusively produce “the best and brightest.” If the impossible happened and the lottery were eliminated, that would mean that Meta, Microsoft, IBM, etc. would have to get along with their already-employed IT workers ---no more massive layoffs---or hire U.S.-born IT workers. Breitbart’s Neil Monro, a long-time H-1B analyst, wrote that “the annual inflow of white-collar visa workers is at least 500,000. The resident [H-1B] population is at least 1.5 million, nearly all of whom work longer hours at lower pay in the hope of getting green cards from the U.S. government.” Put the emphasis on “lower pay” and “green cards.” The H-1B visa is dual-intent which means that a foreign national can enter the U.S. as a nonimmigrant but retain the option to eventually apply for a permanent residency green card.

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Since its inception as part of the Immigration Act of 1990, the H-1B visa has been abused and its original intent---to provide a non-immigrant temporary permission to work in the U.S. legally---has been hijacked. The corrupt American university system, which continues to enroll foreign students---1.2 million as of academic year 2023-2024--- at an increasing percentage of its total student population, forces citizen students to compete with the entire world for admission into coveted STEM programs. Specifically, 56% of international students studied STEM fields, and China, America’s top global threat, receives 27.4% of the H-1Bs and India, 25.4%.

Writing in the Economic Policy Institute, Daniel Costa and Ron Hira concluded that among the many flaws in the H-1B visa none is more egregious than allowing employers to legally hire and underpay workers relative to U.S. workers in similar occupations in the same region. For those who advocate for ending illegal immigration but then add that they’re all-in on legal immigration, note that the H-1B visa is a legal vehicle to enter the U.S., take jobs even though Americans’ employment and wages are undercut.

Whether it’s illegal immigration like what’s gone on for four years at the northern and southern borders or legal via the H-1B visa, Americans want less immigration. Trump wasn’t elected to undermine his supporters’ reduced immigration hopes, the very issue that helped return him to the White House.

Joe Guzzardi is an Institute for Sound Public Policy analyst. Contact him at jguzzardi@ifspp.org

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