New York Times (Letter to the Editor): Visas
for Top Graduates: A View From Capitol Hill
October 1, 2012
LAMAR SMITH
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/02/opinion/visas-for-top-graduates-a-view-from-capitol-hill.html?_r=1&ref=todayspaper
In “Visas for Scientists, With a Catch” (editorial, Sept. 27), you claim that there is a catch with the STEM Jobs Act, which I sponsored, but you are simply fishing for opposition.
According to a recent poll, three in four likely voters think that we
should allow the top foreign graduates of American universities with
advanced degrees in science, technology, engineering and math — known as
STEM fields — to remain in the United States. And that’s exactly what
the STEM Jobs Act does.
Gallup recently reported
that four out of five Americans also do not want to see higher levels
of immigration. That’s why the STEM Jobs Act eliminates the fraud-ridden
diversity visa program and reallocates these visas to those who could
help make us more competitive in the global economy.
We should eliminate the diversity visa lottery because it bases our
immigration system on the luck of the draw by selecting people at random
to receive green cards. No family ties to the United States or strong
skill set are required to be eligible. And former State Department
officials and the nonpartisan Government Accountability Office have
found the lottery to be an open invitation to fraud and a jackpot for
terrorists.
The United States has the most generous legal immigration system in the
world; we admit more than one million legal immigrants each year. We
should maintain this generosity, but we need to make our immigration
system smarter by allowing the best and brightest foreign graduates to
stay here.
Unfortunately, some Democrats voted to send the best and brightest
foreign graduates back home to work for our global competitors. Their
vote against this bill is a vote against economic growth and job
creation.
LAMAR SMITH
Washington, Sept. 27, 2012
Washington, Sept. 27, 2012
The writer, a Republican from Texas, is chairman of the House Judiciary Committee.
www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
No comments:
Post a Comment