Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
International

Trump Administration Seeks 60 Days To Respond On Work Permits Of H1B Spouses

08 Mar, 2017 12:08 PM
    The Trump Administration has sought 60 days to respond to a court case that challenges the decision of the previous Obama Administration to authorise spouses of H1B spouses to work in the US.
     
    While the move by the Obama Administration during its last phase was welcomed by the large H-1B community which mainly included Indians, several American groups challenged this decision in a federal court in Washington DC.
     
    On February 1, the Department of Justice had filed an appeal with the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit entitled "Consent motion to hold proceedings in abeyance for 60 days".
     
    The Government has asked for a 60-day pause in the case to "allow incoming leadership personnel adequate time to consider the issues."
     
    In a statement, Immigration Voice yesterday said that this is "especially concerning" because Attorney General Jeff Sessions, when he was a US Senator, called the H-4 Rule a "change (in) immigration law in a way that hurts American workers."
     
    Even though this rule has actually allowed many H-4 visa holders, including named intervenors, the ability to start businesses in the United States that employ American workers that would otherwise not have jobs if the Rule had not been promulgated, Immigration Voice said.
     
     
    Immigration Voice yesterday announced to intervention in the Save Jobs lawsuit arguing that this was the "only option" to protect the rights of its members and their families, including children who are US citizens.
     
    "There is nothing for the Department of Justice attorneys to confer with their leadership about given the District Court's clear decision stating that this case had no basis for ever being filed," said Aman Kapoor co-founder and president of Immigration Voice.
     
    The recent statements from the Government present an unacceptable risk for Immigration Voice members that DOJ might decide after 60 days to adopt the position of Save Jobs USA.
     
    "Any failure to provide the strongest possible defence of the District Court's decision risks establishing a precedent prohibiting H-4 visa holders from working under the current statutory regime. Under these circumstances, Immigration Voice felt compelled to act to protect the existing and future work permits of our members," Mr Kapoor said.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Indian-Origin Ex-Banker Jailed For Wife Sonita Nijhawan's Manslaughter In UK

    Indian-Origin Ex-Banker Jailed For Wife Sonita Nijhawan's Manslaughter In UK
    Sonita Nijhawan was discovered in a pool of blood in her family estate in Surrey, south England, in May this year.

    Indian-Origin Ex-Banker Jailed For Wife Sonita Nijhawan's Manslaughter In UK

    Indian Pleads Guilty To Student Visa Fraud In US

    Indian Pleads Guilty To Student Visa Fraud In US
    An Indian in the US has pleaded guilty to committing student visa fraud, according to an attorney, local media reported on Friday.

    Indian Pleads Guilty To Student Visa Fraud In US

    Pak Flaunts, Then Downplays Nawaz Sharif's Call With Trump: Foreign Media

    Pak Flaunts, Then Downplays Nawaz Sharif's Call With Trump: Foreign Media
    Our relationship with the United States is not about personalities, it is about institutions

    Pak Flaunts, Then Downplays Nawaz Sharif's Call With Trump: Foreign Media

    Family Pushes For Cyberbullying Laws After Teen's Suicide

    TEXAS CITY, Texas — Family members of a Houston-area high school student who killed herself are rallying for tighter laws against cyberbullying.

    Family Pushes For Cyberbullying Laws After Teen's Suicide

    Canadian Couple In Their 70s Among The Dead In Tennessee Wildfire

    Canadian Couple In Their 70s Among The Dead In Tennessee Wildfire
    Authorities say 71-year-old Jon Tegler and 70-year-old Janet Tegler are among 13 people who have died as a result of the fires.

    Canadian Couple In Their 70s Among The Dead In Tennessee Wildfire

    Doug Ford Not Running For Toronto City Council In Byelection

    TORONTO — Former Toronto city councillor Doug Ford, brother of the controversial late mayor Rob Ford, says he will not be running for a vacant seat in Toronto's city council.

    Doug Ford Not Running For Toronto City Council In Byelection