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Trump Back in Office: What Employers Can Expect Regarding Employer-Based Immigration

By Melissa Allchin, Matthew Gorman, Ginger Partee & Betsy Morgan on November 7, 2024
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Political propaganda paper lying on the Westminster Bridge, London.
Metin Ozer, Unsplash

Donald Trump’s return to the White House in January will have a profound impact on immigration law and enforcement. While the Trump/Vance ticket made immigration a central focus of its campaign, the platform took aim at asylum law and unlawful immigration rather than legal immigration and employer-based immigration. Trump’s first term provides strong clues about potential policy and enforcement changes, though uncertainty remains for employers.

Potential Changes to Employer-Based Immigration

Trump’s first term in office did not result in major legislative changes to immigration law, but enforcement methods and interpretation of existing laws varied drastically from historical norms. Potential changes in a second Trump administration could include:

  • Increased worksite enforcement
  • Restrictions for visas and permanent residence for certain countries
  • Attempts to eliminate the STEM OPT program
  • Attempts to increase prevailing wage rates for H-1B and permanent
    residence processes, aiming to price employers out
  • Increased denials across the board with USCIS and DOS (e.g., 21-24% H-1B denial rate)
  • Increased corporate investigations in relation to protection of US workers (e.g., investigation of PERM practices, hiring practices, and alleged preferential treatment of foreign workers)

What Employers Should Do

  • Communicate with your visa-holder employees in the form of email or town-hall
    style meetings.
  • Review I-9 and E-Verify compliance and protocols and conduct internal audits, particularly if no such audit has been conducted in the past 3 years.
  • Review internal procedures and protocols to ensure equal treatment of US workers as compared to foreign workers.
  • Consider filing extensions (and upgrading to premium processing for pending petitions) as early as possible before the administration change.
  • Consider alternate paths for long-term immigration solutions before the January.
Photo of Melissa Allchin Melissa Allchin
Read more about Melissa AllchinEmail
Photo of Matthew Gorman Matthew Gorman
Read more about Matthew GormanEmail
Photo of Ginger Partee Ginger Partee
Read more about Ginger ParteeEmail
Photo of Betsy Morgan Betsy Morgan
Read more about Betsy MorganEmail
  • Posted in:
    Employment & Labor, Immigration
  • Blog:
    The Employer Report
  • Organization:
    Baker McKenzie
  • Article: View Original Source

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