Latest Trump H-2B Increase Again Betrays American Workers

Burned again.

In April 2017, President Donald Trump signed Executive Order 18837 — a directive to “Buy American and Hire American”. The order signaled the president’s intent to defend the interests of American workers, one of his key campaign promises. Some of his supporters were less-skilled and less-educated voters who shared his concerns that widespread immigration (and foreign guest worker programs) would shrink their job prospects. The executive order states that:

In order to create higher wages and employment rates for workers in the United States … the Secretary of State, the Attorney General, the Secretary of Labor, and the Secretary of Homeland Security shall … propose new rules and issue new guidance, to supersede or revise previous rules and guidance if appropriate, to protect the interests of United States workers in the administration of our immigration system.

This has not happened. Instead of reforming the guest worker system, Trump has allowed it to flourish. In its latest action, the Department of Homeland Security announced today that it is raising the 2019 H-2B cap by 30,000. The additional visas are available to H-2B guest workers who previously worked in the United States within the past three years.

The H-2B visa allows employers to hire foreign workers for non-agricultural jobs that do not require higher education, including landscaping, cleaning, hotels, etc. I’ve explained before how the H-2B program is a raw deal for Americans, and I highlight those points below:

Data show that employers pay H-2B workers much less than their American counterparts.
The H-2B program distorts the labor market and artificially props up inefficient companies, giving them no incentive to reform their hiring practices.
H-2B prevents the neediest Americans (ex-convicts, recovering addicts, the homeless, high school dropouts, etc.) from securing meaningful employment that could transform their lives.
The H-2B visa is unnecessary because a domestic replacement could do the same thing.

Despite these problems, the Trump administration has repeatedly increased the number of H-2B visas. There is a statutory annual cap of 66,000, but in 2017 and 2018, the DHS secretary permitted “temporary” one-time increases of 15,000 more guest workers, as authorized by Congress. Trump could have stopped this by ordering the secretary to do nothing, since Congress chose not to openly raise the cap, instead giving DHS the authority to do so, if it chose (ensuring that Congress avoided any political responsibility for the decision). In February 2019, Trump signed a spending bill that allows the DHS secretary to raise to H-2B cap to as high as 135,000. This would be an alarming increase that contradicts the president’s stated priorities.

Today’s decision increases the H-2B cap by “only” 30,000, rather than the full 67,000 Congress authorized, but this surge nonetheless increases the cap to 96,000. Not even under President Obama did H-2B visas rise to such high levels, as the table below shows:

Fiscal Year H-2B Visas President
2008 94,304 Bush/Obama
2009 44,847 Obama
2010 47,403 Obama
2011 50,826 Obama
2012 50,009 Obama
2013 57,600 Obama
2014 68,102 Obama
2015 69,684 Obama
2016 84,627 Obama
2017 83,600 Obama/Trump
2018 83,774 Trump
2019 96,000* Trump
Source: State Department, “Table XVI(B) – Nonimmigrant Visas Issued by Classification”, Report of the Visa Office, 2004-2008, 2009-2013, 2014-2018, accessed March 27, 2019.

* Increase in cap; total figures not yet available, but visas have exceeded the cap since 2013.

President Trump continues to increase the number of H-2B guestworkers every time he has the opportunity. This is entirely his own administration’s fault. He could, at any time, direct Secretary Nielsen to not increase the cap. This would help American workers and fulfill his promise to voters that he outlined in his original “Buy American and Hire American” executive order. His supporters did not vote for more guest workers — they voted to return Americans to the workforce.

Source w/ links here…

2019-04-02