Tensions within the Trump clan around the issue of visas

Tensions within the Trump clan around the issue of visas
Tensions within the Trump clan around the issue of visas

Donald Trump is not yet in the White House when certain dissensions are already arising within his coalition, between his supporters from tech like Elon Musk and certain conservative figures with ardently anti-immigration positions.

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At the center of the debate: the question of H1-B visas.

They allow companies to bring foreign workers with specific qualifications to the United States. Sesame is widely used by Silicon Valley, and Elon Musk – himself who arrived from South Africa with this visa – is a fervent defender of the possibility of using qualified foreign labor.

The richest man in the world, who has become a close ally and financial supporter of Donald Trump, affirmed Thursday on his X platform that “bringing the top 0.1% of engineering talents via legal immigration is essential for America continues to win” on the international stage.

Billionaire Vivek Ramaswamy, appointed by Donald Trump alongside Elon Musk to head a commission to slash state spending, also defended the use of foreign workers who bring with them the right “culture” in businesses in the United States.

“Our American culture has worshiped mediocrity rather than excellence for far too long,” the businessman said on X.

“A culture that celebrates the high school prom queen rather than the math Olympiad champion, or the athlete rather than the top of the class, will not produce the best engineers,” he added. .

Without radical change, “we are going to get our ass kicked by China,” said the former candidate in the Republican presidential primaries.

Restrictions

Statements that outraged certain conservative figures, accusing the two billionaires of minimizing the technological achievements made in the United States.

Ultraconservative Stephen Miller, Donald Trump’s next deputy chief of staff at the White House, posted on X a 2020 speech by the Republican leader in which he marvels at the American “culture” which has “mastered electricity , split the atom, gave the world the telephone and the internet.

A way for this influential advisor to recall that Donald Trump was once again elected with a primarily anti-immigration program and that, according to him, qualified foreign labor is not necessary for the United States to accomplish great things. things.

During his first campaign for the White House in 2016, Donald Trump expressed his opposition to H1-B visas, which he admitted to using himself within his businesses, but which he described as “very unfair to our American workers. And he had put in place certain restrictions on these visas when he came to power, before they were lifted by the Biden administration.

“Inevitable divorce”

The future American president has remained silent for the moment on this debate which is agitating conservative circles. But a position for one camp or the other would provide clues about his way of governing during his second term. And which factions he intends to rely on the most.

For some longtime devotees, Silicon Valley has already inserted itself too deeply into Trumpist circles.

“We welcomed the tech guys when they came running towards us (…). We did not ask them to design a migration policy,” joked Matt Gaetz, formerly elected to Congress and chosen for a time by Donald Trump as future Minister of Justice before having to give up.

When Elon Musk almost single-handedly torpedoed, before Christmas, a budget agreement in Congress aimed at avoiding a paralysis of the federal state, some Democrats joked about a “President Musk”, with whom Donald Trump would ultimately be reduced to a role of spectator.

It remains to be seen whether after these first cracks in the veneer, the coalition which brought the Republican to the White House will manage to maintain a certain cohesion once in power.

“I look forward to the inevitable divorce between President Trump and Big Tech,” conservative influencer Laura Loomer said on X.

Before urging us to “protect President Trump from the technocrats.”

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