California’s top lawyer slammed the
The changes announced by President
“So the short answer is, we are looking at it,” said Bonta, a Democrat who took office in 2021. “We will assess whether there’s a legal violation. If it’s a policy that we don’t agree with but it’s legally sound, we won’t challenge it. If it’s unlawful, we will.”
Trump’s policy, his biggest step yet toward overhauling the legal migration system in the US, would drastically increase the cost of a program popular with some of the largest American companies. The H-1B program has become a lightning rod in conservative circles as critics argue that recipients displace American workers.
The H-1B visa program is especially important for the tech sector, which uses it to bring in skilled workers from abroad. Finance companies and consulting firms also use the program.
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“We wouldn’t be here without the talent that has come to California on these visas,” Bonta said. He also said that businesses and people want “certainty.” “And you just don’t get that that often, unfortunately, from the Trump administration.”
Bonta has joined other Democratic state attorneys general in filing dozens of lawsuits challenging an array of Trump administration policies.
The attorney general said he is examining whether the changes to the visa program violate the federal Administrative Procedure Act, which bars abrupt rule changes by the government without a period of public notice.
“You need to have a reasoned justification,” the attorney general said. “It can’t be arbitrary, it can’t be capricious, and so we’ve brought cases on that basis quite a few times in the past, and it might be appropriate here, but we’re still looking.”
The
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Peter Blumberg
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