Tag: Republican Hindu Coalition #RHC

  • Indian- Origin high-skilled Indian workers, DALCA kids, rally on Capitol Hill to clear green card backlog

    Indian- Origin high-skilled Indian workers, DALCA kids, rally on Capitol Hill to clear green card backlog

    WASHINGTON, DC(TIP): Indian-origin high-skilled workers and their kids caught up in the broken American immigration system received full support from the powerful Republican lawmakers to obtain lawful permanent residency, popularly known as a green card.

    Addressing a rally on the expansive west lawn of the US Capitol, Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky told a sizeable crowd of Indian immigrants: “You have come lawfully. You have come legally and yet it takes forever and maybe it never happens at all that you get your permanent residency”. A simple way to fix that, he said, is “more green cards and no country limits”. The current immigration system imposes a seven percent per-country quota on the allotment of family-sponsored and employment-based visas.

    An influential voice in Congress, Paul has been in the forefront of boosting high-skilled immigration including increasing the H-1B visa cap, allowing the best and brightest to come to America. “The Indian-American community has exceeded to such levels that it is difficult to recount”, he told the crowd at the rally, mentioning Nobel laureates, Deans at prestigious universities, CEOs in Silicon Valley of Indian origin.

    The event drew busloads of Indian professionals and kids from across the US including the states of California, North Carolina and New Jersey

    Imploring the gathering to be more engaged, Paul said, “People need to talk about what the Indian-American community has brought to America, how you are already part of America, how you are making America great”.

    On eliminating the per country cap for allotment of employment-based visas, he reasoned, “If you want to work and you’ve got a job and you want to be part of America, there are much larger amounts (of immigrant workers) that we can bring in. There is not really a limit if people will work”. In his own state, he disclosed, there is a shortage of skilled workers. “So, we want more people in our country, but we need to do it lawfully, legally and with a process”, he emphasized.

    The event drew busloads of Indian professionals and kids from across the US including the states of California, North Carolina and New Jersey

    The rally was organized under the aegis of the Republican Hindu Coalition (RHC) founded by Chicago-based industrialist Shalabh Kumar, a staunch supporter of President Trump. On hand, were his son Vikram Aditya and daughter Manasvi spearheading the proceedings.

    The event drew busloads of Indian professionals and kids from across the US including the states of California, North Carolina and New Jersey. At one point, rally-goers made a human chain on the expansive lawn of the US Capitol chanting slogans like “Clear green card backlog”, “High-skilled immigrants deserve better”, “DALCA deserves better”. It was quite a sight to behold as they raised their voices in unison hoping those in the corridors of power would hear and heed their clarion call for action.

    In the spotlight were children of H-1B visa holders which the RHC calls DALCA (Deferred Action for Legal Childhood Arrivals) kids. They face possible deportation when they age out of their H-4 dependent status. These are the legal Dreamers sidelined by the DACA (Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals) kids who were brought to the US illegally as children.

    While acknowledging that he sympathizes with DACA recipients, Senator Paul made it clear he doesn’t believe “they should somehow get in front or obscure the kids of legal immigrants” who must have protections in place.

    Congressman Pete Sessions of Texas, Chairman of the House Committee on Rules, thanked the crowd at the rally for sending a message to their families in India that “America wants and needs India to succeed. We want your great and young Prime Minister Modi to be just not a world leader, but a brave leader who will forge a path with America towards a better future”, he said.

  • Trump not planning any executive order on H-1B visas: Shalabh ‘Shalli’ Kumar

    Trump not planning any executive order on H-1B visas: Shalabh ‘Shalli’ Kumar

    The Trump administration has no plans to come out with an executive order on H-1B visas, a prominent Indian-American donor and supporter of the US President claimed today, contradicting media reports that have generated anxiety in India. “There will be a need of more H-1B visas. The number of people on H-1B from India is certainly going to increase,” Chicago-based Shalabh ‘Shalli’, Kumar and head of the Republican Hindu Coalition, told reporters at a news conference.

    Responding to a volley of questions, Kumar claimed that contrary to the reports in the media, there is no executive order being worked upon by the White House on H-1B visa. For the American economy to grow, IT would have to play an important role.

    “As such I visualize need of more IT workers in the US,” he said, adding that the US has huge shortage of IT workers which can be filled up only by Indian IT professionals. Of the view that the Trump Administration would be working to ensure that there is no fraud and abuse of H-1B visas, Kumar said he believes that the White House would work to eliminate country-quota towards allocation of green cards for legal permanent residents.

    “This would be of great help Indian IT professionals,” he said, adding that the current wait time for Indians to get a green card could be as many as 35 years.

    According to reports, President Donald Trump may soon crack down on US temporary work visas including the H-1B and L-1 visas that are used widely by Indian tech companies.

    The H1B visa is a non-immigrant visa that allows US firms to employ foreign workers in specialty occupations that require theoretical or technical expertise in specialized fields. The technology companies depend on it to hire tens of thousands of employees each year.

    During his campaign, Trump had promised to increase oversight of our H-1B and L-1 visa programs.

    Supporting the executive orders of Trump on immigration and visa ban, Kumar said he would prefer this to be expanded to other countries like Pakistan. Kumar said the US Government is currently reviewing the list of countries, and if Pakistan does not start co-operating with the US, there is very high probability of it being included in the list of visa ban countries. Pakistan needs to act against terrorism.

    “There cannot be any difference between what it says and what it does. Trump would not tolerate that,” he said. In response to a question, he did not altogether rule out the possibility of him becoming the next US Ambassador to India.

  • Republican Hindu Coalition supports Trump’s immigration order, demands ban on Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, and Afghanistan, too

    Republican Hindu Coalition supports Trump’s immigration order, demands ban on Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, and Afghanistan, too

    WASHINGTON (TIP): Republican Hindu Coalition expressed full support for President Donald Trump’s actions banning visas for seven Muslim countries. Trump had banned the admissions of all refugees for 120 days and citizens of seven Muslim-majority countries for 90 days. The countries banned include Iran, Iraq, Sudan, Somalia, Yemen and Syria and Libya.

    Chairman of the coalition Shalabh Kumar, a prominent Indian-American donor and supporter of Trump, said that the Trump administration was taking the steps in order to protect the US citizens from Islamic terrorism.

    “We applaud the Trump administration for taking this decisive move to protect our citizens from Islamic terror,” Shalabh Kumar said in a press release. “A firm stance against terror is one of the pillars of our organization and one of the central tenets of the Trump campaign, and we fully support our Commander-in-Chief taking the necessary steps to protect our country.”

    The Republican Hindu Coalition also demanded banning three more countries, including Pakistan, Afghanistan and Saudi Arabia.

    “While Americans do not discriminate, and this is a country that encourages legal immigration and celebrates the contributions that immigrants have made to our culture, it is about time we get serious about combating the dangers of terrorism on our shores,” said Kumar.

  • Indian-American lawmakers slam RHC

    Indian-American lawmakers slam RHC

    Indian-American lawmakers have slammed the US-based Republican Hindu Coalition for supporting President Donald Trump’s executive order on immigration, which they alleged takes the country backwards “towards dark times”.

    “As the most senior Indian-American member of Congress, I believe that Donald Trump’s executive order does not reflect who we are as Americans,” Ami Bera, a three-time Congressman, said.

    “The actions of the Republican Hindu Coalition (RHC) on Wednesday do not reflect the breadth and diversity of the Indian-American community, or our diaspora,” he said in a rare criticism of an Indian-American organization related to the Republican Party.

    Bera, along with three other Indian-American lawmakers, vented out his anger against the Coalition. The Coalition has supported Trump’s executive order on immigration and refugees.

    “We applaud the Trump administration for taking this decisive move to protect our citizens from Islamic terror,” its chairman Shalabh Kumar said on Tuesday.

    The executive order signed on Friday, indefinitely barred Syrian refugees from entering the US, and blocked citizens of seven Muslim-majority countries – Iran, Iraq, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, and Yemen – for 90 days.

    Bera said it was very difficult for people of Indian origin to immigrate to the US before 1965, “and this order takes us backwards towards that dark time.”

    Congresswoman Pramila Jayapal said the Coalition does not represent them. “As Indian-Americans, we believe deeply in pluralism, in freedom of religion, in freedom of speech and in a democratic diverse society.”

    “To them, I would say, shame. Shame for trying to divide the Indian-American community.

    As a Hindu, I can tell you that this group does not represent the much larger Indian- American community that honor our birth countries commitment to religious freedom and democracy,” Jayapal said asserting that Indian-Americans “will not be bullied” by this president.

    “I call on our communities to condemn and resist these executive orders,” Jayapal said. Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi termed the executive order an assault on Constitution which “only serves to divide Americans, not unify them.

    It is no longer time to agonies but to organize. It is time to do everything we can to oppose this executive order,” he said.

    Congressman Ro Khanna said, “We cannot allow policies to exist that are not consistent with our founding ideals and values. I swore in on the Constitution, and will always stand up for Constitutional principles.”

    Former Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asian Affairs Nisha Desai Biswal said, “This executive order does not make us safer; it imposes the most severe of burdens on the most vulnerable among us.

    It goes against our responsibilities from the Geneva Conventions and poses an unjust, un-American and what we believe to be an unconstitutional ban on immigrants and refugees,” Biswal said.