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U.S. President Trump announced a merit based immigration system

Trump announced a merit based immigration system

US President Donald Trump on Thursday rolled out a merit-based immigration system from which foreigners, including hundreds and thousands of Indian professionals and skilled workers, waiting to get Green Cards or permanent legal residency stand to benefit.

The immigration reform proposals significantly increase the quota for skilled workers from existing nearly 12 per cent to 57 per cent.

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Besides, under the proposed reforms, immigrants will be required to learn English and pass a civics exam prior to admission.

The major immigration policy, however, is unlikely to see the Congressional node soon, given the bitter across the aisle political divide between the Democrats, who have majority in the House of Representatives, and the Republicans who control the Senate.

Trump, in his Rose Garden announcement, himself conceded the difficulties ahead in getting his plan become the law of the day.

Signaling to make it an election issue next year, Trump said the Republicans needs to regain control of the House, retain majority in the Senate and he himself be re-elected to the White House.

Notably, America's last immigration overhaul was 54 years ago.

Ruing that the current system of legal immigration has failed to retain and attract the talent and brilliant young people from across the globe, Trump said he is proposing a merit-based immigration system wherein permanent legal residency would be given based on points for their age, knowledge, job opportunities and their civic sense.

"Under the senseless rules of the current system, we're not able to give preference to a doctor, a researcher, a student who graduated number one in his class from the finest colleges in the world, anybody. We're not able to take care of it. We're not able to make those incredible breakthroughs," Trump said.

"If somebody graduates top of their class from the best college, sorry, go back to your country. We want to keep them here," he said in a major Rose Garden speech.

The President said companies are moving offices to other countries because "US immigration rules prevent them from retaining highly skilled even if they are totally brilliant people".

"We discriminate against genius. We discriminate against brilliance. We won't anymore once we get this past, and we hope to get it passed as soon as possible," he said.

Such a move is likely to benefit hundreds and thousands of Indian professionals on H-1B visa whose current Green Card wait, on an average, is more than a decade.

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