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Trump wants skilled overseas workers to ‘train Americans’ then ‘go back home’: U.S. Treasury Secretary

Trump wants skilled overseas workers to ‘train Americans’ then ‘go back home’: U.S. Treasury Secretary

Posted on November 13, 2025 By admin


A day after U.S. President Donald Trump defended the H-1B visa programme, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said the “vision” is to bring in skilled overseas workers who train Americans and then go back home.

“The President’s vision here is to bring in overseas workers, where these jobs went, who have the skills. Three, five, seven years to train the U.S. workers, then they can go home. The U.S. workers fully take over,” Bessent said in an interview to Fox News on Wednesday (November 12, 2025).

Mr. Bessent was asked about Mr. Trump’s latest remarks on the H-1B visa programme, where the President said America has to bring in talent since it does not have “certain talents”.

Mr. Bessent said that for 20-30 years, the U.S. has offshored precision manufacturing jobs. “And the President’s point here is, again, we can’t snap our fingers and say, ‘You’re going to learn how to build ships overnight’. We want to bring the semiconductor industry back to the U.S.” “So this idea of overseas partners coming in, teaching American workers, then returning home, that’s a home run,” Mr. Bessent said, adding that Americans can’t have those jobs now because “we haven’t built ships in the US for years, we haven’t built semiconductors.” Trump defended the H-1B visa programme, saying America has to bring in talent from around the world.

“I agree, but you also do have to bring in talent,” Mr. Trump had said in an interview to Laura Ingraham on Fox News.

Mr. Trump was responding to a question on whether the H-1B visa issue will not be a big priority for his administration, and if one wants to raise wages for American workers, the country cannot be flooded with hundreds of thousands of foreign workers.

When Ingraham noted that “we have plenty of talent”, Mr. Trump said “No, you don’t, no you don’t. You don’t have certain talents. And people have to learn. You can’t take people off an unemployment line, and say, ‘I’m going to put you into a factory, we’re going to make missiles’,” Mr. Trump had said.

“In Georgia, they raided because they wanted illegal immigrants. They had people from South Korea that made batteries all their lives. You know, making batteries (is) very complicated. It’s not an easy thing, and very dangerous. A lot of explosions, lot of problems. They had, like 500-600 people, early stages to make batteries and to teach people how to do it. Well, they wanted them to get out of the country. You’re going to need that…I mean, I know you and I disagree on this. You can’t just say a country is coming in, going to invest $10 billion to build a plant and going to take people off an unemployment line who haven’t worked in five years, and they’re going to start making missiles. It doesn’t work that way.”

The Trump administration has launched a massive crackdown to check abuse in the H-1B visa programme which is used by companies, particularly technology companies, to employ foreign workers in the US. Indian professionals, including technology workers and physicians, are among the largest cohort of H-1B visa holders.

In September this year, Mr. Trump issued a Proclamation titled ‘Restriction on Entry of Certain Nonimmigrant Workers’ as an important initial step to reform the H-1B nonimmigrant visa programme. 

Under the Proclamation, certain H-1B petitions filed after September 21, 2025, must be accompanied by an additional USD 100,000 payment as a condition of eligibility. 

Last week, the Trump administration launched about 175 investigations into H-1B visa abuse, including lapses such as low wages, work sites that didn’t exist and the practice of “benching” employees.   

“As part of our mission to protect American Jobs, we’ve launched 175 investigations into H-1B abuse,” the US Department of Labour had said in a post on X.

It added that under the leadership of President Donald Trump and Labour Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer, the agency will continue taking action to put American workers first.

Chavez-DeRemer said in a post on X that the Labour Department “is using every resource at our disposal to put a stop to H-1B abuse and protect American Jobs. Under the leadership of @POTUS, we’ll continue to invest in our workforce and ensure high-skilled job opportunities go to American Workers FIRST!”

Published – November 13, 2025 03:30 pm IST



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World Tags:Donald Trump advocates for skilled foreign workers, foreign workers to train Americans before returning home, H-1B visa issues, need for specialised talent in U.S.

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