By Kevin D. Williamson
Friday, March 11, 2016
Donald Trump cannot quite decide what he thinks about the
H-1B visa program, under which certain high-skilled foreign workers are
permitted to work in the United States. Silicon Valley executives love it, and
Silicon Valley worker bees hate it, charging that it is used to undercut
domestic wages.
Because Donald Trump is a man who knows nothing about
almost anything, his mind (as John B. Anderson once said of Jimmy Carter) is
“like a seat cushion that bears the imprint of the last person who sat in it.”
In the last debate, Trump decided, out of nowhere, that he was reversing his
formerly restrictive view of the H-1B visa program, that our high-tech
businesses needed those foreign workers, the domestic supply being
insufficient. About five minutes later, having been informed that abruptly
reversing himself on his key issue was bound to cost him a few votes — once
suspects that Ann Coulter was on the verge of tears or worse — Trump announced
that he was reversing his reversal.
It is natural that Trump is of two minds on the question.
There is the third Mrs. Trump to consider.
Donald Trump, a man whose sexual insecurities are such
that he feels the need to reassure the republic that his tiny little fingers
are not proportional to his genitals — Lincoln versus Douglas this ain’t — and
to boast in his memoirs about his sex life (“Oftentimes when I was sleeping
with one of the top women in the world I would say to myself, thinking about me
as a boy from Queens, ‘Can you believe what I am getting?’”), invested in
beauty pageants and a modeling agency. If you are thinking that sounds like a
pretty transparent ploy to put himself in the company of economically
subordinate women, the fact is that his third/current wife is a former client
of the Trump modeling agency, a Slovene by the name of Melanija Knavs, known to
the world now as Melania Trump. The third/current Mrs. Trump came to these
United States on an H-1B visa.
Being married to Donald Trump is, as it turns out,
another temporary job Americans just won’t do.
Given Trump’s habitual disregard for the law and for
basic decency in his business affairs, it will come as no surprise that there
is evidence coming to light that Trump Model Management is a serial abuser of
the H-1B visa program, that it lied to modeling recruits overseas about their
earnings in the United States while raiding such wages as they did earn with
undisclosed fees (the structural parallels with prostitution-trafficking rings
are too obvious to belabor), and, more to the point as a criminal question,
lied to U.S. immigration authorities about those wages, too.
The H-1B program is structured in such as way as to (theoretically,
if not in practice) prevent firms from simply bringing in foreign help on the
cheap to avoid paying prevailing U.S. wages. The idea is that when companies
that need specialized, highly skilled workers, or those with unusual
endowments, they should be able to bring them in relatively easily from abroad
when they cannot locate the workers they need at home. One of the safeguards is
the requirement that firms disclose the wages of their foreign workers, so that
these can be compared with typical domestic wages in the field.
In the case of Alexia Palmer, a Jamaican model recruited
by Trump and brought to the United States, the agency told her — and federal
immigration authorities — that she would be paid $75,000 a year, a figure that
seems to have been the agency’s go-to figure. Given that the “prevailing wage”
was calculated at $45,000 a year, immigration authorities would not have any
reason to believe that Palmer was simply being brought in to undercut domestic
rivals financially.
But, in reality, she was paid about $10,000 a year on
average.
Under federal law, the requirement that H-1B workers be
paid what is claimed on their immigration paperwork falls either on an employer
(in the case of a worker with a full-time commitment to one firm) or, as in the
case of models such as Palmer, their agencies, in this case Trump Model
Management. New York immigration lawyer Jeffrey Feinbloom tells CNN: “It seems
pretty clear to me that there was a violation . . . and a pretty egregious
violation.” That would not be surprising: The program has a long and sometimes
shocking history of abuse.
Trump likes to proclaim that our inability to enforce our
immigration law is an existential threat, like terrorism: “Either we have a
country or we don’t,” he says. When it comes to such threats, Trump’s tough-guy
posturing encompasses all sorts of things: leaning on private companies and
using the law to penalize them if they will not toe his line on immigration,
violating the rights of U.S. citizens, and, famously, his pledging to treat the
families of terrorism suspects like terrorists themselves, to be “very hard on
the families.” Trump has publicly stated that — his words here — “a young and
beautiful piece of ass” is a shield against all criticism. But the
third/current Mrs. Trump is literally the poster girl for a modeling agency
that is credibly accused of systematically abusing the very immigration laws
whose robust enforcement is the purported raison d’ĂȘtre of his presidential
campaign. If immigration abuse is an existential threat and getting tough on
the families is our new national ethos, there’s only one conclusion.
Deport Melania Trump.
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