Covid-19: US green cards to be halted for 60 days, Pres Trump says

Covid-19: US green cards to be halted for 60 days, Pres Trump says
Donald Trump, US president

Donald Trump, US president

WASHINGTON, April 22 (NNN-AGENCIES) — President Donald Trump has said his plan to ban immigration into the US will last for 60 days and apply only to those seeking permanent residence.

Speaking a day after he announced the move in an ambiguous tweet, Trump said the measure would protect American jobs during the coronavirus crisis.

The decision would not impact temporary visas to workers.

Critics say he is trying to distract attention away from his response to the virus. The US has nearly 45,000 deaths.

Democrats also accuse the administration of using the pandemic to crack down on immigration. The issue has traditionally been a strong campaigning theme for Trump, a Republican, but has taken a back seat during the crisis and in the lead-up to the November election.

At a White House coronavirus briefing, Trump said the executive order with the decision was likely to be signed on Wednesday. The ban could be extended “much longer” depending on how the economy was doing, he said.

After vowing to suspend “all immigration to US” on Monday night, Trump apparently changed his original plan that reportedly included immigrants like farm labourers and hi-tech employees on special visas after a backlash from some business leaders.

More than 20 million Americans have lost their jobs amid the coronavirus outbreak, and the president said the government had a “solemn duty” to ensure they regain their jobs.

“It would be wrong and unjust for Americans laid off by the virus to be replaced with new immigrant labour flown in from abroad,” he said, adding that there could be some exemptions to the measure.

“We want to protect our US workers and I think as we move forward we will become more and more protective of them”.

Trump’s order could spark legal challenges.

The US has the highest number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the world – more than 820,000 – according to Johns Hopkins University, which is tracking the disease globally. — NNN-AGENCIES

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