Republican slams Indiana University for using H-1B visa to fill digital marketing job: ‘Zero Americans qualified for that job?’

Republican slams Indiana University for using H-1B visa to fill digital marketing job: 'Zero Americans qualified for that job?'

An Indiana Republican has criticised Indiana University for using a H-1B visa to hire for a digital marketing role, questioning why a taxpayer-funded institution could not find a qualified American candidate.Andrew Ireland wrote on X: “Taxpayer-funded Indiana University is using a H-1B visa to fill a DIGITAL MARKETING job in Indianapolis.”

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He added, “Does anyone seriously believe ZERO Americans are qualified for that job? The university has graduated thousands of marketing majors. American jobs are for Americans”According to the job filing, the position is set to begin on March 3, 2026 and run until the end of February 2029.Ireland has repeatedly raised concerns about universities in the state using the H-1B visa programme. In a separate post, he criticised Purdue University for hiring a foreign software engineer on a H-1B visa at a salary of $149,000 a year. “Does anyone believe no qualified American could do this job for $149,000 a year? The same school has graduated tens of thousands of computer science students,” he wrote. “This has to stop.”He also objected to Purdue University Northwest filing an H-1B application for an assistant professor of marketing role paying $127,500 annually, asking: “Does anyone seriously believe no American in the Chicago area can teach marketing for $127,500 a year? The same university even has a PHD program for marketing students”.Nationwide, 399,395 H-1B petitions were approved in fiscal year 2024, a three per cent rise on the previous year, with educational institutions accounting for 5.6 per cent.The H-1B visa programme allows US employers to hire highly skilled foreign workers. MAGA base argues it undercuts domestic graduates and steals jobs from Americans, while supporters, including Donald Trump, Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy, say it helps attract top global talent.

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