onlyTrustedInfo.comonlyTrustedInfo.comonlyTrustedInfo.com
Notification
Font ResizerAa
  • News
  • Finance
  • Sports
  • Life
  • Entertainment
  • Tech
Reading: Trump Is Shutting Off America’s Talent Pipeline
Share
onlyTrustedInfo.comonlyTrustedInfo.com
Font ResizerAa
  • News
  • Finance
  • Sports
  • Life
  • Entertainment
  • Tech
Search
  • News
  • Finance
  • Sports
  • Life
  • Entertainment
  • Tech
  • Advertise
  • Advertise
© 2025 OnlyTrustedInfo.com . All Rights Reserved.
News

Trump Is Shutting Off America’s Talent Pipeline

Last updated: June 26, 2025 12:41 pm
Oliver James
Share
6 Min Read
Trump Is Shutting Off America’s Talent Pipeline
SHARE

With attention focused on workplace raids and National Guard troops in Los Angeles, it is easy to overlook the Trump administration’s policies on legal immigration. Those policies came into focus at a Senate hearing last month when Joseph Edlow, nominated to be the director of United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), pledged to shut off America’s talent pipeline. 

Edlow told the Senate Judiciary Committee on May 21, 2025, that he would end Optional Practical Training (OPT), which allows international students to work for 12 months in their course of study, typically after graduating. He said he would also eliminate STEM OPT, which enables students to gain practical experience by working an extra 24 months (beyond OPT) in a science, technology, engineering, or math field. The additional 24 months in STEM OPT gives employers a better chance to obtain an H-1B petition for students by entering the H-1B lottery in multiple years, a primary reason the Bush administration added STEM OPT in 2008.

Edlow said he wanted to “remove the ability for employment authorizations for F-1 students beyond the time that they are in school.” That phrasing may be sleight of hand. A program already exists for working while in school, called Curricular Practical Training, but it’s not as widely used as OPT and STEM OPT.

In the 2023–2024 academic year, 163,452 international students engaged in post-completion OPT, and 79,330 students were in STEM OPT, totaling 242,782, according to the Institute of International Education.

Edlow may be promoting the policy already determined by Stephen Miller, the architect of the administration’s immigration policy, who has a history of opposing international students staying in America. The Wall Street Journal reported that during President Donald Trump’s first term, Miller tried to eliminate STEM OPT but was blocked by Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner. In 2015, Miller helped draft a bill as a staffer for Sen. Jeff Sessions (R–Ala.) that would have ended OPT, banned international students with master’s or bachelor’s degrees from working in the United States in H-1B status for at least 10 years after graduation, and prohibited doctorate holders from doing so for at least two years. The Financial Times reported that Miller sought to ban Chinese students from U.S. universities during Trump’s first term.

The first six months of Trump’s second term have seen several policies directed against international students, including new limits on Chinese students, attempts to deport thousands of students for minor offenses, new social media screenings for international students, and ending Harvard University’s ability to enroll foreign students.

“Foreign graduates of U.S. universities cause major increases in innovation,” according to research by George Mason University economics professor Michael Clemens. “Immigration policy that broadly seeks ways to entice foreign graduates of U.S. universities to remain in the United States, the overwhelming mass of evidence suggests, would serve the national interest. Terminating OPT would do the opposite.”

Madeline Zavodny, an economics professor at the University of North Florida, found in a study by the National Foundation for American Policy that, contrary to some concerns, OPT is associated with lower unemployment rates for U.S. workers in STEM fields. Zavodny also found that enrolling immigrants and international students could allow many U.S. universities to survive as the U.S.-born college-aged population declines.

Ending the ability of international students to work after graduation would contradict what then-presidential candidate Trump told venture capitalists during the All-In podcast in June 2024. “What I want to do, and what I will do, is you graduate from a college, I think you should get automatically, as part of your diploma, a green card to be able to stay in this country.” 

Michelle Zatlyn, president, COO, and cofounder of Cloudflare, a company with a market capitalization of $54 billion and 2,400 U.S.-based employees, told me, “The best thing the U.S. government has done on immigration is OPT to allow international students a chance to stay and work for a time after graduation. It allowed me to work with Matthew Prince on the business plan that helped create the company.”

International students represent 71 percent of the full-time graduate students in computer and information sciences and 73 percent in electrical and computer engineering at U.S. universities. It is already much easier to transition from a student visa to a work visa and then to permanent residence in Canada and other countries than in the United States. International student interest in coming to U.S. universities will plummet without the ability to work in their field after graduation. That will sever America’s talent pipeline.

The post Trump Is Shutting Off America’s Talent Pipeline appeared first on Reason.com.

You Might Also Like

How the Jeffrey Epstein files could derail Trump’s spending cuts for PBS and NPR

U.S. offers $5 million reward for Afghan-American believed abducted in 2022

Soldiers, Strykers and 100-degree temps: Inside Trump’s border military zone

Wisconsin lawmakers look to increase municipal reimbursement by $31M

Why the Middle East is the perfect setting for Russia-US talks

Share This Article
Facebook X Copy Link Print
Share
Previous Article Woman ‘Started Screaming’ After M Lottery Prize Win: ‘My Daughter Thought Something Bad Had Happened’ Woman ‘Started Screaming’ After $1M Lottery Prize Win: ‘My Daughter Thought Something Bad Had Happened’
Next Article George Pickens backs out of hosting his own youth football camp George Pickens backs out of hosting his own youth football camp

Latest News

Gisele Bündchen Shares Rare Photos of Her Baby to Mark Her 45th Birthday: ‘Spent It in Nature’
Gisele Bündchen Shares Rare Photos of Her Baby to Mark Her 45th Birthday: ‘Spent It in Nature’
Entertainment July 23, 2025
‘It was a nightmare’: Venezuelans deported from US describe conditions in Salvadoran prison
‘It was a nightmare’: Venezuelans deported from US describe conditions in Salvadoran prison
News July 23, 2025
Geno Smith aims to bring stability and firepower to Raiders’ struggling offense
Geno Smith aims to bring stability and firepower to Raiders’ struggling offense
Sports July 23, 2025
Oregon’s Dan Lanning has an idea to fix the College Football Playoff: Get rid of byes
Oregon’s Dan Lanning has an idea to fix the College Football Playoff: Get rid of byes
Sports July 23, 2025
//
  • About Us
  • Contact US
  • Privacy Policy
onlyTrustedInfo.comonlyTrustedInfo.com
© 2025 OnlyTrustedInfo.com . All Rights Reserved.