H-1B visa controversy heat up: US Senator Mike Lee questions program amid Walmart Bribery rumors

H-1B visa controversy heat up: US Senator Mike Lee questions program amid Walmart Bribery rumors


The recent comments against the H-1B visa system coincide with rurumourshat Trump may attack the system, which permits Indian IT engineers to work in the US, next.

New Delhi:

US Senator Mike Lee has stirred debate over the future of the H-1B visa program, questioning whether itโ€™s time to pause the system that allows skilled foreign workersโ€”primarily from Indiaโ€”to work in the United States. His comments come amid unverified social media claims linking Walmart to a bribery scandal involving the hiring of Indian tech professionals.

โ€œIs it time to pause H1-B visas?โ€ Senator Lee asked on X (formerly Twitter), after reposting claims that Walmart was allegedly accepting bribes to replace American workers with Indian H-1B visa holders.

The controversy originated on the workplace discussion platform Blind, where an anonymous user alleged a โ€œmassive fraudโ€ inside Walmart. The post claimed a company executive had fired American tech workers while taking bribes to hire Indian nationals under the H-1B program. Though widely circulated on social media, these allegations remain unverified.

Walmart has since issued a statement denying any link between its internal investigation and the H-1B program. โ€œFollowing an investigation, Walmart recently terminated one vendor and a small number of U.S.-based associates. This investigation had nothing to do with H1B visas,โ€ the company clarified.

Leeโ€™s remarks echo sentiments recently expressed by far-right Republican Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene, who called for an end to Indian H-1B visas, claiming they were โ€œreplacing American jobs.โ€ Her comments were made in response to a social media post by former President Donald Trump, who criticized Indiaโ€™s purchase of Russian oil and threatened to impose higher tariffs on Indian goods and services.

The controversy arises at a time when Trump-aligned โ€œMake America Great Againโ€ (MAGA) supporters are pushing a digital campaign accusing foreign workersโ€”especially Indian nationalsโ€”of taking jobs from Americans amid ongoing tech layoffs.

Indian citizens make up more than 70% of all H-1B visa recipients, followed by Chinese nationals at approximately 12%.

While thereโ€™s no official move yet to suspend the program, the growing political rhetoric suggests that the H-1B visa system may come under increased scrutiny in the lead-up to the 2026 U.S. midterm elections.



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