Management manager calls Trump to reduce immigration to Georgia Raid

Management manager calls Trump to reduce immigration to Georgia RaidEPA/Shutterstock

After a robbery, President Donald Trump is faced with calls from managing directors in a Hyundai plant in the US state of Georgia.

It was the biggest such raid in the US immigration history and swept 475 workers, including around 300 people from South Korea.

The decision to aim at the project supported by a company has in South Korea, where politicians and business leaders have warned that it will relax the willingness to invest in the USA.

In the United States, corporate groups stated that RAID would probably also achieve local business because it detered important parts of the workforce.

“These measures have wave and side effects on others that are real and unintentional, unfortunately whether they are in the legal status or not,” said Jeff Wasden, President of the state managing directors, which represented state lobby groups of companies throughout the economy.

He said he sent the White House on Monday by e -mail, hoping that the moment made an opening for the implementation of enforcement into the US immigration system.

While he praised Trump because he had stopped the river of migrants across the border, he said that the raids had “fear” and “damping” of the US economic activity.

“We have to turn the site,” he said. “It is time to concentrate on the workforce and how we fix some of these programs and problems.”

Visa voltages

Since RAID, the construction at the location has stopped a partnership between Hyundai and LG Energy Solutions that manufactures batteries for its electric cars.

According to the South Korean media, LG and other South Korean companies in South Korean companies have also introduced new borders for business trips to the USA.

The South Korean officials have announced that many of the people from South Korea had joined temporary visas in the United States who enabled employees to attend business meetings or conferences, but not paid for employment in the United States.

Such visas were a common problem that was used by companies in the country that have long been frustrated that they do not benefit from a more expansive visa program that are currently enjoyed by countries like Australia.

Many Trump supporters reject the loosening of visa rules and argue that such programs were used by Big Business to import cheaper foreign employees and to freeze American citizens.

However, since the United States is fighting to formulate industries such as semiconductors, trade groups say that there are not enough workers with the necessary skills in the United States.

In a statement to the BBC, Jae Kim, President of the southeastern US Korean Chamber of Commerce, said a group that is intended to increase relationships between South Korea and the southeastern USA, “for foreign companies, especially for temporary workers, not a” simple process “for foreign companies, especially for temporary workers.

He warned that the hold-ups “made it difficult that such production projects of the next generation to thrive in the United States” and a “stronger balance” of the US priorities.

In comments against reporters over the weekend, Trump recognized the complaints about the visa process and reported reporters: “We will see this whole situation.”

In a subsequent post on social media, Trump said that foreign investments were “welcome”, but asked foreign companies to “ask the immigration laws of our nation”.

“We encourage you to legally bring your very clever people with great technical talent to build first -class products, and we will enable you to do this quickly and legally,” he wrote on Sunday and added: “In return, we ask that you hire and train American employees.”

However, it is not clear to what extent the administration plans to change your approach.

At a appearance at CNN on Sunday, the Border Czar Tom Homan said that more building stands would come.

Trump previously confronted tensions between his promises to facilitate the path for the economy, and its aggressive immigration policy.

Before he even took office, his followers broke out in a bitter online brawl whether the administration should make it easier for companies to secure visas for highly qualified technology workers.

The fight led Elon Musk and other Tech -Gurus, who had supported his campaign against the former Trump campaign manager Steve Bannon.

Cracks in the coalition reappeared in June when the White House enabled its jobs and cry out the outcry of farmers and hotels. The administration proposed to change its approach to reaffirm the procedure a few days later.

Jennie Murray, managing director of the National Immigration Forum, a group that works for immigrants and was involved in discussions about reforms, said that the latest news from the White House was “mixed”.

However, she said that some TOP Trump officials, including those from the departments of labor and agriculture, were susceptible to business concerns regarding the raids at the workplace, which former presidents largely avoided due to their controversy and economic costs.

She said she saw how these arguments were brought into harmony, especially as economic costs for raids such as those in Georgia.

“The effect begins to speak for itself,” she said. “Since the economy continues to score hits and slowly slowed down, which will probably happen in the next few months, there is that there are many people who are willing to have discussions about what these solutions are.”

But Douglas Holtz-Ekin, President of the American Action Forum, an Institute for Politics in Middle Right, said that he had seen little signs that the administration had prepared to change their approach.

He added to the president: “He is strongly tailored to pressure. If the pressure becomes big enough, he will change politics, but we haven't seen it yet.”