The role of H-1B visa holders would be redefined as “temporary trainers” under a new policy vision clarified by Scott Bessent. This explanation came after Donald Trump made surprising comments about needing foreign talent, which many mistook for a softer immigration stance. Bessent’s clarification points to a “knowledge transfer” model where foreign experts train Americans and then leave.
Trump had previously sparked debate by stating, “We also do have to bring talent into the country,” and “you don’t have certain talents.” This led to a widespread belief that he was pivoting to a more open policy on skilled immigration to fill high-tech roles in defense and manufacturing.
Scott Bessent, however, presented a different interpretation. He explained that the policy is not about long-term labor, but short-term education. The vision is to bring in “overseas workers who have the skills” for a limited duration—”three, five, seven years”—to “train the US workers.”
This “train-and-return” policy is designed to address specific skill deficits. Bessent cited shipbuilding and semiconductors as examples of industries where Americans “can’t have that job, not yet.” The foreign experts would serve as a bridge to American self-sufficiency.
Bessent described this as a “home run” for the American worker. The plan’s ultimate goal is for the trained US workers to “fully take over” these high-tech jobs after their foreign instructors “go home.”
H-1B Workers as “Temporary Trainers”: Bessent Clarifies Trump’s Stance
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