Washington: The Trump administration has moved to significantly tighten its review process for H-1B visa applicants, directing U.S. embassies and consulates worldwide to conduct intensive background checks on individuals seeking to work in the United States’ high-skilled labour market. An internal State Department cable, circulated on December 2, reveals a new focus on identifying applicants who may have participated in activities the administration views as curbing free speech.
The H-1B programme, widely used by American technology and financial companies, draws a substantial number of workers from India and China, making the policy shift immediately consequential for employers and prospective visa holders. Despite strong support for Donald Trump among several tech-sector leaders during the last election, the industry now faces heightened uncertainty over hiring.
New directive expands review of applicants and their families
The cable instructs consular officers to comb through résumés and online professional profiles—including LinkedIn—of applicants and accompanying family members. Officers are directed to scrutinise past employment for involvement in fact-checking, content moderation, misinformation control, online safety, compliance or similar fields.
According to the memo, any evidence that an applicant played a role in restricting “protected expression” in the United States could trigger ineligibility under a specific provision of the Immigration and Nationality Act. These rules apply not only to first-time H-1B hopefuls but also to those renewing their visas.
The State Department spokesperson, responding broadly without confirming the leaked document, said the U.S. does not support admitting “aliens … to work as censors muzzling Americans,” adding that President Trump, whose social media accounts were previously suspended, does not want “other Americans to suffer this way.”
Free speech concerns now a foreign-policy plank
The administration has repeatedly framed content moderation by tech platforms as suppression of conservative viewpoints. That stance has shaped not only domestic political messaging but also diplomatic positions, with officials criticising European regulators and governments for alleged curbs on right-leaning political speech. Senate Republican Marco Rubio earlier this year threatened visa restrictions on individuals involved in curbing Americans’ online speech.
The latest move adds H-1B screening to a growing list of visa categories flagged for ideological review. Student visa applicants, for example, already face increased scrutiny of social-media activity considered hostile to the United States.
Broader immigration tightening continues
The enhanced vetting for H-1B visas comes amid a wider effort by the Trump administration to rework immigration channels, including imposing new fees on H-1B petitions in September. Trump and his allies have accused the Biden administration and major digital platforms of stifling speech under the guise of combating misinformation, particularly on issues like vaccines and elections.
With the new directive targeting applicants employed in roles typically found within major tech and social-media companies, immigration lawyers warn that the policy could introduce significant delays and new grounds for denial across the H-1B system—one of the most relied-upon avenues for skilled foreign workers entering the U.S. labour market.