Anxiety grips Bay Area immigrant communities as possible misinformation swirls about federal raids

SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) — Fear about the deployment of federal agents to their neighborhoods is causing widespread anxiety among immigrants throughout the Bay Area. Many are now questioning everything they see.

A woman who wished to remain anonymous shared that her neighbors and friends are reporting any suspicious vehicles they encounter. “My friend in the morning, I see 4 cars for ICE, but I don’t know if it’s true or not,” she explained. She added, “Nobody comes on the street, nobody you know, it is very bad for everybody.”

On Friday, Oakland Mayor Barbara Lee confirmed that federal agent operations were canceled for the entire Bay Area. However, according to local nonprofits, rumors and misinformation continue to spread rapidly throughout the community.

“There’s already a lot of fear, panic, and anxiety. When people respond to these rapid changes with inaccurate information, it just becomes hurtful,” said Madeline Hernandez, Attorney at the Immigration Institute of the Bay Area.

To address the growing concerns, numerous Bay Area nonprofits and volunteers have been actively working on the ground, reminding community members about 24/7 hotlines specific to their counties. These hotlines serve as crucial resources where residents can report any potential federal agent activity.

“These networks connect individuals to local attorneys who can help represent them or assist their families. They also deploy legal observers who are trained to verify if ICE is actually present,” Hernandez emphasized. “If ICE is present, these observers are trained to record the encounter, ensuring there are no violations of constitutional rights. Any such violations by federal agencies are carefully documented.”

According to the Migration Policy Institute, approximately 42,000 undocumented immigrants reside in San Francisco alone. Many of them face the risk of deportation, a reality that has prompted fear and reluctance to leave their homes.

In response, organizations like La Raza Centro Legal have implemented “know your rights” orientations and provided privacy notices to local businesses. “You might see these notices displayed in windows around the city,” explained Dalia Blevins, JD Case Worker for the removal defense program at La Raza Centro Legal. “They help business owners and managers understand and assert their rights within the workplace.”

To combat misinformation about unconfirmed federal actions, La Raza Centro Legal has deployed community outreach teams across San Francisco. “If you are concerned that it’s ICE presence, it’s important to document what you are seeing,” advised Blevins.

Despite these reassurances, many community members remain unsettled. “They can detain me at any time, but it hasn’t happened. I haven’t been detained,” said one San Francisco resident who preferred to stay anonymous.

The ongoing uncertainty underscores the need for accurate information and community support during these challenging times.
https://abc7news.com/post/anxiety-gripping-immigrant-communities-around-bay-area-possible-misinformation-swirls-federal-raids/18068176/

Florida bill would allow families to sue for killings by illegal migrants, fine police refusing to work with ICE

A Republican Florida state lawmaker proposed a bill Monday that would open up opportunities for families to sue some local governments over killings committed by illegal immigrants.

The Shane Jones Act, which would expand on the Sunshine State’s staunch immigration laws, was authored in honor of its namesake, who was killed in a traffic accident involving an alleged illegal immigrant in 2019.

Rep. Berny Jacques, who introduced the bill, said that Jones’ widowed wife, Nikki, helped inspire the legislation. The bill would impose harsher restrictions on illegal immigrants and even law enforcement officials who violate the state’s immigration policies.

“For too long, American families have been left to pick up the pieces after their loved ones were taken from them by crimes that could have been prevented,” Nikki Jones said in a press release. “The Shane Jones Act represents a turning point, finally holding local governments accountable when they fail to enforce immigration laws.”

The bill outlines a new structure allowing families to sue local governments over the death of a loved one, but only if an illegal immigrant is found to be responsible. It also proposes a $10,000 fine for out-of-compliance law enforcement agencies, which would go toward compensation for the grieving families.

Jacques insisted that the current immigration laws in Florida “require that law enforcement agencies collaborate with federal immigration enforcement officers,” according to a press release.

In the Sunshine State, the law mandates that police agencies use their “best efforts” to work with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), though none are currently required to enter into 287(g) agreements with the federal agency.

The state further argued that no city or police department can cancel the partnerships once they have been agreed to, warning that doing so would be an act of defiance against Florida’s mandate.
https://nypost.com/2025/10/21/us-news/proposed-florida-bill-would-permit-families-to-sue-for-killings-by-undocumented-immigrants-fine-police-refusing-to-work-with-ice/

How the small suburb of Broadview became a flash point in ICE’s crackdown

Since the launch of “Operation Midway Blitz,” the tiny suburb of Broadview has become the focal point of weekly protests and clashes.

These ongoing events have put significant strain on the local police force, challenging their capacity to maintain order and safety.

Residents of Broadview have also been deeply affected, expressing frustration and concern over the disruptions to their community.

As the situation continues to unfold, the suburb remains on edge, balancing between public safety and the right to protest.
https://www.dailyherald.com/20251020/news/how-the-small-suburb-of-broadview-became-a-flash-point-in-ices-crackdown/

DOJ says a “North Texas Antifa Cell” attacked a Texas ICE facility, 2 men indicted

Federal prosecutors have charged two North Texas men accused of helping orchestrate a violent July 4 attack on a U. S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Alvarado, alleging the pair were part of an “Antifa cell” that plotted to target law enforcement officers with gunfire and explosives. Cameron Arnold and Zachary Evetts were federally charged with providing material support to terrorists, attempted murder of officers and employees of the U. S., and discharging a firearm in relation to a crime of violence, according to the indictment from the Department of Justice. The night of July 4, several masked individuals dressed in black, some of them armed, arrived at the Prairieland ICE detention facility, vandalizing vehicles and security cameras in the parking lot, according to authorities. When an Alvarado police officer tried to engage with a person from the group, an unknown number of people opened fire. At least one bullet struck the officer in the neck, police said. What is antifa? The DOJ said in the indictment that “Antifa is a militant enterprise made up of networks of individuals and small groups primarily ascribing to a revolutionary anarchist or autonomous Marxist ideology, which explicitly calls for the overthrow of the U. S. government, law enforcement authorities and the system of law.” The indictment claims the group that Arnold and Evetts were a part of did extensive preplanning before the incident, and that Arnold trained others on firearm use and close-quarters combat. The group was heavily armed with over 50 firearms that were purchased in Fort Worth, Grand Prairie, Dallas and elsewhere, according to the indictment. The document also noted that Arnold allegedly built numerous AR-platform rifles, some of which he distributed to his co-defendants, and at least one of which featured a binary trigger, allowing the gun to shoot at a higher rate by causing two bullets to fire with each trigger cycle. Arnold, Evetts and others also used an encrypted messaging app to coordinate their moves, according to the DOJ. The investigation found that one member of the group wrote “I’m done with peaceful protests” and “Blue lives don’t matter” as part of those conversations. A federal judge in Fort Worth previously decided that Arnold and Evetts must remain behind bars, along with six others tied to the case. Short for “anti-fascist,” antifa activism can be traced back to antiracists who opposed the activities of members of the Ku Klux Klan and neo-Nazis, according to a June 2020 report from the Congressional Research Service. The report describes antifa as “decentralized” and lacking a “unifying organizational structure or detailed ideology.” Instead, it consists of “independent, radical, like-minded groups and individuals” that largely believe in the principles of anarchism, socialism and communism. “There is no single organization called antifa. That’s just not the way these activists have ever organized themselves,” Michael Kenney, a professor at the University of Pittsburgh who has studied antifa, recently told CBS News. “There’s tremendous variation inside that movement, even on issues like political violence.” The FBI has warned about violence perpetrated by antifa adherents, and in 2017, then-FBI Director Chris Wray told Congress that the bureau was looking into “a number of what we would call anarchist extremist investigations, where we have properly predicated subjects who are motivated to commit violent criminal activity on kind of an antifa ideology,” according to CRS. Defense argues “antifa thinking” is not a crime Defense attorneys for Arnold and Evetts argued that anti-government beliefs and “antifa thinking” are not grounds for a crime. They downplayed their clients’ role in the Fourth of July incident, discounting the certainty of gunshot residue evidence, arguing that owning guns is legal, and laying the majority of the blame on Benjamin Hanil Song, one of 17 people initially arrested in connection with the attack. One defense attorney argued that their client did not know what was going to happen that night, thinking they were just driving to protest. July 4 attack at a Texas immigration detention The attack occurred around 11 p. m. on July 4 outside the Prairieland ICE detention facility, which houses between 1, 000 and 2, 000 immigration detainees. According to the Alvarado Police Department, officers responding to the scene saw a person carrying what appeared to be a firearm. When one officer attempted to engage, multiple suspects opened fire Body camera footage captured the chaos as gunfire erupted. One officer was struck in the neck and flown to a Fort Worth hospital. He was treated and later released. Authorities said more than 50 weapons were seized in connection with the group. Additional firearms were recovered days later when Song was found hiding in a Dallas apartment.
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/two-men-involved-in-ice-attack-in-north-texas-officially-charged-and-linked-to-antifa-terrorism/

外国人に起業で在留資格、厳格化 「経営・管理」16日改正

外国人の起業で在留資格「経営・管理」を厳格化、改正省令を公布

出入国在留管理庁は10日、日本で起業などを行う外国人向けの在留資格「経営・管理」の取得要件を厳格化する改正省令を公布しました。施行日は10月16日となっています。

今回の改正では、必要な資本金の基準が従来の500万円以上から3,000万円以上に引き上げられます。これにより、外国人が日本で事業を開始・運営する際の要件が大幅に強化される見込みです。

詳細は有料会員向けの記事でご覧いただけます。

https://www.nishinippon.co.jp/item/1409761/

Three presidential candidates face off in first TV debate in race for Áras

The first televised debate of the presidential campaign was shown on Virgin Media One on Monday night. Hosted by Kieran Cuddihy, the debate featured the three candidates: Independent Catherine Connolly, Fine Gael’s Heather Humphreys, and Fianna Fáil’s Jim Gavin.

The 60-minute programme began with opening statements from the candidates. This was followed by questions on neutrality before moving on to the issue of Irish flags being erected in certain communities, which led to a broader debate about immigration.

The topic raised the first real clash concerning direct provision and asylum seekers. Gavin welcomed immigration but emphasized the need for a robust yet fair immigration system. Connolly was strongly critical of the direct provision process and, when asked about those who are not asylum seekers or whose claims have been rejected, she stated: “We are talking about human beings and about a conflation of issues.”

The debate then moved on to safety on the streets of Dublin and other towns. Humphreys asserted that there are more gardaí on the streets, while Connolly countered that there is a lack of Garda presence on the ground, particularly community gardaí.

There were also strong exchanges on the situation in Gaza between Connolly and Gavin before the discussion turned to the challenging topic of housing. Connolly was adamant that the Government has failed miserably in this area. Humphreys defended the Government’s performance to date, acknowledging that ambitious goals were not achieved but noting that the solution is very complex.

A potential United Ireland was also discussed, with all three candidates outlining their experiences with communities in the North. Humphreys spoke of her experience as a “proud Ulsterwoman and Republican.”

### Opening Statements

In the initial addresses, Catherine Connolly opened proceedings, saying:

> “As President and working together, we can shape a new United Republic, where everyone is valued, where diversity is cherished, where sustainable solutions are urgently implemented and where a home is a fundamental human right.

> A country where we raise our voice for the peaceful resolution to conflicts and war, drawing on our history of colonization, of famine and our lived experience of the successful peace process in the North.”

Heather Humphreys said:

> “I want to bring my life experience to the role of President. I worked for many years as a Credit Union manager; where I got to know people; and the challenges they faced. It was a great apprenticeship for public life.

> I was honoured to serve in Cabinet for over a decade. I led the 1916 Commemorations. I supported businesses through the pandemic; and I worked hard to ensure children across our country receive a Hot School meal.

> I’m a daughter, a mother and a grandmother. All my life I have seen the quiet strength of women.

> In my own family, in my community and right across this country, women have been the ones holding things together. I can’t promise perfection, but I will promise honesty, compassion and service.”

Jim Gavin said:

> “Over the last four decades I’ve served my country and its values in many different roles. From working in our most disadvantaged communities to leading peacekeepers in Africa, I’ve always worked to serve others.

> I’ve built teams which show how much we can achieve when we listen and when we respect each other. There’s no problem we cannot overcome when we work together.

> At a time of growing division, my commitment to you is that I will be a President for every section of society. A voice for all.”

### Campaign Activity and Upcoming Debates

Earlier today, Humphreys and Gavin were canvassing in Dublin, while it is understood that Connolly was focusing on her debate preparation.

Further presidential debates are planned to be broadcast on Prime Time and The Week in Politics.

The election takes place on Friday, October 24th, with counting beginning the following day.
https://www.breakingnews.ie/ireland/three-presidential-candidates-face-off-in-first-tv-debate-in-race-for-aras-1812756.html

South Korea and US to form joint working group to improve visa system

South Korea and the United States are set to launch a joint working group this week aimed at improving the US visa system for South Korean workers, Yonhap News Agency reported.

The move comes in response to the recent detention of more than 300 Korean nationals during a US immigration raid in Georgia, diplomatic sources said Sunday. The first meeting of the new working group will take place in Washington on Tuesday, just weeks after the high-profile raid on a factory construction site that drew international attention, according to Yonhap News Agency.

The detained workers were held for about a week over what officials described as unclear visa violations before being released following diplomatic negotiations between Seoul and Washington.

According to diplomatic sources, South Korea’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the US State Department will jointly lead the initiative. The US Department of Homeland Security and Commerce Department are also believed to be taking part in the group.

The two nations are widely expected to discuss how to improve the US visa system for South Korean workers at a time when Korean firms have been carrying out large manufacturing projects in the US.

Many of those who were detained in the Georgia raid had arrived in the US on a B1 visa, which is issued for business purposes such as attending meetings or signing contracts, or under the Electronic System for Travel Authorization (ESTA).
https://www.mid-day.com/news/world-news/article/south-korea-us-set-to-launch-joint-working-group-to-improve-visa-system-weeks-after-high-profile-raid-on-korean-nationals-23596280

Trump confident ahead of Monday showdown, says Dems’ position makes shutdown likely

Washington — President Trump said Sunday that a government shutdown is likely unless top Democrats back down from their negotiating position.

“I just don’t know how we are going to solve this issue,” Mr. Trump said in a phone interview with CBS News.

Mr. Trump also expressed confidence that the American people will side with him if government funding expires in the coming days. He believes Democrats will pay a political price for not working with him, on his terms, to further cut spending.

“They’re not interested in fraud, waste and abuse,” Mr. Trump said of the Democrats.

The president is scheduled to meet Monday with congressional leaders ahead of the Oct. 1 deadline for lawmakers to reach an agreement on a spending bill that would avert a shutdown.

A source close to Mr. Trump told CBS News that the president privately welcomes the prospect of a shutdown because it will enable him to wield executive power to slash some government programs and salaries.

Last week, the White House Office of Management and Budget sent a memo to federal agencies instructing them to prepare layoff plans if there is a government shutdown. The memo, obtained by CBS News, directs agencies to consider reduction-in-force (RIF) notices—a federal term for layoffs—for employees in programs, projects, or activities with discretionary funding that stops on Oct. 1 or that lack alternative funding sources.

The memo further states that employees should receive RIF notices if they work in programs or projects “not consistent with the President’s priorities.”

In the interview Sunday, Mr. Trump criticized the Democrats’ current demands, which in recent weeks have focused on extending Affordable Care Act insurance subsidies, calling them ill-advised.

Instead, Mr. Trump said, if the Democrats want to discuss health care, they should work with him to prevent undocumented migrants from accessing public benefits.

“The Democrats, incredibly, want to keep their old policies of open borders and we’re not going to have it. We’re not going to allow it,” Mr. Trump said.

He added that any possible health-care negotiations must address immigration and border-related matters; otherwise, “It’s just not acceptable for us.”

Democrats have forcefully pushed back against Mr. Trump’s characterization of their positions on both government funding and immigration. They emphasize that people who are in the U.S. illegally are not eligible to receive Medicaid coverage.

“Donald Trump knows, or at least I think he knows, that current federal law prohibits using taxpayer dollars for undocumented immigrants in connection with their health care. And no one is trying to change or reverse that law,” House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries told MSNBC on Saturday.

“What we are doing is fighting to protect the healthcare of everyday Americans in the midst of this Republican-caused crisis that is devastating hospitals and nursing homes and community-based health clinics,” Jeffries added.

Mr. Trump is scheduled to meet Monday with Senate Majority Leader John Thune, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, House Speaker Mike Johnson, and Jeffries. The meeting comes after the president canceled an initial session last week, citing the Democrats’ “unserious and ridiculous” demands.

Earlier this month, the House approved a GOP-led continuing resolution to keep the government funded until Nov. 21. However, Democrats put forward their own proposal to keep the government funded until Oct. 31, including other party priorities such as their health-care request.

In the Senate, where 60 votes are needed to advance most legislation, both the House-passed bill and the Democrats’ proposal fell short.

The Democrats’ proposal includes a permanent extension of enhanced tax credits for Americans purchasing health insurance through the Affordable Care Act marketplace, which Democrats have described as a red line for their support.

The proposal would also roll back cuts to Medicaid in Mr. Trump’s “big, beautiful” bill and restore funding for public broadcasters that was rescinded earlier this year.

The Senate is returning to Washington on Monday after a weeklong recess and will have little time to act to avert a shutdown.

Echoing Mr. Trump, Senate Majority Leader John Thune told NBC’s “Meet the Press” that it’s “totally up to the Democrats” whether the government shuts down, noting “there is a bill sitting at the desk in the Senate right now” that the House passed to keep the government open.

“This decision, in my judgment at this point in time, is up to a handful of Democrats,” Thune said. “We need eight Democrats to pass it through the Senate.”

Senator Amy Klobuchar, a Minnesota Democrat, told “Face the Nation” Sunday that “Democrats are united in pushing” on the health-care issue and expressed optimism about the upcoming meeting.

“This is an opportunity for the country because of one big problem, and that is that the Republicans have created a health care crisis,” Klobuchar said. “My constituents, Americans, are standing on a cliff right now with these insurance premium increases that are upon them.”

— Contributed to this report
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/trump-confident-government-shutdown-meeting/

Trump’s $100,000 H-1B Gamble: An Erratic Tax On Talent That Will Hollow Out Indo-US Trust

When policy looks like a tantrum, economies pay the price. Last week’s proclamation from the White House slapped a staggering $100,000 charge on H-1B sponsorships — a move rolled out with breathtaking haste and defended as a revenue-and-protection measure by the administration.

Whatever its stated objectives, the practical arithmetic and geopolitical fallout are stark: this is not a narrow reform but a blunt instrument aimed squarely at the talent bridge between India and America.

### The Numbers Speak First

The H-1B system is not small. USCIS approved roughly 399,395 H-1B petitions in FY-2024, of which about 141,205 were approvals for initial employment (new entrants rather than renewals). The statutory annual cap remains 85,000 (65,000 regular slots plus 20,000 for advanced degrees).

Depending on how the new charge is applied, the headline revenue to U.S. coffers could range widely — and not all of it would be net gain once economic second-order effects are accounted for.

– If the $100,000 were charged only to the statutory cap (85,000 new visas), the gross take is $8.5 billion.
– If it were to fall against all initial petitions approved in a year (~141,205), that figure jumps to roughly $14.1 billion.
– If the levy extended to every approved petition in FY-2024 (a broader and legally doubtful reading), the sum would be nearly $40 billion.

(Using today’s rupee-dollar rates, $100,000 is roughly ₹8.8 lakh — small variations in exchange rates explain why some reports quote ₹83 lakh or ₹88 lakh.)

### Beyond Raw Revenue

Raw revenue is not the whole ledger. Indian technocrats are woven through American tech, finance, healthcare, and academia — they are founding entrepreneurs, senior engineers, hospital specialists, and university researchers. Indian nationals accounted for roughly three-quarters of H-1B approvals in recent years, a concentration that means any blunt restriction falls disproportionately on India.

Much of the economic value these professionals create — patents, start-ups, payroll taxes, consumption, and managerial leadership — is not captured by a one-off visa levy. Indiaspora and industry studies show the Indian diaspora’s economic footprint in the U.S. runs into the tens or hundreds of billions when multiplicative effects are counted; students alone contribute over $8 billion a year in tuition and living expenses.

Strip mobility, and the innovation pipeline is damaged in ways a fee cannot repair.

### Who Gets Hit?

In one sense, every company that depends on specialized, mobile labor — from Amazon and Microsoft to giant Indian services exporters such as TCS and Infosys — faces sharply higher costs. Federal filings show Amazon, Cognizant, Ernst & Young, TCS, and others among the biggest sponsors; Amazon alone accounted for thousands of H-1B beneficiaries in 2024.

For Indian services firms that staff client sites across the U.S., the hit is not merely additional fees but the prospect of re-pricing contracts, canceling placements, or shifting delivery back offshore — with attendant margin and reputational damage. Smaller U.S. start-ups, which rely on H-1B hires to scale, would be squeezed even harder.

How many Indian lives and careers are immediately endangered is a question of definitions: reports quote a range from roughly 300,000 to 700,000 Indians affected, depending on whether one counts active H-1Bs, beneficiaries plus dependents, or cumulative approvals.

That variance matters politically: a conservative figure of ~300,000 still represents whole communities clustered in specific Indian ecosystems — Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Chennai, Pune, Mumbai, and the Delhi-NCR corridor — and flows of talent that feed the wider economy through remittances, entrepreneurship, and investments.

States that account for the lion’s share of India’s software exports — Karnataka, Maharashtra, Telangana, and Tamil Nadu — will feel the blow most directly, since they host the headquarters and campus pipelines that feed U.S. placements.

### Americans Will Also Be Hit

So what does the U.S. “gain”? The immediate fiscal headline looks seductive: billions in receipts (depending on the base) and, the administration argues, pressure on employers to hire domestically.

But the counterfactual is costly. Reduced mobility will depress U.S. innovation output, delay product roadmaps, shrink start-up formation by immigrant founders, and raise costs for firms that cannot easily replace experience embodied in transferred teams.

In short, short-term revenue risks becoming a longer-term tax on competitiveness.

### What Should Be India’s Future Strategy?

There is no single lever; this moment calls for a layered response:

**1. Diplomatic Containment and Negotiation**
New Delhi must mount a calibrated diplomatic offensive — not tit-for-tat, but targeted advocacy for carve-outs (healthcare, critical R&D, academic exchanges) and grandfathering of current holders. India should channel industry pressure through U.S. corporate stakeholders who will lose talent and lobby Congress.

**2. Legal and Multilateral Pressure**
The legality of an executive fee of this magnitude will be challenged in U.S. courts; India and affected firms should coordinate legal and administrative reviews while using WTO and international forums to underscore the externalities of unilateral, extra-legislative measures.

**3. Offshore Resilience and Near-Shoring**
Indian firms must accelerate higher-value onshore-offshore models: repatriate roles to Indian delivery centers, deepen centers in neighboring time zones (ASEAN, Middle East), and pivot clients to outcome-based contracts rather than body-shopping models.

**4. Domestic Absorption and Talent Policy**
Invest the shortfall into skilling, start-up financing, and R&D incentives so returning talent seeds domestic product companies rather than becoming unemployed. States such as Karnataka and Telangana must be offered fiscal support to expand global capability centers.

**5. Strategic Economic Diplomacy**
Broaden mobility pipelines with Europe, Japan, South Korea, Australia, and Canada while pressing for reciprocal mobility and technical collaboration.

### Final Thoughts

The administration’s spectacle — a policy unleashed with headline theatrics and inconsistent clarifications about renewals and scope — has already frayed trust.

If the objective was to protect American workers, the tools chosen are blunt and economically perverse: levy first, measure consequences later.

For India, the need is to turn diplomatic shock into strategic opportunity: convert disruption into accelerated domestic capability, diversify partner markets, and make the case — to U.S. firms and to Washington — that talent mobility is not a subsidy but the oxygen of 21st-century innovation.

If New Delhi and Mumbai react only with anger, they will cede the strategic initiative. If they act with speed, foresight, and the hard policy instruments of investment, skills, and international coalition-building, the loss of a visa corridor can become impetus for a stronger, less dependent India.

*— The writer is a strategic affairs columnist and senior political analyst based in Shimla.*
https://www.freepressjournal.in/analysis/trumps-100000-h-1b-gamble-an-erratic-tax-on-talent-that-will-hollow-out-indo-us-trust

Indian Diaspora Must Speak On Trump’s Policy Changes, Visiting US Congressmen Tell Parliament Panel

A Visiting US Democratic Delegation Voices Concerns Over President Trump’s Policies During Meeting with Indian MPs

A delegation of five US Democratic lawmakers recently engaged with Indian Members of Parliament (MPs) from across party lines in the Standing Committee on External Affairs, chaired by Dr. Shashi Tharoor. The meeting provided an opportunity for frank discussions on several pressing issues pertaining to US-India relations.

During the interaction, the Democratic delegation expressed strong concerns regarding policy changes implemented by US President Donald Trump. Sources reveal that questions were raised by Indian MPs about key issues such as modifications to the H-1B visa program, the 50% tariff imposed on Indian goods, and the persistent involvement of President Trump in matters affecting bilateral ties.

In response, the visiting Democrats urged Indian MPs to motivate the Indian diaspora in the United States to speak out against these policy shifts. They emphasized the importance of advocacy within the Indian-American community to influence US policy decisions favorably.

Following the meeting, committee chairman Dr. Shashi Tharoor addressed the media, stating, “I do want to stress that one of the points we raised is why the Indian-American diaspora has been so silent about all this. One of the Congressmen said not one phone call has come to her office from any Indian-American voter asking her to support a change of policy. This is something that is surprising.”

He further added, “We all need to reach out to the Indian-American population, saying if you care about your relationship with the motherland, then you also have to fight for it and speak for it, and make more of an effort to press your political representative to stand up for India.”

Dr. Tharoor underscored that the visiting US lawmakers are well-disposed towards India and are friends of the country, making their concerns and suggestions particularly noteworthy.

Besides visa and tariff-related issues, the committee also discussed the US sanctions waiver for Iran’s Chabahar Port—an important development project led by India.

The H-1B visa concerns were especially highlighted by opposition leaders from the Samajwadi Party, including Ballia MP Sanatan Pandey and Firozabad MP Akshay Yadav, both of whom noted how these policies affect numerous Indians.

Sanatan Pandey shared, “Sanatan Pandey and I met with the visiting delegation led by Amerish Bera. We told them that we are the third-largest party in India and our leader, along with Akshay Yadav from the Samajwadi Party, raised this matter.”

The delegation also included BJP MPs such as Sudhanshu Trivedi, Ravi Shankar Prasad, Aparajita Sarangi, and Bansuri Swaraj, among others.

The first half of the meeting featured a detailed briefing on India-Sri Lanka relations, with India’s Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri providing insights to the committee members.

This interactive session marks an important step in fostering dialogue and cooperation between US lawmakers and Indian parliamentarians concerning bilateral matters, diaspora engagement, and regional strategic interests.
https://www.news18.com/world/indian-diaspora-must-speak-on-trumps-policy-changes-visiting-us-congressmen-tell-parliament-panel-9592589.html