Washington: US President Donald
Trump announced Wednesday that his long-promised “ gold card ” was officially
going on sale, offering legal status and an eventual pathway to US citizenship
for individuals paying $1 million and corporations ponying up twice that per
foreign-born employee.
A website accepting applications
went live as Trump revealed the start of the program while surrounded by
business leaders in the White House's Roosevelt Room. It is meant to replace
EB-5 visas, which Congress created in 1990 to generate foreign investment and
had been available to people who spend about $1 million on a company that
employs at least 10 people.
Trump sees the new version as a way
for the US to attract and retain top talent, all while generating revenue for
federal coffers. He's been promoting the gold card program for months, and once
suggested that each card would cost $5 million, though he more recently revised
that to the $1 million and $2 million pricing scheme.
The president said all funds taken
in as part of the program will “go to the U.S. government” and predicted that
billions would flow into an account run by the Treasury Department “where we
can do things positive for the country.”
The new program is actually a green
card, effectively offering permanent legal residency with the chance for
citizenship. “Basically, it's a green card but much better," Trump said.
“Much more powerful, a much stronger path.”
The president made no mention of
requirements for job creation for applying corporations or on overall caps on
the program, which exist under the current EB-5 program. Instead, he said he'd
heard complaints from business leaders who had been unable to recruit
outstanding graduates from U.S. universities because they were from other
countries and lacked permission to stay.
“You can't hire people from the best
colleges because you don't know whether or not you can keep the person,” Trump
said. Trump has built his political career around clamping down on the
U.S.-Mexico border and championing hard-line immigration policies. His second
administration spent its first 10-plus months launching mass deportation pushes
and sweeping immigration crackdowns that have targeted cities including Los
Angeles and Charlotte.
But he's also drawn criticism from
leading voices of his “Make America Great Again” movement for repeatedly
suggesting that skilled immigrants should be allowed into the U.S. — something
the gold card program could facilitate. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said
the program will include $15,000 for applicant vetting and that the thorough
process used to scrutinize backgrounds would ”make sure these people absolutely
qualify to be in America.”
Companies will be able to receive multiple cards,
but will be limited to one individual per card, he said.
Lutnick also said the current green
card holders earn less money than the average American, and that Trump wanted
to change that. "So, same visas, but now just full of the best people,”
Lutnick said.
Investors’ visas are common around
the world, with dozens of countries offering versions of “golden visas” to
wealthy individuals, including the United Kingdom, Spain, Greece, Malta,
Australia, Canada and Italy.
Trump said the program means the
U.S. is “getting somebody great coming into our country because we think these
will be some tremendous people" and singled out top U.S. college graduates
from China, India and France as among those who will possibly be receiving gold
cards. “The companies are going to be very happy,” he said.