By Staff Reporter |
Rep. Eli Crane (R-AZ-02) introduced a bill to impose a three-year moratorium on H-1B visas while major reforms occur in the program.
The bill introduced Wednesday, the End H-1B Visa Abuse Act of 2026, proposes a laundry list of program reforms to include:
- Reducing the annual H-1B cap from 65,000 (not including the 20,000 for advanced degree holders) to 25,000;
- Eliminating existing exemptions;
- Replacing the lottery system with a wage-based selection system;
- Requiring employers to certify inability to source qualified American workers;
- Requiring employers to prove no layoffs occurred;
- Setting the minimum H-1B wage at $200,000 per year;
- Barring H-1B workers from holding multiple jobs;
- Prohibiting third-party staffing agencies from employing H-1B workers;
- Prohibiting H-1B workers from bringing dependents into the country;
- Prohibiting federal agencies from sponsoring or employing nonimmigrant workers;
- Ending Optional Practical Training (OPT);
- Prohibiting H-1B holders from adjusting status to permanent residency; and
- Requiring nonimmigrants to depart the U.S. before changing to another nonimmigrant status.
Crane called the H-1B Program a “flawed process” that needed years of work to restore fairness in employment.
“The federal government should work for hardworking citizens, not the profit margins of massive corporations. We owe it to the American people to prevent the broken H-1B system from boxing them out of jobs they are qualified to perform,” said Crane. “The End H-1B Visa Abuse Act of 2026 would provide greater access to employment, strengthen protocols in the visa process, and prioritize the livelihoods of Americans.”
Rep. Paul Gosar (R-AZ-09) signed on as an original cosponsor, along with Republican Reps. Brandon Gill (TX), Wesley Hunt (TX), Tom McClintock (CA), Keith Self (TX), and Andy Ogles (TN).
Gosar expressed discontent with a program as a cost-saving measure for businesses at the expense of American employment rates.
“The H-1B program has been hijacked to replace American workers with cheaper foreign labor — plain and simple. This bill slams the brakes on a system that’s rigged against our own people and puts American jobs first again,” said Gosar. “If a company can hire an American, they should. No loopholes. No excuses. We’re done subsidizing the outsourcing of our own workforce.”
An overhaul of the H-1B Program has been a priority for President Donald Trump.
Last September, the president imposed a $100,000 entry fee for new H-1B visa recipients. However, this fee doesn’t apply to those residing in the U.S., meaning a vast majority of H-1B holders are exempt.
New data on lottery pool entries and entry fee payments reflected that the entry fee had minimal impact on reducing H-1B visas.
Last week, Financial Express reported that the lottery pool reduced by about 27 percent, from 470,300 to 345,000 entries — still far above the 85,000 cap on visas. Only 85 entry fees have been paid.
Attorney General Kris Mayes sued the Trump administration over the fee in December. Mayes cited the need for foreign labor to staff rural school districts and the semiconductor industry.
In December, the Department of Homeland Security announced it would be amending program regulations by replacing the random lottery for a weighted selection to prioritize skills and wages.
AZ Free News is your #1 source for Arizona news and politics. You can send us news tips using this link.







