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WATCH: Foreign workers can sue, Americans can’t? John Miano exposes a stunning immigration fight * WorldNetDaily * by WND Staff

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Did the Trump Justice Department just side with foreign workers against American workers?

In this explosive interview, Elizabeth Farah sits down with immigration attorney, former software engineer, and immigration policy expert John Miano to discuss a little-known legal battle that could have major consequences for American workers, immigration law, and the future of the America First movement.

Miano has spent decades fighting immigration abuses in the courts and exposing how visa programs are used to replace American workers with lower-cost foreign labor. He joins Farah to discuss a recent Supreme Court case challenging a program that allows certain spouses of H-1B visa holders to work in the United States, and why he believes the Justice Department’s response amounted to a stunning betrayal of American workers.

According to Miano, the Trump administration’s legal filing not only defended the controversial program, but also argued that American workers may lack standing to challenge these policies in court. Meanwhile, foreign workers and their advocates were permitted to intervene in the case and defend the program. The result, he argues, is a system where Americans face extraordinary barriers to defending their own economic interests.

The conversation also explores the broader immigration system, including H-1B visas, Optional Practical Training (OPT), foreign student visas, outsourcing firms, university lobbying, Big Tech influence, and the legal loopholes that have allowed corporations to import foreign labor while American graduates struggle to find work.

Drawing on his own experience as a software engineer, Miano recounts witnessing entire departments of American workers replaced by foreign labor contractors, then being brought in later to help clean up the damage. He argues that many of the claims used to justify these programs, including alleged labor shortages and a lack of qualified American workers, simply do not match reality.

At its core, this is a conversation about executive power, immigration policy, the courts, the future of American labor, and whether the government is truly putting American workers first.

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