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Obama ‘Missed Opportunity’ in SOTU to Push for High-Skilled Immigration Reform, Shapiro Says

CEA is “disappointed” that President Barack Obama “missed the opportunity” in his State of the Union address “to push for strategic immigration reform,” said CEA President Gary Shapiro Wednesday in a statement. Immigration reform for the high-skilled is needed “to…

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keep the world’s best and brightest here in the U.S. to build companies and create jobs, a key policy component necessary to maintain our leadership in innovation,” Shapiro said. “We also would have appreciated the recognition he provided in the 2014 State of the Union speech that patent trolls are hurting America's job creators.” Shapiro hailed Obama’s promise to “proactively seek bipartisan support” of trade promotion authority (TPA), “especially with the opportunity we have this year to pass trade agreements that help our manufacturing sector.” To compete in the global marketplace, “U.S. manufacturers have to be able to effectively supply the world with their products,” Shapiro said. “Passing TPA legislation that reflects the realities of the digital age would not only improve U.S. trade, but also strengthen job creation and bolster our economic recovery.” CEA agrees with the need to preserve an open Internet, Shapiro said. But “the best way to do so is through a measured and common-sense approach that encourages competition” among ISPs and investment in the Internet, he said. That’s “a solution that balances the desire for open access with the need to continue encouraging innovation,” he said. CEA also backs Obama’s call “to reform unfair and outdated tax laws that allow more than $2 trillion in U.S. corporate earnings to be held overseas, and use those funds to help upgrade our nation’s infrastructure,” Shapiro said.