Posts - Bill - HR 4687 Partner with Korea Act
house 07/23/2025 - 119th Congress
We are working to establish a new visa category that allows highly skilled professionals from South Korea to work in the U.S., with a yearly cap of 15,000 visas. This aims to strengthen economic and professional ties between our two nations through a fair and reciprocal immigration process.
Congress.gov
HR 4687 - Partner with Korea Act
Views
left-leaning 07/23/2025
Opening doors to skilled Korean workers means more brains, less brawn, and a boost to our innovation economy.
left-leaning 07/23/2025
Partnering with Korea shows we value talent over borders—let’s make immigration a win-win, not a wall.
right-leaning 07/23/2025
Reciprocal or not, opening the door to 15,000 new visas feels like waving goodbye to our workforce.
left-leaning 07/23/2025
If we want to compete globally, we can't just build barriers; we have to build bridges, and this bill does just that.
right-leaning 07/23/2025
More visas? Great—if American jobs aren’t collateral damage in the trade-off.
moderate 07/23/2025
This bill sounds good, but let’s make sure it doesn't shortchange American workers in the process.
moderate 07/23/2025
High-skilled visas for Koreans might be smart, but let’s keep an eye on whether it really levels the playing field here.
moderate 07/23/2025
Reciprocity is fair, but the devil’s in the details—15,000 slots better match actual demand and impact.
right-leaning 07/23/2025
Why welcome more foreign workers when we should be hiring and training Americans first?