Tuesday, March 24, 2026
18.1 C
New Delhi

‘I’m literally stuck in India’: US cancels H-1b interviews abruptly, leaving workers stranded back home — but why?

‘I’m literally stuck in India’: US cancels H-1b interviews abruptly, leaving workers stranded back home — but why?

Indian H-1B visa holders who traveled to India this month to renew their US work permits are now stranded after American consulates abruptly canceled their appointments and rescheduled them months later, according to immigration lawyers. The disruptions follow the rollout of the Trump administration’s expanded social media vetting policy, leaving hundreds—possibly thousands—of high-skilled workers stuck abroad with expired visas and uncertain timelines for returning to their jobs in the United States.Hundreds, possibly thousands, of high-skilled workers had appointments cancelled between December 15 and 26, a period many H-1B holders target since it coincides with the US holiday season. In emails viewed by The Washington Post, the State Department said interviews were being delayed after the implementation of the Trump administration’s new social media vetting policy “to ensure that no applicants … pose a threat to US national security or public safety.”

Trump’s H-1B Visa Chaos: Jobs At Risk, Families Traumatised As Wait Pushed To Late 2026

The H-1B immigration programme, which allowed hundreds of thousands of foreign workers with specialised skills to live and work in the United States for up to six years, had become controversial during President Trump’s second term. Some far-right backers urged its elimination, arguing it took jobs from US citizens. Tech executives in Silicon Valley, however, defended H-1B workers as vital to the industry.The sudden cancellations upended lives, the lawyers said, leaving workers on expired visas fearful of losing their jobs.

How long Indians have to wait?

It is still not sure, exactly, how long will it take for Indian to clear the H-1B visas.The mass cancellation of scheduled interviews for H-1B visa applicants is expected to cause significant delays in their return to the US, according to a PTI report.The move, prompted by enhanced vetting measures, affects all interviews previously scheduled from December 15 onwards. PTI reported that the rescheduling applies to every applicant whose interview was set from December 15 onwards. The cancellations, introduced by US authorities as part of tighter scrutiny, will push back interview dates and delay visa approvals, extending applicants’ timelines for re-entry.

‘I’m literally stuck in India now’

Emily Neumann, a partner at the Houston-based immigration firm Reddy Neumann Brown PC, said she had at least 100 clients stranded in India. Veena Vijay Ananth, an immigration attorney in India, and Charles Kuck, who practises immigration law in Atlanta, said they each had more than a dozen similar cases. “This is the biggest mess we have seen,” Ananth said. “I’m not sure there is a plan.”Asked for comment, the White House and the US Embassy in India referred The Post to the State Department. A spokesperson said that “while in the past the emphasis may have been on processing cases quickly and reducing wait times, our embassies and consulates around the world, including in India, are now prioritising thoroughly vetting each visa case above all else.”An Indian engineer living in the Detroit suburbs, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said he had appointments set for Dec. 17 and 23 but received an email on December 8 cancelling them and rescheduling for July 2 – more than six months away. “I was like ‘OK, What do I do?’” he recalled. He secured an expedited appointment after his company submitted documentation showing key projects were ramping up next year, but he remained apprehensive. “I’m hoping they honour it and don’t just bump it out further,” he said. Lawyers said such exemptions were rare.Unable to predict when employees would return, US tech executives were scrambling to find accommodations and work-arounds, said a person familiar with the issue. “They don’t know how to deal with this,” the person said, speaking on condition of anonymity. “How long are companies going to be willing to wait for these people?” Neumann asked.People stranded in India had turned to online platforms for advice. On Blind, an anonymous workplace community, one user posted that they were “one of those unlucky souls” whose December appointment was delayed for three months. “I’m literally stuck in India now,” the user wrote. “I’m on unpaid leave, been living off savings for weeks and now I gotta stretch it till march somehow.”On a Facebook group devoted to H-1B issues, a person identifying as a physician posted that their appointment had been pushed to March and asked if it was worth appealing to US senators. “I have dozens of patients scheduled already,” they wrote. “Is there anyone in the same situation as me?”Kuck said the delays might be justified operationally but were driven by partisan politics. “Social media is the excuse,” he said. “But the reason is the extraordinary rise in attacks on the H-1B programme, and Indian nationals in particular.” Go to Source

Hot this week

EC meets state officials, focuses on sealing borders

NEW DELHI: Election Commission Tuesday held a meeting with chief secretaries, chief electoral officers and police chiefs of poll-bound states/UT and 12 other states they share borders with, to review overall election preparedness, law Read More

SC rejects plea for separate enumeration of denotified, nomadic & semi-nomadic tribes

Supreme Court on Tuesday frowned upon a PIL seeking distinct enumeration of denotified, nomadic and semi-nomadic tribes (DNTs), some of which have been given Scheduled Caste or Scheduled Tribe status, during the forthcoming census exe Read More

75L jobs added in informal sector in 2025: NSO survey

NEW DELHI: Signalling a recovery from successive shocks of the last few years – including demonetisation, GST rollout and the Covid pandemic – the informal sector added nearly 75 lakh jobs during Jan-Dec 2025, the latest d Read More

Israel To Allow ‘Non-Hostile’ Vessels To Transit Strait Of Hormuz Under Specific Conditions

Iran has effectively shut the waterway, where 20% of the world’s oil normally transits, since the US-Israeli attack on February 28, driving up oil prices. Read More

US To Deploy Thousands Of Troops To West Asia Amid Ceasefire Talks. Here’s Why

The United States is expected to deploy thousands of soldiers from the US Army’s elite 82nd Airborne Division to West Asia amid reported ceasefire talks. Read More

Topics

EC meets state officials, focuses on sealing borders

NEW DELHI: Election Commission Tuesday held a meeting with chief secretaries, chief electoral officers and police chiefs of poll-bound states/UT and 12 other states they share borders with, to review overall election preparedness, law Read More

SC rejects plea for separate enumeration of denotified, nomadic & semi-nomadic tribes

Supreme Court on Tuesday frowned upon a PIL seeking distinct enumeration of denotified, nomadic and semi-nomadic tribes (DNTs), some of which have been given Scheduled Caste or Scheduled Tribe status, during the forthcoming census exe Read More

75L jobs added in informal sector in 2025: NSO survey

NEW DELHI: Signalling a recovery from successive shocks of the last few years – including demonetisation, GST rollout and the Covid pandemic – the informal sector added nearly 75 lakh jobs during Jan-Dec 2025, the latest d Read More

Israel To Allow ‘Non-Hostile’ Vessels To Transit Strait Of Hormuz Under Specific Conditions

Iran has effectively shut the waterway, where 20% of the world’s oil normally transits, since the US-Israeli attack on February 28, driving up oil prices. Read More

US To Deploy Thousands Of Troops To West Asia Amid Ceasefire Talks. Here’s Why

The United States is expected to deploy thousands of soldiers from the US Army’s elite 82nd Airborne Division to West Asia amid reported ceasefire talks. Read More

Last-minute cancellation of rail tickets gets costlier

NEW DELHI: A last-minute change in plans will cost you dearly, as the Railways has announced a revised rule linking refunds to the timing of ticket cancellations. Read More

Scheduled caste status only for Hindus, Buddhists, Sikhs: SC

NEW DELHI: Supreme Court on Tuesday said no person professing a religion other than Hinduism, Sikhism or Buddhism shall be a member of Scheduled Caste. Read More

In Rajya Sabha, PM Modi warns of prolonged disruption

NEW DELHI: Amid continuing uncertainty over the likely course of the war in West Asia, PM Modi on Tuesday warned of prolonged disruption, saying its adverse effects could last for a long time. Read More

Related Articles