This week Blaze News reported a Biden Department of Homeland Security change to H-1B policy that allows nonimmigrant workers more freedom to work remotely inside the United States. On Tuesday, the Supreme Court declined to hear a petition that would have tested whether executive agencies can reshape rules connected to the H-4 spousal visa program. The move leaves the administration’s regulatory approach in place and raises alarm among conservative critics.
The case targeted the H-4 nonimmigrant program, which serves as the spousal or dependent complement to the H-1B worker visa. Save Jobs USA brought the petition asking the Court to rethink how far DHS can go when it writes employment rules for visa categories. That legal fight is framed as a dispute over statutory authority and the impact on American workers.
The petition was brought by Save Jobs USA, which, according to Reuters, “represents American tech workers who it says were displaced by foreign labor.” The Center for Immigration Studies says the group “is composed of computer professionals who worked at Southern California Edison until they were replaced by H-1B workers.”
Public information about the plaintiffs is limited, but their claims focus squarely on job displacement and administrative reach. Save Jobs USA directly challenges a DHS interpretation shift that, in their view, authorizes work for a broader class of nonimmigrant spouses. Their filings press a constitutional and statutory point: who gets to decide when people can work in America.
“With the H-4 Rule, DHS reversed its earlier interpretation and began allowing certain spouses of H-1B nonimmigrant workers to be employed, despite no such directive in the statute.”
“Following the H-4 Rule, there was an explosion in the number of noncitizens authorized to work in the United States entirely through regulations.”
The petition for a writ of certiorari presented two questions. Those questions go to the heart of whether agency regulations can create work rights that Congress declined to grant.
“whether the Department of Homeland Security can grant work authorization for classes of nonimmigrants for whom Congress has refused to grant work authorization.”
“whether the statutory terms defining nonimmigrant visas in 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(15) are mere threshold entry requirements that cease to apply once an alien is admitted or whether they persist and dictate the terms of a nonimmigrant’s stay in the United States.”
“The petition for a writ of certiorari is denied. Justice [Brett] Kavanaugh took no part in the consideration or decision of this petition.”
Those two lines are the Court’s full explanation on the order list distributed Tuesday. By denying review, the justices left the lower-court decision in place and declined to weigh in on the statutory interpretation dispute. For conservatives who fear agency overreach, that inaction is a missed chance to clarify the boundary between Congress’s power and regulatory authority.
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services notes that the only eligibility requirement for H-4 visas is being the spouse of a qualified and approved H-1B visa holder. That baseline makes the administration’s regulatory choices all the more consequential for how many people can legally enter the job market.
Republican critics argue the administration used rule-writing to expand work authorization instead of seeking congressional approval, and they point to groups like Save Jobs USA as examples of affected Americans. Blaze News contacted the Departments of Homeland Security and State for comment.
Darnell Thompkins is a Canadian-born American and conservative opinion writer who brings a unique perspective to political and cultural discussions. Passionate about traditional values and individual freedoms, Darnell’s commentary reflects his commitment to fostering meaningful dialogue. When he’s not writing, he enjoys watching hockey and celebrating the sport that connects his Canadian roots with his American journey.