Republican slams Purdue University for hiring H-1B foreign national for professor role at $127,500: 'Can no American teach marketing in Chicago?'

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 'Can no American teach marketing in Chicago?'

Indiana State Representative Andrew Ireland has criticised Purdue University Northwest for filing an H-1B visa to hire a foreign national as an assistant professor of marketing, starting June 2026 at a salary of $127,500. The Republican called the move unfair to American workers and questioned whether there were qualified US applicants nearby in Chicago.In a post on X, he said: "Taxpayer-funded Purdue University disclosed it is hiring a foreigner on an H-1B visa to teach marketing."Andrew also added: "Does anyone seriously believe no American in the Chicago area can teach marketing for $127,500 a year? The same university even has a PHD program for marketing students"

The position was posted on Purdue Northwest’s Labor Condition Application and would run from June 1, 2026 to May 31, 2029 at the Hammond campus. Purdue University has been active in using the H-1B program. According to USCIS data, Purdue filed 265 H-1B Labor Condition Applications in fiscal year 2025, with 258 approved.H-1B visas are intended for “specialty occupations” where no qualified Americans are available. But MAGA critics and 'America First' propagators argue that in fields such as marketing, software engineering, and data science, there is an abundance of domestic talent.

However, last year, leaders like President Donald Trump, ex-DOGE leaders Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy have defended H1-B visas as a necessary source to attract the best and talented people from around the globe. USCIS statistics for fiscal year 2024 show 399,395 H-1B petitions approved nationwide, a 3 per cent increase from the previous year. Educational institutions accounted for 5.6 per cent of approvals. GOP nationalist leaders have claimed that such numbers suppress wages and allow foreigners to replace Americans in the job industry with less pay.

This, in turn, limits opportunities for US graduates who want to apply to Ivy League institutions.In another social media interaction, Andrew was told by a user that universities hire the best people irrespective of their origins: "Universities try to hire the best person for the job, regardless of whether he is American or foreign. Under your thinking, Princeton wouldn't hire Einstein, because they could have gotten some guy from Kentucky for the same price."To which Andrew replied: "7.5 million people live within an hour of campus. Do you really think none are better hires as an assistant marketing professor at a satellite campus? If the concern is recruiting Einstein, O-1 visas exist for a reason."

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