City
Epaper

US lawmakers unite to defend bilateral ties with India through letters and resolutions

By IANS | Updated: October 28, 2025 08:15 IST

Washington, Oct 27 Both Republican and Democratic lawmakers have joined hands to support the India-US relationship, months after ...

Open in App

Washington, Oct 27 Both Republican and Democratic lawmakers have joined hands to support the India-US relationship, months after the Trump administration announced a series of policies targeting Indian interests.

At least six bipartisan letters and resolutions have been drafted over the past 10 days defending the interests of the Indian American community, reaffirming support for the India–US partnership, and pressing the administration for accountability over its recent actions targeting New Delhi.

Last week, a group of House members expressed concern that an event at Rutgers University on Monday could "fuel further prejudice" against Hindus at a time when Hindu temples have been targets of violence.

The co-signers of the letter were Democrats Sanford Bishop from Georgia, Shri Thanedar from Illinois, and Suhas Subramanyam from Virginia, and Republican Rich McCormick, also from Georgia.

Two days earlier, another bipartisan group of six House Representatives wrote to US President Donald Trump and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, expressing concerns over the H-1B proclamation.

"We are concerned that the recent proclamation related to H-1B visa petitions will create significant challenges for US employers and overall weaken our competitiveness," the letter stated.

The group again included Democrat Suhas Subramanyam along with Republican Congressmen Jay Obernolte and Don Bacon, among others.

On October 17, four US lawmakers wrote to President Donald Trump, urging him to attend the Quad Leaders' Summit in India and other meetings in Asia.

The same day, a bipartisan resolution was introduced in the House of Representatives to recognise the "contributions made to the United States by the Indian American diaspora" and condemn recent acts of racism against Indian Americans.

The resolution also termed the India-US relationship as "one of the most important democratic partnerships in the world".

It was a sharp departure from just days earlier, when 19 House members, all Democrats with no Republican support, wrote to President Donald Trump on October 8, urging him to "reset and repair" the India-US "critical partnership".

Leaders from both Democratic and Republican parties have faced criticism for mostly remaining silent as senior officials of the Trump administration, like Trade Advisor Peter Navarro and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, repeatedly targeted India over its purchase of Russian oil and trade imbalance.

In August, the Trump administration imposed 50 per cent tariffs on New Delhi, which included a 25 per cent levy for importing Russian oil.

Then, in September, President Donald Trump signed a proclamation on H-1B visas, imposing a $100,000 application fee to restrict the programme. Over 70 per cent of the approved H-1B applications in 2024 went to Indian nationals.

While a handful of Democrats opposed the administration’s stance publicly, Republican lawmakers, until recently, decided to keep quiet.

In early October, Democratic Representative Ami Bera, a leading advocate of the US-India relationship, told IANS that some Republican lawmakers have remained silent out of fear of the president.

"I think they're certainly afraid to take on President Trump directly," he said.

In recent weeks, ties have stabilised, and negotiators have resumed talks to finalise the first phase of a trade agreement.

Last week, President Donald Trump held a special Diwali event at the White House where he termed Prime Minister Narendra Modi "a great person" and said he loves "the people of India."

Bera added that more members should come out to support the relationship.

"Instead of making this about President Trump, let's make it about the US-India relationship. Let's make it about what we think as members of Congress - Democrats and Republicans. I don't want the India-US relationship to be a Democratic thing or a Republican thing. It should be an American thing," he told IANS.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

CricketRuturaj Gaikwad admits CSK lack 'X-factor' in bowling, hails team effort after win over DC

InternationalUS Navy starts mine-clearance operations in Strait of Hormuz

Other SportsPV Sindhu, Harmanpreet Kaur experience HYROX race in Bengaluru

InternationalEAM Jaishankar meets UAE Foreign Minister in Abu Dhabi; discusses West Asia security and strategic partnership

CricketSanju Samson credits CSK trust, resilience after match-winning century against DC in IPL 2026 clash

Business Realted Stories

BusinessIndia's marine product exports reach Rs 62,408 crore in 2024-25, exporters urged to work towards Rs 1 lakh crore target

BusinessDelhi BJP chief Virendra Sachdeva welcomes draft EV policy

BusinessIndia turns crisis into opportunity by augmenting strategic petroleum reserve capacities, diversifying imports

BusinessAIDA urges Centre to roll out ethanol-based cooking nationwide to cut reliance on imported LPG

BusinessGovt raises diesel duties, hikes ATF levy with immediate effect