AP
June 4, 2015
A
majority of Americans support allowing immigrants living in the country
illegally to stay and be granted legal status, according to a new poll
released Thursday.
The survey conducted by the Pew Research Center found that 72 percent of Americans support legal status for such immigrants.
The
poll found that 56 percent of Republicans agree that immigrants living
in the U.S. illegally should be able to stay as long as they meet
certain criteria, as did 8
in 10 Democrats and three-quarters of independents. The poll question
did not specify what those requirements might be.
At
the same time, 63 percent of Republicans also say immigrants — those in
the U.S. legally and illegally — are a burden on the country when asked
to choose, while 27
percent say they strengthen the country.
Among
Americans overall, more say that immigrants strengthen the country (51
percent) than say they burden the country (41 percent).
The
Pew survey also found that about half of Americans think a lot more can
be done to secure the nation's border. Border security is a common
starting point among many
Republicans for any plan to overhaul the country's immigration system.
Asked
to specify which they support, 42 percent of Americans said that
immigrants currently in the United States illegally should be allowed to
apply for citizenship,
while 26 percent said they should be able to apply for permanent residency, not citizenship.
The
distinction between those two options could be important over the
course of the 2016 presidential campaign, with Hillary Clinton
supporting a path to citizenship and
some Republicans stopping at offering legal residency.
The
Pew survey also suggests a divide between Republican voters and GOP
lawmakers. Researchers found that only 34 percent of Republicans and
Republican-leaning independents
said the party is adequately representing their views on illegal
immigration.
About
half of Democrats, and those whose views lean toward the Democratic
Party's, say that party is doing a good job representing their view on
the issue.
Support
for allowing immigrants in the country illegally to stay can vary
depending on how survey questions are worded. A recent Associated
Press-GfK poll found that about
half of Americans and a third of Republicans support either a path to citizenship or legal status, but that survey did not specify that
immigrants must "meet certain requirements" to qualify, as the Pew
survey did.
Still,
the AP-GfK poll found that most Republicans could at least imagine
voting for a candidate who wanted to keep in place President Barack
Obama's executive action
to postpone many deportations in place.
Last
year, Obama announced plans to expand a program that shields certain
immigrants from deportation and allows them to legally work in the U.S.
The expanded program,
which could benefit more than 4 million people, is on hold after a
federal judge in Texas ordered it halted pending a trial to determine if
the effort is legal.
The
Pew survey was conducted by telephone using landline and cellphones
among 2,002 adults between May 12 and May 18. The poll's margin of error
was plus or minus 2.5
percentage points.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com



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