Washington Times
By Stephen Dinan
September 15, 2015
Democrats have become far more open to legalizing illegal immigrants over the last decade, while Republicans remain adamantly opposed, according to extensive new polling by the Chicago Council on Global Affairs that helps explain the rise of businessman Donald Trump within the GOP presidential field and the dim hopes for getting anything done in Congress.
Little
more than a decade ago, voters in both parties generally agreed that
unchecked immigration was a significant threat to U.S. vital interests —
with Democrats actually
topping Republicans in that belief, 63 percent to 58 percent. Now,
however, the parties diverge wildly, with 63 percent of Republicans
saying immigration is a threat, while just 29 percent of Democrats rate
it so.
Independents are spot in the middle, with 46 percent seeing immigration as a threat.
“Today,
the partisan gaps between Republicans and Democrats on illegal
immigration are at record levels,” the Chicago Council said. “Two-thirds
of Republicans, but only
one-third of Democrats, say that controlling and reducing illegal
immigration is a very important goal of U.S. foreign policy.”
Overall,
Democrats share many of the same foreign policy goals as voters who
identify with the GOP or who state they are independent, the Chicago
Council found, ranging
from the threat from radical Islam to the spread of nuclear weapons.
But
the two parties split radically on immigration and global warming,
where Democrats are far more likely to say the U.S. must change, even if
it means major costs to
the government and economy: 56 percent of Democrats said climate change
is serious and big steps are needed, while just 12 percent of
Republicans agreed.
Indeed,
Democrats place climate change as a top-five threat to the U.S., while
Republicans ranked it dead last out of 20 possible threats, according to
the poll, which
surveyed 2,034 adults between May 28 and June 17.
The changing attitudes on immigration trace back to the beginning of President George W. Bush’s tenure in office.
Under
President Clinton, a Democrat who oversaw the stiffest immigration
policies in modern politics, the parties generally agreed that mass
immigration was a threat to
U.S. interests — and Democrats were even slightly more staunch in that
view, at 58 percent to 56 percent for the GOP. But those attitudes
changed, ironically, under Mr. Bush, who pushed for more leniency for
illegal immigrants.
Democrats
appeared to side with Mr. Bush, while his own GOP loyalists split from
him. The divide has only deepened under President Obama, who has used
the issue as a political
wedge, urging Hispanic voters to punish Republicans for not embracing
legalization.
But
that’s an unpopular opinion within Republican circles, where 45 percent
said illegal immigrants should be forced to leave the country, and
another 16 percent said
they can stay but should never be allowed to apply for citizenship. By
contrast, the vast majority of Democrats say they should be allowed to
stay and become citizens, either immediately or after they pay a penalty
and “wait a few years.”
The presidential candidates mirror that divide.
Democratic
candidates are competing to be the most generous toward illegal
immigrants, with several of them vowing to go beyond Mr. Obama’s
executive actions and grant
a deportation amnesty to even more than the 5 million this current
White House has tried to include in its policies.
Republican
candidates, meanwhile, are sparring over whether illegal immigrants
should be granted any legal status at all, even if it does fall short of
a special new pathway
to citizenship.
America’s
Voice, a leading pro-immigrant advocacy group, said the Republican
candidates’ rhetoric, and particularly that of Mr. Trump, is leading to a
poisonous atmosphere
for immigrants.
“While
none of the other contenders on the debate stage have fully embraced
Trump’s nativist mass-expulsion platform, Republican candidate after
Republican candidate is
nonetheless lurching to the right on immigration, and embracing
patently ridiculous and offensive immigration policies,” the group said
in a memo ahead of Wednesday’s GOP presidential debate.
The
advocacy group warned that if the GOP doesn’t change its stances or
tone on the issue, it will see a political backlash from Hispanic and
Asian voters.
An
MSNBC/Telemundo/Marist poll released earlier this week found that black
voters also fully embrace the cause of illegal immigrants.
On
question after question, black voters were as likely, or sometimes even
more likely, than Hispanic voters to back lenient policies.
For
example, only 23 percent of black voters wanted to see illegal
immigrants deported to remove the need for sanctuary cities, which is
even smaller than the 27 percent
of Hispanics who supported deportation. And 65 percent of black voters
found the term “anchor baby” to be an offensive way to describe a child
born to an illegal immigrant mother — while just 56 percent of Hispanics
found it offensive.
As with the Chicago Council poll, the MSNBC survey found a deep party divide on those questions too.
The
split contrasts with most other areas of policy. Despite intense
differences between Republicans and Democrats over the Iran nuclear deal
and Mr. Obama’s handling
of world hot spots, voters in both parties generally favor an active
U.S. role in world affairs, the Chicago Council survey found.
Sixty-nine
percent of the GOP and 67 percent of Democrats backed a strong American
role. Independents are slight outliers, with just 57 percent of them
favoring an active
role.
Republicans
are more likely to perceive Islamic fundamentalism as a critical
threat, but the GOP, Democrats and independents all said the threat rose
over the last year.
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