New York Times
By Julia Preston
July 29, 2014
Most
Americans surveyed in a poll released Tuesday said the United States
should give shelter and assistance to children from Central America
coming here illegally without
their parents while the authorities decide whether they can stay.
In
the poll, by the Public Religion Research Institute, a nonpartisan
organization that conducts research on religious values in public life,
69 percent of respondents
said the children should be treated as refugees and should be allowed
to stay “if authorities determine it is not safe for them to return to
their home country.”
About
a quarter of Americans in the survey, 27 percent, said the minors
should be “treated as illegal immigrants” and deported to their home
countries.
Of
those polled, 56 percent said the families of children coming from
Central America were acting to keep the young people safe from violence
in their home countries.
Some 38 percent of those polled said the families were “taking
advantage of American good will” and trying to stay illegally in the
United States.
“There
is broad consistency for a policy offering support for the
unaccompanied children and a determination process, not just an open
door,” said Robert P. Jones, chief
executive of the research institute. “At the same time, there are
concerns that policy may bring some negative consequences, and the
situation has raised people’s concerns about immigrants overall.”
More
than 57,000 unaccompanied minors have been detained crossing the
southwest border illegally since Oct. 1, most from three countries in
Central America. About half
of the people responding to the poll said they had heard “a lot” about
the crisis. In Washington, Congress is debating a request from the White
House for $3.7 billion in emergency funds to deal with the surge and
also considering bills that would accelerate
deportations of the youths. With both parties divided on the issues, it
was unclear whether any money would be approved before the summer
recess begins next week.
Even
some Americans who favored refuge for the youths expressed worries
about the impact of such a policy, Mr. Jones said. In the poll, 59
percent said allowing children
to stay would “encourage others to ignore our laws and increase illegal
immigration.”
In
a tracking poll by the institute, the share of Americans who regard
immigrants as a social burden increased to 42 percent last week from 38
percent in the first week
of April, while the share who said immigrants strengthen the country
through their hard work fell to 49 percent last week from 54 percent in
the first week of April.
But
the concerns did not affect broad overall support for Congress to pass
legislation with a pathway to citizenship for immigrants already living
illegally in the country.
Last week support for that option was 58 percent, according to the
survey, down only three percentage points from early April.
The
poll was bilingual, in English and Spanish, and was based on telephone
interviews conducted from July 23 to July 27. Interviews were conducted
with a random sample
of 1,026 adults over 17 in the continental United States, including 512
respondents on cellphones. The margin of error was plus or minus three
percentage points.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
No comments:
Post a Comment