Los Angeles Times (California)
By Seema Mehta
September 15, 2014
Though
deeply concerned about the effects of illegal immigration on
California, state voters broadly support a path to legalization for the
nation's 12 million unauthorized
residents, according to a new poll.
Across
major demographic and partisan groups, nearly three in four of those
surveyed favor an overhaul of federal immigration laws. But sharp
divisions emerge over the
fate of unaccompanied minors from Central America who have streamed
over the U.S. border in recent months, the USC Dornsife/Los Angeles
Times poll shows.
Nearly
half call for the children to be immediately deported, but a similar
number say they should be allowed to stay in California as they await
legal proceedings.
The
dichotomy reflects a pragmatic belief that something must be done
without creating an incentive that prompts more people to cross the
border illicitly, said Dave Kanevsky
of American Viewpoint, a Republican polling firm that helped conduct
the bipartisan survey.
"Voters
are compassionate to those here illegally — they recognize this is a
problem that needs to be addressed," he said. "But what they don't want
to do is have solutions
that let the problems continue and fester.... They're compassionate to
immigrants but they're not open-border advocates."
The
findings also reflect a state electorate that has grown increasingly
tolerant of people here illegally in the two decades since the passage
of Proposition 187, the
ballot measure intended to deny taxpayer-funded services to those in
the country illegally. (It was virtually invalidated later by the
courts.)
Illegal
immigration is a crisis or major problem, according to 72% of poll
respondents. That belief was shared by strong majorities of all races,
political leanings, income
levels and geographic regions, and even among those who favored a
conduit to legal status.
Beverly
Bloom, a 59-year-old from Corona who works in physical education at a
high school, said she sees the effect of unbridled immigration every
day. But she doesn't
want her students or their families, many of them in California
illegally, punished.
"I
don't want to hold it against these kids, because these kids are
wonderful children," said Bloom, a Democrat. "Many of them have been
here since they were infants,
or their parents are undocumented, and I would hate to see these people
sent back."
But she is alarmed by the consequences of illegal immigration.
"Oh
my gosh, it's impacted us. Economically, for jobs, it's impacted us.
Insurance, housing, our schools are overcrowded — just across the
board," Bloom said. Those factors
prompted her to favor deportation of the unaccompanied minors.
That
crisis is the most recent flashpoint in the immigration debate, and it
came to a head this summer in Murrieta, drawing national attention.
Protests
forced away federal buses carrying Central American parents and
children apprehended after crossing into Texas and bound for the Inland
Empire city's Border Patrol
facility.
Nearly
half of all poll respondents, and of white voters, said they would be
very or somewhat concerned if they had such a facility in their
communities. Blacks and Asians
were the most concerned and Latinos were the least, at 57% and 41%
respectively.
Latinos
were most in favor of aiding the minors. Two-thirds of Latinos surveyed
said the children should be allowed to stay while awaiting hearings on
their status, compared
with less than half of white voters who felt that way.
And
60% of Latinos support a legislative proposal to provide $3 million for
legal aid for the minors, compared with 41% of white voters.
David
Bradford, 42, is a Republican whose mother emigrated legally from
Mexico when she was a teen. He said he believes the children face
potentially deadly consequences
back home and must be given due process, despite the imposition on the
nation.
"Being
a parent, I would never be able to send my kids across Mexico with some
coyote [smuggler] to hopefully get to America," said the father of two.
"These parents must
have been in a desperate, desperate situation."
Bradford
is in the minority among Republicans, 71% of whom said the children
should be returned to their home nations, a belief that aligns with the
position of President
Obama. Several poll participants said they feared creating a new magnet
that could cause a flood across the border if the United States did not
take decisive action.
"We
need to educate them: 'This is our country and we would love to have
you here, but these are the laws and these are the rules and you have to
follow them,' " said
Marjorie Irons, 55, of Modesto. "It's chaos."
Irons
said she volunteers for the American Red Cross and has friends helping
the minors. "Your heart goes out to these people, but we have to get the
message out to the
home countries that this isn't the way to do it."
Such
divisions largely disappeared on the broader question of federal
immigration laws. A proposal stalled in Congress that includes
heightened security and a pathway
to legality was supported by nearly three in four Democrats,
Republicans, tea party supporters and unaffiliated voters and a strong
majority in various ethnic, age, income and geographic groups.
Drew
Lieberman of Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research, the Democratic half of
the survey team, said the proposal had widespread support partly because
it includes provisions
that appeal to varying interests.
Components
include more border security, employer verification of their workers'
legality, fines for those who hire people in the country illegally and
requirements that
applicants learn English and pay taxes and a penalty.
"It has a little bit of something for everybody," Lieberman said.
The
USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences/Los Angeles Times
poll canvassed 1,507 registered state voters by telephone from Sept. 2
through 8. The margin of
error overall is 2.9 percentage points, higher for subgroups.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
No comments:
Post a Comment