Los Angeles Times (California)
By George Skelton
March 25, 2015
Times change. Attitudes soften. People get to know each other and chill.
Twenty-one
years ago, California voters decided overwhelmingly — 59% of them — to
deny public services for immigrants who came here illegally. That
included refusing to
educate kids.
Courts tossed out most of Proposition 187. But they couldn't throw out the sentiment behind it.
Fast-forward to a dramatic reversal in opinion.
In
a new statewide poll released Wednesday night, the Public Policy
Institute of California reported that the vast majority of voters now
favor providing a pathway to
citizenship for immigrants here illegally.
They'd
need to meet certain conditions, including paying back-taxes, passing a
criminal-background check, undergoing a waiting period and learning
English.
Likely
voters favored citizenship for these immigrants by 73% to 24%. Even 61%
of Republicans favored it, although nationally GOP politicians have
been the biggest obstacle
to immigration reform.
All ethnic and age groups strongly supported such citizenship. So did every California region, whether blue or red.
A USC Dornsife/Los Angeles Times poll last September also found broad California support for legalization..
Why the turnaround?
"So
many Californians experience immigrants in their daily lives," said
Mark Baldassare, the policy institute's president and pollster. "And
they're positive experiences.
"We've
seen in our polling that people consistently see immigrants as more of a
benefit to the economy than a burden. They know the importance of citizenship. And they're
at the point where they just want a solution."
Republicans
nationally have been dragging their feet on immigration reform, one of
the blemishes on the GOP brand in California, where the Latino
electorate has grown
substantially since Proposition 187.
Three
Republican congressmen from the immigrant-rich San Joaquin Valley —
Reps. Devin Nunes of Tulare, Jeff Denham of Turlock and David Valadao of
Hanford — have been
fighting their party on the issue, pushing for major reform. So has the
agriculture industry.
But
not the valley's most powerful congressman, Majority Leader Kevin
McCarthy of Bakersfield. He reflects his party's national base and
opposes a comprehensive immigration
bill because, his spokesman Matt Sparks recently told The Times,
President Obama "cannot be entrusted to enforce the immigration laws
previously enacted by Congress."
Last
November, the impatient president acted on his own, through an
executive order, to shelter from threatened deportation up to 5 million
immigrants living in the country
illegally. Roughly 1.5 million are in California.
A Texas federal judge froze the Obama program, and the case is probably headed to the U.S. Supreme Court.
In
the policy institute's poll, 57% of likely voters supported the
president's unilateral action. People's views of Obama played into their
opinions, Baldassare said.
Overall, however, California no longer is bashing illegal immigration.
There's
no broad public consensus on three other issues confronting the state,
the poll found. And it's one reason the politicians often have such a
tough time taking
decisive action.
One polarizing issue is Gov. Jerry Brown's bullet train project.
The
price tag, projected at $68 billion, is twice what voters were told
when they approved the Los Angeles to San Francisco high-speed-rail line
seven years ago. And the
start of construction is more than two years behind schedule for a
29-mile section in the San Joaquin Valley.
Asked
whether they now favor or oppose building the rail system, voters were
evenly split: 48% to 48%. The biggest support was in the San Francisco
Bay Area, the weakest
in the Central Valley and Inland Empire.
Another issue where voters are torn is whether to spend windfall tax receipts on higher education or on paying down state debt.
The
pollster noted that state government is expected to enjoy a
multibillion-dollar surplus over the next several years. Voters were
asked whether the extra should be
used to restore university funding or to pay off debt. The response:
47% universities, 48% debt.
Voters
sided with Brown in his dispute with the University of California over
money. They also did in a USC Dornsife/Times poll in February.
The
governor has proposed kicking in an extra $120 million next year, but
only if tuition remains frozen. UC President Janet Napolitano says the
university needs $100
million more than that annually or it will hike tuition 5% a year.
Asked
about this in the institute's poll, 52% of voters said university
funding should be increased only if tuition isn't raised. In fact, 27%
said funding shouldn't be
boosted in any case.
Brown and Napolitano are trying to negotiate a compromise.
One plus for Brown: His job approval remains high for a politician who has been around so long. It's at 56%.
Whether
to extend Brown's "soak the rich" tax increase — Proposition 30 — when
it starts to expire after next year is another issue that divides
Californians.
Brown
insists it was only meant as a temporary tax, as he promised. But a lot
of money is involved — more than $6 billion annually — and Democrats
are plotting to keep
the revenue flowing.
In
the poll, 48% of voters favored extending the tax; 32% even making it
permanent. But 45% said let it expire. There was one unifying thought,
however: 68% said the voters
should decide, not the Legislature.
They still don't trust Sacramento.
But they've lightened up on illegal immigration. Maybe it's not exactly welcomed. But it's tolerated and viewed realistically.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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