Los Angeles Times
By David Lauter
October 8, 2015
American
views on immigration have grown more polarized, with Republicans taking
harder-line positions as Democrats and independents take more liberal
stands, a new poll
indicates.
The
shift can be seen on several issues, including whether children born in
the U.S. to people in the country illegally should be eligible for
citizenship. Over the last
nine years, Democrats have become steadily more supportive of so-called
birthright citizenship, which is guaranteed by the Constitution’s 14th
Amendment. Republicans have become slightly more opposed to it.
Just
more than half of Republicans favor amending the Constitution to end
birthright citizenship, according to a new poll by the nonpartisan Pew
Research Center. Donald
Trump is among the leading Republicans who have called recently for
ending birthright citizenship, although Trump has argued the change
could be made without amending the Constitution.
Fewer
than 1 in 4 Democrats back an end to birthright citizenship, the poll
found. That's a notable shift since 2006, when slightly more than 1 in 3
Democrats took that
position. Among independents, 37% would back a constitutional
amendment, down from 44% in 2006. Blacks and Latinos have both become
more opposed to an amendment, as have Americans younger than 50.
A
similar shift has taken place on the issue of building a fence along
the entire U.S. border with Mexico. Overall public opinion has remained
stable, with just less than
half of Americans backing the idea. But support has grown in the GOP,
from 65% in a 2007 Pew survey to 73% now. Democrats have gone in the
opposite direction, from 37% support to 29%.
Despite
the intense campaign debate among Republicans over immigration,
two-thirds of Republicans continue to say that they believe that at
least some immigrants in the
U.S. illegally should be allowed to stay. One-third say they should not
be allowed to stay, the position taken by Trump and several other GOP
presidential candidates.
Just
under 4 in 10 Republicans back allowing some illegal immigrants to
obtain citizenship, while about 1 in 4 support giving them status as
permanent residents. Among
Democrats, 80% back legal status, with 57% backing citizenship.
Three-quarters of independents also back legal status, with just less
than half backing citizenship.
The
Pew survey was taken Sept. 22-27 among 1,502 Americans age 18 and
older. The margin of error for the full sample is plus or minus 2.9
percentage points.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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