AP
December 18, 2015
More
Americans favor than oppose a pathway to citizenship for immigrants who
are living in the United States illegally, a new Associated Press-GfK
poll shows.
While most Republicans oppose such a path to citizenship, it doesn't seem to be a deal-breaker issue for them.
Here are some things to know about Americans' opinions on immigration policy from the new AP-GfK poll:
___
MOST SUPPORT CITIZENSHIP
A
majority of Americans — 54 percent — support a way for immigrants who
are already in the country illegally to become citizens, while 44
percent are opposed. More than
7 in 10 Democrats are in favor, while about 6 in 10 Republicans are
opposed.
Still,
a significant minority of Republicans — 4 in 10 — do support a path to citizenship. Four in 10 conservative Republicans and 3 in 10 tea party
Republicans favor
a path to citizenship for immigrants already in the country illegally.
Six
in 10 Americans, including three-quarters of Democrats and nearly half
of Republicans, favor providing immigrants who were brought to the
country illegally as children
with a way to stay in the country legally.
___
NOT A DEALBREAKER FOR GOP
The
new poll shows that while tough rhetoric on immigration appeals to a
majority of Republicans, most still don't consider it a deal breaker
issue.
The
poll shows that immigration action taken last year by President Barack
Obama allowing some immigrants to apply for temporary legal status is a
particular sticking
point for Republicans, with 73 percent of them saying they prefer to
support someone who would undo those immigration steps taken by a
president deeply unpopular within their party.
But
25 percent of Republicans say they would prefer to vote for a candidate
who would keep Obama's immigration actions in place. And another 34
percent say they could
vote for such a candidate even though they disagree on that issue, so
long as they see eye to eye on other matters.
Even
among conservative Republicans, more than half say they either prefer a
candidate who would keep the immigration action in place (16 percent)
or that they could imagine
voting for a presidential candidate who would (40 percent).
___
DIVISION ON OBAMA'S ACTIONS
The
poll shows that overall, Americans are split on what they want a 2016
presidential candidate to do about the executive action Obama took last
year. Just over half
(51 percent) say they're more likely to support someone who wants to
keep that action in place, while 46 percent are more likely to support
someone who wants to undo it.
Still,
60 percent of Americans disapprove of the way President Barack Obama is
handling immigration, while just 38 percent approve.
___
BIG ISSUE FOR HISPANICS
Among
Hispanics, a large majority — about three quarters — support a pathway
to citizenship for immigrants in the country illegally.
Hispanics
are far more likely to say they prefer a presidential candidate who
would keep the president's immigration action in place than one who
would prefer to undo
it, by a 74 percent to 20 percent margin. More than half — 56 percent —
say they could not imagine voting for a candidate who wanted to reverse
it, even if they agreed on other issues.
___
IMPORTANCE GOES UP
Americans
are slightly more likely than they were two months ago to see
immigration as a very or extremely important issue, with 61 percent
saying so now after 57 percent
said so in October. Republicans are more likely than Democrats to
consider it an important issue, 76 percent to 51 percent.
Neither
party emerges as the clear winner on who Americans trust more to handle
the issue. Twenty-nine percent say they trust the Democratic Party to
do a better job and
27 percent trust the Republican Party more, while 31 percent say they
trust neither party on handling immigration.
___
The
AP-GfK Poll of 1,007 adults was conducted online Dec. 3-7, using a
sample drawn from GfK's probability-based KnowledgePanel, which is
designed to be representative
of the U.S. population. The margin of sampling error for all
respondents is plus or minus 3.4 percentage points.
Respondents
were first selected randomly using telephone or mail survey methods,
and later interviewed online. People selected for KnowledgePanel who
didn't otherwise
have access to the Internet were provided access at no cost to them.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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