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ESSAY: AMERICANS’ SUPPORT FOR IMMIGRATION IS AT RECORD HIGHS – BUT THE GOVERNMENT IS OUT OF SYNC WITH THEIR VIEWS

US immigration

In an article first published on The Conversation, MARIANO SANA, of Vanderbilt University, looks at what polls show about American views on immigration…

Since its start, the Trump administration has implemented policies to step up immigration enforcement and reduce the number of immigrants admitted into the US.

Many of these efforts – like the border wall, the travel ban, family separations, DACA termination and detention centres – have received wide media attention. In addition, the White House slashed refugee admissions, ended a number of special programs and changed rules used to adjudicate visa applications.

US immigration

Polls show that Americans feel more welcoming toward immigrants than they have in the past. PICTURE: Evgenia Parajanian/Shutterstock.com

 

“[D]ecades of public opinion polls show that Americans have never felt warmer toward immigrants, nor have they ever been more supportive of immigration.”

As a result of these and myriad lesser-known administrative changes, legally immigrating to the US has become a lot harder, as evidenced by the sharp increase in the number of visa denials in 2018. President Donald Trump heads the most immigration-restrictive administration since the 1920s.

Yet decades of public opinion polls show that Americans have never felt warmer toward immigrants, nor have they ever been more supportive of immigration.

Rolling out the welcome mat
Consider the trends recorded by Gallup, a polling firm.

Since the 1960s, Gallup has been asking this question: “In your view, should immigration be kept at its current level, increased, or decreased?” Those who answer “decreased” have historically outnumbered those who say “increased”, with the gap peaking in the mid-1990s at an overwhelming 65 per cent who wanted decreased immigration, to seven per cent who wanted increased immigration.

Since the turn of the century, however, preferences changed significantly. The last measurement, from this year, showed 35 per cent who want immigration to decrease versus 27 per cent who want it to increase, with 37 per cent of respondents supporting keeping current levels.

That means that nearly two-thirds of Americans are at least fine with immigration as is.

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The same trend can be seen for refugees. In my own research, I reviewed questions on refugee admissions from opinion polls covering the period 1938 to 2016. The refugee flows coming into the US in the last 20 years have met substantially less opposition than nearly all their predecessors.

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Americans’ evaluation of immigration is largely positive: Two different polls recently reported that three-quarters of Americans consider immigration to be “a good thing“.

Furthermore, Americans tend to like immigrants. In one survey, 73 per cent of respondents were not bothered by encounters with immigrants who cannot speak English, 69 per cent felt sympathetic toward undocumented immigrants and only 27 per cent thought that giving unauthorised immigrants legal status would be a “reward for doing something wrong”.

As for undocumented immigrants, most Americans, from 62 per cent to 81 per cent, consistently support offering them legalization with a path to citizenship.

Americans care about border security, too. While most respondents oppose a border wall – 60 per cent, according to Gallup – they do support hiring more Border Patrol officers, and say that the government should “halt the flow of illegal immigrants into the US.”

A July poll by Politico/Morning Consult reported that 51 per cent support the current wave of ICE raids. However, a closer look reveals that the question specified that the targeted immigrants “have outstanding court orders to be removed from the US”. This wording suggested that the immigrants in question were criminals, increasing support for the raids. As news reports indicate, this is inaccurate. On 7th August, for example, ICE raided seven food processing plants in Mississippi, arresting 680 suspected undocumented workers.

Public opinion versus policy
The government is out of sync with public opinion. While immigration is at its highest historical level of support, the government is hostile to it. Many questions arise, but I will address only two.

First, since what the American public wants is clear, can Congress and the president reach a compromise where the US grants amnesty to unauthorised immigrants while also implementing measures to effectively control the US–Mexico border?

Such a compromise appears impossible. When Trump suggested trading temporary protection for those brought illegally into the US as children for border wall funding, he was lambasted by his conservative base.

Meanwhile, the increasingly influential progressive wing of the Democratic Party adopts pro-immigration stances that appear to give the message that Democrats are against enforcement and not concerned with border security. This does not bode well for compromise either.

Second, could being out of sync with public opinion cost Trump his reelection? Not necessarily, since he was already out of sync with the majority, in matters of immigration, when he won in 2016. Trump won despite his positions on immigration, not because of them.

The key to explaining this, I believe, is single-issue voters. Poll data suggest that, on immigration, single-issue voters are much more likely to be Republicans, the restrictionist side, than Democrats, the pro-immigration side. Republicans are several times more likely than Democrats to tell pollsters that immigration is the country’s top problem and that it should be Congress’ top priority.

Most Americans want immigration reform with compromise, but they also care about many other things that also influence their votes. Meanwhile, Trump’s base of single-issue restrictionist hardliners gives the president a bloc of votes unmoved by nonimmigration concerns. That is an advantage for the president, even when overall public opinion disagrees with him.

Mariano Sana is associate professor of sociology at Vanderbilt University. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

The Conversation

 

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