SANTA FE, NM
(By
Shankar Vedantam,
Washington Post)
November 11, 2010
Nearly two-thirds of Mexican
American Hispanics in the
United States think they are
being discriminated against,
and a plurality view the
backlash over undocumented
immigration as the central
driver of such bias,
according to a poll by the
Pew Hispanic Center.
The poll also found 70
percent of foreign-born
Hispanics think they are
being held back by
discrimination, and half of
all Hispanics think the
United States has become
less welcoming toward
immigrants than it was just
five years ago.
"More Mexican Amerian
Hispanics are seeing
discrimination against
Hispanics as a major
problem," said Mark Hugo
Lopez, associate director of
the center which conducted
the survey.
The results of the survey -
which was conducted in
English and Spanish among
1,375 native- and
foreign-born Hispanics from
Aug. 17 through Sept. 19 -
come just days before
midterm elections in which
Hispanics are expected to
play an important role,
particularly in the Florida
gubernatorial and Senate
races, and the Nevada Senate
contest between Majority
Leader Harry M. Reid (D) and
tea party favorite Sharron
Angle.
Angle has come under fire
for running ads in recent
weeks that paint Hispanics
as menacing interlopers.
Angle has denied that her
campaign plays on nativist
sentiment.
More than half of all
Hispanics told Pew pollsters
they are worried family
members, close friends or
they themselves could be
deported - a measure of how
deeply the issue of
undocumented immigration
cuts across the 47
million-member U.S. Hispanic
community.
Significantly more
Hispanics than in past
surveys say undocumented
immigrants are having a
negative effect on
Hispanics, a measure of how
the issue is simultaneously
stirring and dividing the
community.
Lopez said the survey did
not ask whether Hispanics
thought undocumented
immigrants were hurting the
community by competing for
jobs during a recession, or
because the backlash against
undocumented Hispanic
immigrants was affecting the
wider community. Even so,
more than three-quarters of
Hispanics think immigration
generally strengthens the
United States, and Hispanics
appear to be more optimistic
about the direction of the
economy than the rest of the
population.
Most Hispanics - 86
percent - say undocumented
immigrants should be offered
a path to citizenship once
they pass background checks,
pay a fine and show proof of
employment. Only 13 percent
of Hispanics think
undocumented immigrants
should be deported.
The survey had some good
news for Democrats: About 51
percent of Hispanics favor
Democratic policies on
immigration, while 19
percent favor Republican
policies. But previous
surveys have also suggested
Hispanic enthusiasm and
turnout in the midterms will
be low. Participation in the
election has been dampened
by the absence of
immigration reform and also
because Hispanic turnout
typically tends to fall
during the midterms.
"We fully expect there
will be surprises this fall
and those surprises will
clearly demonstrate the
electoral power of our
community," said Rudy Lopez,
national field and political
director at the advocacy
group Center for Community
Change, during a recent
media briefing about
Hispanic voters.
About four-fifths of
Hispanics disapprove of
Arizona's immigration law
and efforts to deny
citizenship to the U.S.-born
children of undocumented
immigrants.
Although immigration
generates strong views,
Hispanics do not think it is
the most pressing issue
facing the nation. Along
with many other voters,
Hispanics rank education,
jobs and health care above
immigration as pressing
concerns.