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The Jon Garrido Network
which includes Hispanic News
supports and endorses the
American Dream for Hispanics
that can only be achieved by a
pragmatic comprehensive federal
immigration solution. |
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On Immigration Reform, Voters Get It,
Politicians Do Not
WASHINGTON
(By Frank Sharry, America's Voice)
September 10, 2010 — So, just where
do Americans stand on the red-hot
issue of illegal immigration? Is it
true they want the government to
just “build the dang fence” and be
done with it? Are they so fed up
with those who have violated
immigration laws they are clamoring
for mass deportation? Or do they
want immigration reform that
combines enforcement with legal
status for those rooted here? Do
they like the Arizona “papers,
please” immigration law and want
other states to act, or do they want
a comprehensive, federal solution?
A careful reading of opinion surveys
over several years shows the public
has a sophisticated understanding of
what constitutes a pragmatic
immigration solution, and what
constitutes political pandering.
In sum, here is where they stand:
They are fed-up and frustrated, but
only some are angry at immigrants;
most are frustrated with the federal
government’s failure to advance a
solution. The broken immigration
system has become for them a potent
symbol of how Washington has failed
to step up and solve tough problems.
They want their leaders to take bold
action that ends illegal
immigration. And the action they
strongly prefer is a national and
comprehensive approach that couples
enforcement measures at the border
and the workplace with a practical
and humane path to legal status for
those here without papers.
Here is some of the most recent
evidence, which tracks polling
results over the past few years:
A recent poll from Fox News found 68
percent of voters – including
majorities of Republicans,
Democrats, and Independents – say
efforts to secure the border should
be combined with reform of federal
immigration laws by Congress. What
do voters mean by reform of federal
immigration laws?; In the Fox poll,
68 percent “favor allowing illegal
immigrants who pay taxes and obey
the law to stay in the United
States.”
But what about the Republican mantra
of “secure the border first?” As the
Fox News analysis puts it:
While more voters think the
government should secure the border
first (21 percent) than pass new
immigration laws (7 percent), most —
68 percent — say both should be done
at the same time. That includes
majorities of Democrats (72
percent), independents (67 percent)
and Republicans (65 percent).
This survey captures the fact a
solid two-thirds of voters realize
an “either/or” approach has to yield
to a “both/and” strategy. Enhanced
security plus a path to earned legal
status is the solution.
Clearly, those watching Fox News
should pay more attention to their
immigration polling than the
simplistic, enforcement-only
rhetoric coming from many of their
guests.
The Fox poll isn’t unique. It’s
actually the standard. Check these
recent results from a Chicago
Tribune/WGN poll of that city and
its suburbs:
Nearly all of those who responded,
87 percent, believed some sort of
legal status should be offered to
the nearly 11 million people in the
country illegally, provided the
immigrants aren't dangerous felons,
that they learn English and that
they pay fines and back taxes.
Opinions about immigration in the
suburbs are slightly different than
in Chicago, whose immigrants from
around the world have helped define
the city. In some collar-county
communities that have only recently
seen new immigration, there is more
support for police enforcement and a
more negative view of illegal
immigrants. On the question of
offering legal status, 84 percent of
those in the collar counties said
they would support such a program,
compared with 90 percent in the
city.
Got that? In this poll, 84% support
for offering legal status represents
the “more negative view.” Let’s be
realistic: rare is the issue that
enjoys 84% support.
And it’s not just voters in the
suburbs of Chicago, but in Idaho and
Alabama, and Arkansas, Missouri, and
Ohio who also support comprehensive
immigration reform.
Take Colorado: a recent IPSOS poll
of likely Colorado voters found by
64 to 34 percent, Colorado voters
agreed “A person residing here
illegally in the United States with
a clean record should be able to pay
a fine, their taxes, and then have
the opportunity to become U.S.
citizens.” By a similar 62 percent
to 33 percent split, these same
respondents favor deporting those
here illegally who commit crimes and
allowing those remaining to stay. In
contrast to their support for a
sensible earned citizenship plan,
Colorado voters rejected blanket
deportation proposals by a 58
percent to 40 percent margin.
But why do polls show public support
for Arizona’s “show me your papers”
law? Because voters are frustrated,
they want action, and sympathize
with those who take matters into
their own hands given Washington’s
failure to act. But if you look
closely, event these polls show
strong support for a “both/and”
approach, one that combines
enforcement with a path to legal
status for those here illegally.
Here are some examples:
Washington Post/ABC, June 2010: 58%
support the Arizona law; 57% support
“a program giving illegal immigrants
now living in the United States the
right to live here legally if they
pay a fine and meet other
requirements.”
NBC/MSNBC/Telemundo, May 2010: 61%
of all voters support the Arizona
law (70% of whites, 31% of Latinos);
65% of voters favor “allowing
undocumented immigrants who are
already in the country to pay a
fine, learn English, and go back to
the line for the opportunity to
become American citizens.”
AP-GfK-Univision, May 7-12, 2010:
41% of all voters, and 15% of
Hispanic voters, favor the Arizona
law; 59% of all voters, and 86% of
Hispanic voters, favor “a legal way
for illegal immigrants already in
the United States to become U.S.
citizens.”
CBS/New York Times, April 28-May 2,
2010: 51% of voters feel the Arizona
law is “just right” (9% say it
doesn’t go far enough); 64% of
voters agree “illegal immigrants who
are currently working in the U.S.
should be allowed to stay in their
jobs and to eventually apply for
U.S. citizenship, or they should be
allowed to stay in their jobs only
as guest workers.”
In fact, recent polling conducted by
the Democratic firm of Lake Research
Partners and the Republican firm of
Public Opinion Strategies for
America’s Voice found while a
majority of poll respondents
supported the Arizona ‘papers
please’ immigration law, a whopping
84% of those who voiced support for
the Arizona law also supported
comprehensive immigration reform.
Then, sigh, there’s CNN’s polling.
Their polls from May and July
present an “either/or” choice of
border security or a path to
citizenship, in line with the
conventional wisdom offered by the
inside-the beltway punditry. Sure,
it’s an easier construct, but it’s
also irrelevant. The question is not
“do we secure the border or do we
give citizenship to undocumented
immigrants,” but “how do we secure
the border and deal with
undocumented immigrants”? CNN’s
either/or choice shows 42% favor a
path to legal status and 57 percent
favor stopping the flow of illegal
immigrants, as if voters can only
have one or the other.
Buried deeper in the May CNN poll –
and rarely mentioned – is the
finding 80% of those surveyed favor
“creating a program that would allow
illegal immigrants already living in
the United States for a number of
years to stay here and apply to
legally remain in this country
permanently if they had a job and
paid back taxes.”
Clearly, the public realizes a
pragmatic approach to dealing with
the whole problem requires a
national approach, enforcement and a
path to legal status for qualified
undocumented immigrants. They don’t
call it “amnesty,” they call it
“accountability,” and that’s where
Americans are — even if political
class in DC doesn’t get it yet.