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New Poll: Immigration Key Issue
in Contested Races
Public Wants
Illegals to Go Home, Enforcement,
No Immigration Increase
Read the
Panel Discussion Transcript
Contact: Steven Camarota
(202) 466-8185
Kellyanne
Conway (202) 667-6557
WASHINGTON , D.C.
(October 16, 2006) -- A new poll, using neutral
language, finds intense voter concern over immigration in 14 tight congressional
races. The surveys were conducted by the polling company for the Center for
Immigration Studies.
In addition to a
national survey,
detailed polling on immigration was conducted in four contested Senate races
(click on the state/district to see the results):
Missouri,
Pennsylvania,
New Jersey,
and Montana;
and in 10 contested House races:
Arizona 5th,
Connecticut 4th,
Indiana 8th,
Kentucky 4th,
Pennsylvania 6th,
Texas 17th,
Louisiana 3rd,
Georgia 8th,
Colorado 7th,
and
Ohio 6th.
Among the findings:
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Immigration is a big issue
throughout country. Of likely voters nationally, 53 percent said
immigration was either their most important issue or one of their top three
issues, while just 8 percent said it was not at all important. With the
exception of CT-4th, in races surveyed only about 10 percent of
voters said it was not important at all.
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When told numbers, voters want less immigration. When told
the actual number of immigrants here (legal and illegal) and the number coming
(legal and illegal), and asked to put aside the question of legal status, 68
percent of voters nationally thought immigration was too high, 21 percent about
right, and just 2 percent thought it was too low. In every congressional
race surveyed, the share who said overall immigration was too low was in the
single digits.
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Voters less likely to vote for
immigration-increasing candidates. Experts agree that the bill recently passed by the Senate would
at least double future legal immigration, yet 70 percent of voters said they
would be less likely to vote for a candidate who wanted to double legal
immigration. Overwhelming majorities in every battleground race feel the same
way.
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Voters reject extremes of legalization or mass deportations.
Some previous polls have shown support for legalizing illegal immigrants. But
those polls have given the public only a choice between large-scale deportations
or an earned legalization, and not the third choice of across-the-board
enforcement, causing illegals to go home. This third option, which is the basis
of the bill passed by the US House, is voters’ top choice.
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U.S. House immigration plan by far
the favorite. Enforcement approaches with no increase in legal immigration were
the most popular policy option -- 44 percent wanted enforcement that causes
illegals to go home, the US House’s approach, and another 20 percent wanted
large-scale deportations. Just 31 percent supported a legalization.
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Intensity stronger among enforcement supporters.
Nationally, 32 percent of voters said they would be much more likely to
vote for a candidate who would enforce the law and cause illegals to go home,
compared to just 15 percent who said they would be much more likely to
vote for a candidate who supports legalization. This same pattern holds in
battleground contests.
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Voters skeptical of need for unskilled immigrant labor.
More than 70 percent of voters nationally agreed that there were, “plenty of
Americans to do low-wage jobs that require relatively little education,
employers just need to pay higher wages and treat workers better to attract
Americans,” compared to 21 percent who said we need immigrants because there
were not enough Americans to do all such jobs. The results were very similar in
all the contested states and districts surveyed.
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Voters think lack of enforcement
is reason for illegal immigration. Three out of four voters in the nation
agreed that the reason we have illegal immigration is that past enforcement
efforts have before “grossly inadequate.” Voters strongly reject the argument
that illegal immigration is caused by overly restrictive legal immigration
policies. Strong majorities in every battleground contest surveyed felt this
way.
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Numbers make a difference.
One key finding is that when told the scale of immigration (legal and illegal),
voters overwhelming thought it was too high. Also when told how much the Senate
bill would increase legal immigration voters tended to reject it. This
would seem to undermine the argument that voters are only concerned about
illegality and not the level of immigration. The level of immigration used in
the questions are those widely agreed upon by experts based on government data.
For more information, contact Steven
Camarota at (202) 466-8185
sac@cis.org
or Kellyanne
Conway at (202) 667-6557.
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The Center for Immigration Studies is an independent research institute
which examines the impact of immigration on the United States.
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