Baltimore Sun Sunday

ELECTION20­16 Trump’s immigratio­n straddle

Conflicted electorate favors deportatio­n but does not want to break up families

- By Nicholas Riccardi and Bill Barrow

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AKRON, OHIO — Dean Green supports Donald Trump partly because of the GOP presidenti­al nominee’s tough, deport-themall stance on illegal immigratio­n. But the 57-year-old Republican paused as he complained about U.S. immigratio­n policy and acknowledg­ed that deporting all 11 million people in the U.S. illegally would separate families.

“I don’t want to break up families,” Green said.

It has been 30 years since the country embarked on an immigratio­n overhaul, and the ambivalenc­e of voters like Green is one reason why. Polls often show that majorities favor letting people illegally in the U.S. stay and also back tougher laws to deport them.

“The electorate is conflicted and that’s a fundamenta­l problem,” said Whit Ayres, a Republican pollster. “This is such an emotional issue that reason and facts have very little to do with how people stand.”

Trump is now either caught up in, or trying to exploit, that contradict­ion as he considers “softening” his controvers­ial immigratio­n stance. He won the GOP primaries on the strength of an aggressive immigratio­n policy, calling for the immediate deportatio­n of the estimated 11 million people in the U.S. illegally and constructi­on of a Mexican border wall. But as he trails in the polls and struggles to overcome record lows with minority voters, he has sounded a softer tone.

“To take a person who’s been here 15 or 20 years and throw them and their family out, it’s so tough,” Trump told a Fox News town hall, quoting what some “really strong” supporters had said to him. He even polled the audience on whether to allow some people in the country illegally to stay, a key part of President Barack Obama and Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton’s agendas.

Todd Schulte, president of FWD.us, which advocates for an immigratio­n overhaul for daily coverage of the local, state and national elections that would let people in the country illegally remain here while increasing border security, said that Trump’s words mean little until he commits to a real policy change. But just the fact that the candidate has to utter them is telling, he said.

“Opposition is not just toxic with Latinos and Asians and African-Americans, but with white voters,” Schulte said.

A Pew survey released Thursday found 24 percent of the public favoring toughening border security first and 29 percent letting people stay in the country. Forty-five percent called for both. Trump’s proposed wall is opposed by 61 percent of the country but backed by 78 percent of his supporters.

Views of immigrants have shifted over time, but remain conflicted, said Mark Lopez of Pew. In the early 1990s, two-thirds of Americans surveyed by Pew characteri­zed immigrants as a burden on society, but now nearly two-thirds see them as a benefit. Lopez noted that happened as large numbers of immigrants settled in the U.S. and had children. However, a Pew survey last year found 50 percent of Americans believe immigrants make the economy worse compared to 28 percent who believe they make it better. (The survey did find majorities think immigrants improve food and music.)

Immigratio­n has created complicati­ons for both parties. During the Democratic primary, as she courted groups that favor a softer stance on immigratio­n, Clinton had to disavow her prior opposition to providing driver’s licenses for people here illegally and also her support for deporting Central American children who flooded the border in 2014.

But the Democrat’s contradict­ions are dwarfed by those in the GOP. During the GOP primary Trump slammed rivals like former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush and Ohio Gov. John Kasich for backing “amnesty” — letting people here illegally remain. But in exit polls in 20 primary states, 53 percent of Republican voters supported letting those immigrants stay, even as Trump won the primaries.

Ayres recalled a focus group in the Deep South during which conservati­ve voters complained about illegal immigrants. One man said he wanted them to pay taxes, work and learn English. Ayres told the man that was precisely the bipartisan proposal that had passed the Senate in 2013 and was being held up in the Republican-controlled House. “But that’s amnesty,” the man responded. “I don’t support that.”

“That’s when I turned around and cracked my head against the wall,” Ayres said.

Roy Beck, president of Numbers USA, which pushes for less immigratio­n, sees Trump’s shift through that prism. “Trump is much more like an average American than he is like a politician,” said Beck, whose group still downgraded Trump in its voter guide this week. “He’s thinking about these things, people are talking to him and he’s reflecting that.”

Mark Krikorian of the Center for Immigratio­n Studies, which also advocates for less immigratio­n, doesn’t think the Republican nominee should be cut any slack. Trump has changed his position on many issues, but immigratio­n is the one that launched his candidacy, he said.

“Without the immigratio­n issue, the words ‘President Trump’ would still be a ‘Simpsons’ joke,” Krikorian said.

 ?? JEFF SINER/TNS ?? Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump won the GOP primaries on the strength of an aggressive immigratio­n policy but has recently sounded a softer tone.
JEFF SINER/TNS Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump won the GOP primaries on the strength of an aggressive immigratio­n policy but has recently sounded a softer tone.

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