Los Angeles Times

Most back law to shield migrants

- By Jazmine Ulloa

SACRAMENTO — More than 50% of California­ns favor a new “sanctuary state” law to shield people from deportatio­n, according to a new USC Dornsife/Los Angeles Times poll.

This year, California officials and the Trump administra­tion have squared off over the landmark sanctuary state law, which takes effect in January and greatly limits whom state and local law enforcemen­t agencies can hold, question and transfer at the request of federal immigratio­n authoritie­s.

The law was part of a broader effort by majority Democrats in the California

Legislatur­e to shield more than 2.3 million immigrants living illegally in the state from President Trump’s expanded immigratio­n enforcemen­t orders. It has drawn sharp rebuke from Trump officials, making it a focus of a national debate over how far states and cities can go to prevent their officers from enforcing federal immigratio­n laws.

But in California, the law appears to have wide approval. The USC Dornsife/ L.A. Times poll surveyed 1,504 eligible voters in California from Oct. 27 to Nov. 6, one year before the 2018 election. Of those respondent­s, 53% favored the legislatio­n, with 31% in strong support. Nearly 29% opposed the law — 18% did so strongly.

There were broader splits among poll participan­ts when they asked to what degree California’s leaders — the governor, attorney general and city mayors — should cooperate with Trump administra­tion policies. The majority, about 63%, believed they should mostly not or completely not cooperate with the president’s initiative­s.

Despite the Trump administra­tion’s repeated attempts to frame illegal immigratio­n as a threat to public safety, the poll also found an overwhelmi­ng majority believe that people without legal residency help revitalize cities as opposed to increasing crime.

The survey results, poll analysts and policy experts said, reflect ongoing trends in California, where through the decades the public has tended to support immigrants in the country illegally, even when federal or state political leaders have stoked anti-immigrant sentiment to rally their bases.

“We have seen this in California forever,” said Jill Darling, the survey director for the Center for Economic and Social Research at USC. “People, including Republican­s, have been more supportive of immigrants and reform, even to the point of supporting a path to citizenshi­p, more so than Republican leadership.”

Most poll participan­ts also expressed positive perception­s of people without legal residency in the country.

Nearly 63% of people surveyed said they believed immigrants without legal status strengthen­ed the economy, as opposed to roughly 38% who said they took away jobs. Sixty-six percent said immigrants in the country illegally helped revitalize cities, and about 34% — including more than 72% of Republican­s — believed they increased crime.

Policy experts said the poll results reflect the explosive growth of Latinos, Asians and other minority communitie­s that tend to lean Democratic. California’s families are so diverse, they said, that nearly everyone knows someone who came to the country as an immigrant — legally or illegally.

It also reflects a shift away from the “us-versusthem” rhetoric that damaged the Republican brand in the 1990s, political consultant­s and immigratio­n policy experts said. During that time, Gov. Pete Wilson was criticized for using footage of people running across the border to dramatize the problem of illegal immigratio­n, and voters passed propositio­ns to bar immigrants in the country illegally from public benefits, outlaw affirmativ­e action programs and teach only English in schools.

That “no longer reflects our reality,” said Mindy Romero, director of the California Civic Engagement Project. “In a state like California, immigrants are us.”

Andrew Medina, state policy manager for Asian Americans Advancing Justice, said he wasn’t surprised by the results of the poll — or by the approval among California residents for the sanctuary state law. A study released in February by the Public Policy Institute of California found that a solid majority of California­ns believe the state and local government­s should make their own policies and take action to protect the rights of immigrants who are here illegally.

The final language of the sanctuary state law was the result of months of tough negotiatio­ns among Gov. Jerry Brown, Senate leader and bill author Kevin de León (D-Los Angeles), and law enforcemen­t officials.

It will largely prohibit state and local law enforcemen­t agencies from holding or sharing informatio­n about people with federal immigratio­n agents unless those individual­s have been convicted of one or more offenses from a list of 800 crimes outlined in a 2013 state law.

Federal immigratio­n authoritie­s still will be able to work with state correction­s officials — a key concession Brown had demanded — and will be able to enter county jails to question immigrants. But the state attorney general’s office will be required to publish guidelines and training recommenda­tions to limit immigratio­n agents’ access to personal informatio­n.

“It is positive that these polls show that there is support for immigrant communitie­s, and it is especially positive in this era,” Medina said.

Still, Romero advised caution.

“Discrimina­tion against immigrants is very real and a danger,” she said, pointing to anti-immigrant rhetoric at the national level. “I think we can’t rest on a changing landscape in California and just assume that things will continue to be more receptive and open.”

‘We have seen this in California forever. People, including Republican­s, have been more supportive of immigrants and reform, even to the point of supporting a path to citizenshi­p.’ — Jill Darling, survey director, USC Center for Economic and Social Research

 ?? Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times ?? SERGIO AGUILAR came to the U.S. on a work visa that he illegally overstayed. Polling shows most California­ns have positive perception­s of immigrants like him.
Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times SERGIO AGUILAR came to the U.S. on a work visa that he illegally overstayed. Polling shows most California­ns have positive perception­s of immigrants like him.

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