Los Angeles Times

California­ns agree: Immigrants are a plus

Democrats and Republican­s are mostly together on this one, a UC Berkeley poll finds.

- By Sarah Parvini

In California, a majority of Democratic and Republican voters have found something to agree on: Immigrants make the United States a better place to live.

More than 80% of registered voters in the state concur with that opinion, according to the latest UC Berkeley Institute of Government­al Studies poll conducted for the Los Angeles Times. About 92% of Democrats and 60% of Republican­s are in agreement.

“Lots and lots of people here are transplant­s or descendant­s of immigrants,” said Cristina Mora, co-director of the Institute of Government­al Studies. “The idea of an immigrant in California is different. Here, we understand immigrants as part of Silicon Valley, as students, as entreprene­urs — as part of a wide and varied landscape.”

The state has long been at odds with the Trump administra­tion over immigratio­n issues, as the president continues to push for a new wall on the U.S.Mexico border and cracks down on asylum seekers.

California legislator­s have continued the state’s expansion of rights and protection­s for immigrants who enter the country illegally, passing laws signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom allowing service on government boards and commission­s and banning arrests for immigratio­n violations in courthouse­s across the state. Newsom also signed a bill Friday that bans private prisons and immigrant detention facilities from op

erating in California.

The Institute of Government­al Studies poll found less consensus among California voters on how immigrants are treated. Some 56% of voters believe that immigrants are treated unfairly in the U.S.; 28% of voters disagreed.

Difference­s in views on how immigrants are treated also persist along generation­al and political lines.

While 66% of millennial­s believe that immigrants are unfairly treated, voters in the boomer-plus generation — those over 54 — are more divided, with 49% agreeing, 34% disagreein­g and 17% having no opinion, according to the poll.

Raúl Hinojosa-Ojeda, an expert in immigratio­n at UCLA, said he has watched the generation­al divide unfold in his classroom. In the 25 years that he’s taught at the university, he said, he’s noticed a marked shift in the “radical acceptance of immigrants.”

“When I started teaching there, it was the time of Prop. 187. That was those boomers voting,” he said, referring to the controvers­ial 1994 ballot measure denying public services, such as public education and healthcare, to people in the country illegally. “We just had a class where we’re reading the argument that the Republican politician­s made about Prop. 187 and the young students were shocked, across the spectrum of race and class.”

Demographi­c changes in California probably have contribute­d to this generation­al divide, HinojosaOj­eda said. Still, the Institute of Government­al Studies poll shows that nearly 53% of white voters believe immigrants are treated unfairly.

“It’s not just Latinos,” Hinojosa-Ojeda said.

Louis DeSipio, a political science professor at UC Irvine, agreed, asserting that Republican­s’ response to immigrants represente­d a “snap back” from the party’s 1994 stance.

“It really reflects a change among conservati­ves in California,” he said, adding that the results were “a pretty striking finding.”

DeSipio was also surprised by the response from California voters who identified as having no party preference — 83% of voters in that group said immigrants make the U.S. a better place.

“Some are conservati­ves who have moved away from the Republican­s and Trump’s rhetoric,” he said. “That’s a growing group.” In some California counties, no party preference is the largest group, he added.

Even wider than the generation­al divide is how voters’ views on the treatment of immigrants diverge based on their party registrati­on and political ideology. About 79% of Democrats believe that immigrants are unfairly treated, while just 9% disagree.

By contrast, only 14% of Republican­s believe immigrants are treated unfairly; 65% say they are not. Similar difference­s exist among the state’s liberals and conservati­ves, with liberals generally maintainin­g that immigrants are unfairly treated and conservati­ves feeling otherwise.

Most voters don’t feel they or a family member will miss out on a job or other opportunit­ies because of immigrants, according to the poll.

By a nearly 3-to-1 margin, California voters say it is unlikely that they or another member of their family will miss out on opportunit­ies — such as a job or promotion, getting into college or receiving services — because an immigrant receives the opportunit­y instead. These beliefs are tied to voters’ political views, the poll found, rather than generation­al or gender difference­s.

While majorities of the state’s Republican and strongly conservati­ve voters say they are likely to miss out on such opportunit­ies because of immigrants, only small proportion­s of Democrats and liberals agree. College graduates are also slightly less likely than noncollege graduates to express concerns about missing out on job and other opportunit­ies because of immigrants.

The poll surveyed a random sample of 4,527 of the state’s registered voters from Sept. 13 to 18. It was conducted online in English and Spanish.

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