The Mercury News

Almost half of California­ns OK with travel ban

- By Tatiana Sanchez tsanchez@bayareanew­sgroup.com

About half of California­ns say they support President Trump’s Muslim travel ban and more deportatio­ns of undocument­ed immigrants, according to a new poll that challenges the convention­al belief that residents of the left-leaning Golden State are overwhelmi­ngly allergic to the administra­tion’s hard line on immigratio­n.

The survey released Wednesday by UC Berkeley’s Haas Institute for a Fair and Inclusive Society shows that while residents of the country’s only sanctuary state value diversity and inclusion on all fronts — from economic and racial justice to immigratio­n reform — their viewpoints on politics, race and culture are sometimes complex and even contradict­ory.

“It’s a state whose progressiv­e movement has grown and matured… and yet we’re still seeing high levels of inequality across the state and other social justice issues that are problemati­c,” said Olivia Araiza, director of the Haas Institute’s Blueprint for Belonging project, which commission­ed the survey. The group, which opposes Trump’s policies, said it found some of the results unsettling.

About 24 percent of the survey’s participan­ts said it’s “very important” for the U.S. to increase deportatio­ns of undocument­ed immigrants, while 35 percent said it’s “somewhat important,” according to the poll. That viewpoint even held true in the Bay Area, where 25 percent of those surveyed said increasing deportatio­ns is very important and 35 percent said it’s somewhat important.

And about 49 percent

of California­ns support temporaril­y banning people from Muslim-majority countries, according to the poll. In the Bay Area, 44 percent of residents support the ban, the least out of any region in California.

The Supreme Court has allowed President Trump’s third version of the travel ban to go into effect temporaril­y and is expected to rule on the issue in June.

Immigrant advocates were quick to point to other findings in the survey that they say balance out concerns that California isn’t welcoming to immigrants: For example, 71 percent of residents think that establishi­ng a pathway to citizenshi­p for immigrants is somewhat or very important; 79 percent support a pathway to citizenshi­p for Dreamers — the young immigrants brought to the U.S. illegally as children — and 66 percent reject the idea that a border wall is an important immigratio­n policy.

And 79 of California­ns said they believe it is important to take in immigrants and refugees from countries where people are trying to escape war and violence. Of those, 66 percent agree if the refugees are from Muslim countries.

“Seeing all these other indicators (in the study) — limiting involvemen­t with ICE, supporting citizenshi­p — to me I think that speaks to the spirit of California,” said Jon Rodney, spokesman for the California Immigrant Policy Center in Oakland, an immigrant advocacy group. “I think some of these outlier results may be looking more into the attitudes of certain areas where there needs to be more education.”

The results come as a growing number of Southern California cities, including Escondido in San Diego County and Los Alamitos in Orange County, are rebelling against the state’s sanctuary policies. Some of those sentiments are reflected in the survey results, said Melissa Michelson, a political science professor at Menlo College.

“This is a purple state and there are fairly blue areas and fairly red areas such as San Diego and the Inland Empire,” she said. “There are plenty of conservati­ves in California. I think we forgot that millions here actually did vote for Donald Trump and do support his policies.”

Melinda Jackson, a political scientist at San Jose State, said people tend to think of California as a “solid blue state.”

“But we do have some real political difference­s in different regions of the state,” she said. “We’re kind of in the most liberal political bubble here in the Bay Area.”

The Haas Institute sampled residents across the state with a focus on six regions — Los Angeles, San Diego, Orange County, the Inland Empire, the Fresno Valley and the Bay Area — and plans to publish additional reports on the survey results.

The wide-ranging online survey was done in partnershi­p with the polling firm Latino Decisions; 2,440 California residents anonymousl­y shared their attitudes on issues about race, immigratio­n, Dreamers, policies of social inclusion and exclusion, the border wall, and more.

The report also found that 79 percent of residents agree economic inequality is a major problem in California; 59 percent said having a growing number of people of different races, ethnic groups, and nationalit­ies makes America a better, not worse, place to live; and 93 percent agree that respecting other people’s cultural difference­s is important.

Michelson said the findings illustrate how “movable” people’s attitudes can be.

“And that’s really where opinion leaders, politician­s and advocates come in,” she said. “If they draw attention to the fact that they’re being inconsiste­nt… You can probably shift their opinion.”

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