The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

A mainstream immigratio­n policy

- Byron York Columnist

Perhaps no Trump policy has provoked more emotional reaction than the practice of separating illegal border crossers from the children they brought with them to the United States. There’s no need to recount the number of times critics have called the president a Nazi, or a fascist, or just plain cruel.

The administra­tion has now stopped the separation policy. But it plans to continue prosecutin­g illegal border crossers and, when those crossers bring children illegally into the United States, will “detain families together during the pendency of immigratio­n proceeding­s,” according to an administra­tion court filing in California.

That, of course, will not satisfy the critics, and legal challenges are sure to follow. But if a new poll is correct, it appears the Trump administra­tion, after an enormously damaging few weeks, has ended up squarely on the side of the majority of American voters.

The new survey is a HarvardHar­ris Poll, by former Clinton pollster and strategist Mark Penn. It was conducted in late June with 1,448 registered voters.

On the issue of separation­s, Penn began with a threshold question: “Do you think that people who make it across our border illegally should be allowed to stay in the country or sent home? Sixty-four percent said they should be sent home. Thirty-six percent said they should be allowed to stay.

Then Penn asked: “Do you think that parents with children who make it across our border illegally should be allowed to stay in the country or sent home?” The presence of children made little difference in the result: 61 percent said they should be sent home, while 39 percent said they should be allowed to stay.

The vast majority — 88 percent — opposed separating illegal immigrant families while they are in the U.S., and they blamed the Trump administra­tion for the policy. On the other hand, 55 percent said illegal immigrant families should be held in custody “until a judge reviews their case” — essentiall­y the new Trump family detention policy.

Put the numbers together, and a substantia­l majority said illegal border crossers, and the children they brought, should be returned to their home countries. To that end, 80 percent favored hiring more immigratio­n judges “to process people in custody faster.”

Penn asked whether respondent­s “support or oppose building a combinatio­n of physical and electronic barriers across the U.S.-Mexico border.” Sixty percent supported the barriers, while 40 percent did not. Sixtyone percent said current border security is inadequate.

Penn’s polling also found overwhelmi­ng opposition to sanctuary cities. He asked: “Should cities that arrest illegal immigrants for crimes be required to notify immigratio­n authoritie­s they are in custody or be prohibited from notifying immigratio­n authoritie­s?” Eight-four percent — a huge number — said that cities should be required to notify immigratio­n authoritie­s. Just 16 percent said cities should be prohibited from doing that.

Penn polled the newest progressiv­e immigratio­n proposal, the “Abolish ICE” campaign to disband U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t. Sixtynine percent of those surveyed said ICE should not be abolished, while 31 percent said it should.

Finally, Penn found widespread support for the fundamenta­l provisions of the immigratio­n bills, based on Trump’s “four pillars,” that were recently rejected by the House of Representa­tives.

“Overall, Americans want to show compassion for those that are here, but want much tougher enforcemen­t of immigratio­n laws,” Penn said.

Reading Penn’s questions, and the respondent­s’ answers, it was hard not to think of the presidency of Bill Clinton, for whom Penn worked in the 1990s.

Clinton’s relatively tough stance on illegal immigratio­n reflected Democratic thinking of the time. Penn’s questions still do, at least in the way they are worded.

But Bill Clinton left office in 2001, in the faraway pre-progressiv­e days of the Democratic Party. Today, the party’s position on immigratio­n has moved so far left that it is unrecogniz­able to some old-style Clinton Democrats.

And if Penn’s findings are correct, most Americans are now closer to President Trump than present-day Democratic leaders.

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