www.NumbersUSA.com |
THIS ISSUE: Pres. Biden continues to lose support from key groups on immigration
FRI, OCT. 8[SUP]TH[/SUP]
Immigration is the fourth most important issuefacing the country, according to a recent survey of 1,500 U.S. adults conducted by The Economist and YouGuv. Respondents ranked only healthcare, the economy, and climate change as more pressing issues.
With an ongoing border crisis that's now entering its eighth month, immigration ranking fourth may not sound like a big deal. But the percentage of respondents who ranked immigration as the most important issue jumped by 42% compared with the same poll from just a few weeks earlier. This is a significant jump in public opinion, considering the extremely limited media coverage of events along the border.
On the immigration question, 48% said the issue was "very important", while another 32% said the issue was "somewhat important".
What should be most concerning for the Biden Administration is the major shift among white men with a college degree. This group, which was pivotal for electing Biden to the White House, ranked immigration as the most important issue overall.
A new Quinnipiac poll should also be concerning for the Biden Administration. Most significantly, the poll found that 69% of Hispanics disapprove of Pres. Biden's handling of immigration.
While some may think that the administration's failure to deliver on one of its signature issues -- amnesty for illegal aliens -- is driving the result, the poll found the opposite. 41% of Hispanics think that the Biden Administration isn't aggressive enough in its enforcement of immigration laws compared with just 20% who think the administration's efforts are appropriate.
On the border crisis, 67% of all respondents disapprove of Pres. Biden's handling of the issue, including 96% of Republicans and 73% of Independents. In fact, Pres. Biden is upside down across every demographic group except for Democrats. But even amongst Democrats, 50% either disapprove or didn't express an opinion.
Despite the recent polling, the Biden Administration seems to be doubling-down on its immigration agenda. In recent weeks, it has made public new regulations to rescind the successful Remain-in-Mexico policy and to reissue Pres. Obama's DACA executive amnesty.
Further, DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas issued new enforcement priorities last week, protecting most illegal aliens from removal. Meanwhile, the administration and Senate Democrats continue to look for a way to grant amnesty to illegal aliens through the budget reconciliation effort that is acceptable to Senate Parliamentarian Elizabeth MacDonough.
Trump voters most concerned about negative impacts of mass immigration
Americans who voted for former President Donald Trump in 2020 are deeply concerned that mass immigration could adversely affect their job prospects and wages, according to polling released by the University of Virginia on Thursday.
61% of Trump voters expressed concern over receiving lower pay due to high levels of immigration. 59% are concerned that high immigration could prevent them from getting a higher paying job, and 51% are concerned that high immigration could cost them their job.
While Biden voters weren't as concerned about future job and wage prospects, they did express concern over higher taxes and increased crime due to uncontrolled illegal immigration.
| CHRIS CHMIELENSKI
NUMBERSUSA DEPUTY DIRECTOR |
|
|
ACTION | Congressional Democrats have not given up their effort of adding an amnesty to the budget reconciliation bill.
Please check your Action Board for messages you can send to your Member of Congress.
|
|
AMAZON SMILE | DID YOU KNOW?
Now you can give to NumbersUSA when you shop at Amazon!
Visit Amazon Smile to sign up and a percentage of your qualifying purchases will go to NumbersUSA Education and Research Fund.
THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT! |
|
TEXT ALERTS |
Want to receive Action Alerts via text message?Sign up for text alerts today!
Don't worry, we'll only send you a text message when your action is needed in an especially urgent way. You'll still receive most alerts through email.
To sign up, click on the "Sign Up" button below!
|
|
RASMUSSEN REPORT |
The ORANGE line shows that 60% of likely voters think the government is doing "too little" to prevent illegal border crossings compared with 53% a few weeks earlier.
The YELLOW line shows that many of those who thought that the government was doing just enough to prevent illegal border crossings, now believe that its not doing enough.
A majority of Republicans and Independents and a plurality of Democrats think the government is doing too little.
REPUBLICANS -- 77%-14% (too little vs. too much)
INDEPENDENTS -- 66%-14%
DEMOCRATS -- 39%-23% |
|
|
|
FRI, OCT. 8[SUP]TH[/SUP] | What's a pundit to do when his commitment to ever-increasing immigration makes it much more difficult to achieve realistic policy goals he claims to care about? If he works for The New York Times there's a good chance he'll just ignore the contradiction and keeping penning paeans to the cure-all powers of immigration-driven growth. |
|
|
WED, OCT. 6[SUP]TH[/SUP] | Earlier this week, The United States Supreme Court issued a ruling against the Biden Administration who was seeking to block border barrier construction using defense funding along the southern border. |
|
|
MON, OCT. 4[SUP]TH[/SUP] | Biden's approval ratings on immigration have plummeted, and Latino voters in Texas are the tip of the down-facing arrow. But Biden is hardly alone. |
|
|
TUE, OCT. 5[SUP]TH[/SUP] | Some Senators have started to demand answers from the Biden Administration with new reports showing hundreds of Afghan parolees simply walking off U.S. military bases without completing the required resettlement process. |
|
|
FRI, OCT. 1[SUP]ST[/SUP] | As Obama indicated in his interview, there is a tension between Americans' openness to the world and America's ability to absorb the world. The benefits of moderate immigration levels include tight labor markets, better wages, more economic opportunities for women and the less-skilled, less demand on resources and infrastructure, greater access to the outdoors, and greater hope for protecting wildlife and wildlands, and open spaces. We are moving further away from a system we can sustain. |
|
|
|