Why are Trump voters so angry about immigration?
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| Washington
Donald Trump鈥檚 supporters have negative views about immigrants, particularly those who entered the United States illegally. That鈥檚 not a news flash. Mr. Trump鈥檚 vow to build a wall along the southern border 鈥 financed by Mexico 鈥 remains one of his biggest rally applause lines.
But what, specifically, is behind this anger? Is there anything about undocumented immigration that even Trump voters see in a positive light?
We鈥檝e run across a couple of interesting studies that bear on these questions in recent days. The first is a Pew Research 鈥渇eeling thermometer鈥 survey that shows one reason why Trump voters, even more so than Republicans in general, think immigration is bad for the US.
The reason? Trump backers appear much more likely that a growing number of newcomers in the US 鈥渢hreatens traditional American customs and values.鈥
Fully 60 percent of Trump supporters have at least a 鈥渟omewhat warm鈥 response to that statement. Only 29 percent have a 鈥渟omewhat cold鈥 response, disagreeing that immigrants are threatening the cultural foundations of the US.
The second study, conducted by assistant professors Morris Levy of the University of Southern California and Matthew Wright of American University, focuses on the opinions of non-Hispanic white voters on illegal immigrants and why many US voters support tougher measures against them. Is it pure anti-Latino prejudice, or something else?
The study鈥檚 first finding appears to back the prejudice theory. A survey found that US voters were much less likely to say a Mexican immigrant 鈥 as opposed to a German or Asian counterpart 鈥 should be allowed into a notional legalization program.
But that discrimination disappeared when respondents were told the Mexican immigrant spoke English and had worked as waiter for two years. That appeared to remove a concern of white voters that the Hispanic immigrant would be a burden on US taxpayers.
鈥淒iscrimination against Latinos may grow not from hostility against an ethnic 鈥榦utgroup,鈥 but rather stereotypes about whether they will contribute to the United States or become a burden,鈥 Levy and Wright at the Washington Post Monkey Cage political science blog.
These two studies don鈥檛 exactly match up and are far from definitive, of course. But taken together they suggest that US white voters, including Trump voters, aren鈥檛 so much anti-Hispanic as they are worried about the perceived effect of immigration on their culture and pocketbooks.
That means many might support a path to legalization for illegal immigrants if they were convinced the effort would include stringent enforcement, an English test, and a job requirement. Certainly, of course, another contingent would still remain opposed.
鈥淚n other words, whites are open to politics that address the negative group stereotypes 鈥 and ensure that new US citizens could genuinely join and contribute to the community,鈥 conclude Levy and Wright.