Wyoming Residents Torn On Immigration Reform
Wyoming residents are divided on how to approach legislation pertaining to undocumented immigrants, according to the University of Wyoming’s Statewide Election Survey.
Results from the survey indicate that 37 percent of Wyoming residents favor deporting illegal immigrants back to their home countries. A very similar amount of people, 39 percent, say they would like to illegal immigrants to stay in the country to work, but only for a limited amount of time. About one quarter of those surveyed said they would like to provide the group with a path to citizenship.
As with most current political issues, opinions are highly correlated with party identification, says Oliver Walter, emeritus professor of political science at UW and the survey’s co-director.
“For instance, only about 15 percent of surveyed Republicans would provide a path to citizenship, while more than half of the Democrats would do so,” Walter says. “The most preferred position for Republican identifiers was to permit the undocumented to remain to work, but only for a limited amount of time.”
It appears that a significant majority of Wyoming citizens favor the provisions of President Barack Obama’s Dream Act, which halts deportations for those who came to the U.S. before their 16th birthday and who meet certain qualifications, such as graduation from high school or who received an honorable discharge from the military. Almost seven in 10 Wyoming citizens favor the Obama policy. Again, position on the Dream Act varies by party identification. Sixty-one percent of Republicans favor the policy, while more than 90 percent of the Democrats do so.
Walter says the strong support for the Dream Act concept probably would vanish if a larger percentage of Wyoming citizens knew that it was a policy put forth by President Obama.
“The president is a negative cue for many Wyomingites and, if he favors a position, their initial reaction is to oppose it,” he says. “Eliminate the partisan cues, and it might be possible to reach accord on immigration reform, but partisan polarization shows no signs of abating either in Wyoming or at the national level. Therefore, reform in the next several years is highly unlikely.”
The statewide telephone survey of 768 Wyoming residents was conducted in October by UW’s Survey Research Center and was sponsored by the Department of Political Science, Wyoming Public Radio and the Wyoming Survey and Analysis Center.
The survey has a margin of error of plus or minus four percentage points.