62% of Americans Want Immigration Cut by 50% or More

Published:  

National Survey of 1000 Likely Midterm Voters
Conducted July 24-25, 2017
By Pulse Opinion Research
Margin of Sampling Error, +/- 3 percentage points with a 95% level of confidence

1* When businesses say they are having trouble finding Americans to take jobs in construction, manufacturing, hospitality and other service work, what is generally best for the country?  Is it better to raise the pay until they can attract Americans without jobs even if it causes prices to rise, or is it better for the government to continue to automatically bring in new immigrants each year to keep the costs down?

61% Better to raise the pay to attract Americans without jobs even if prices rise
17% Better for the government to automatically bring in new immigrants to keep
        the costs down
22% Not sure

2* Some businesses say it is especially difficult to hire workers from among groups with the highest unemployment and poverty rates, which includes Black and Hispanic Americans and younger Americans of all ethnic groups without a college degree.  Should businesses be required to try harder to recruit and train people from those groups with the highest unemployment or should the government continue to bring in new immigrants to compete for the jobs?

72% Business should be required to try harder to recruit and train from groups  
        with highest unemployment
11% Government should continue to bring in new immigrants to compete
        for the jobs
17% Not sure

3* Current federal policy automatically adds about one million new legal immigrants each year giving all of them lifetime work visas.  Which is closest to the number of lifetime immigrant work visas the government should be adding each year -- none, 250,000, half a million, one million, one and a half million, two million, or more than two million?

24% None
22% 250,000
16% Half a million                                 62%   Reduce to half-million or less
14% One million                                    14%   Keep at one million
  3% One and a half million                     9%   Increase to more than a million
  2% Two million
  4% More than two million
14% Not sure

4* When businesses are allowed to bring in immigrant workers on lifetime work permits, who should those immigrants be allowed to eventually petition to also get lifetime work permits….their spouse and minor children only, their extended family in addition to their spouse and minor children or no family members at all?

54% Spouse and minor children only
22% Extended family in addition to spouse and minor children
18% No family members at all
  6% Not sure

5* A bill in the U.S. Senate would allow immigrants to bring in their spouse and minor children but would end migration of extended family. Do you favor or oppose allowing immigrants to bring in only their spouse and minor children and NOT their extended family?

56% Favor
29% Oppose
14% Not sure

6* A bill in Congress would eliminate a government run visa lottery that each year randomly selects approximately 50,000 new immigrants around the world to move to the United States.  Opponents of the visa lottery criticize it for bringing in people without any regard for their skills or how they affect American workers who have to compete with them for jobs.  Supporters of the visa lottery say it is needed to add diversity to the United States.  Should the United States eliminate the visa lottery or continue the visa lottery?

60% Eliminate the visa lottery
29% Continue the visa lottery
11% Not sure

7* On the issue of helping refugees, the U.S. government has settled an average of 63,000 refugees in local U.S. communities every year for the last decade.  Next year how many refugees should the United States admit – more than 100,000, 75,000, 50,000, 25,000, fewer than 25,000, or none and instead assist refugees in safe zones close to their home countries?

17% Admit more than 100,000
10% Admit 75,000                                        17%   Admit 75,000 or more
10% Admit 50,000                                        65%   Admit 50,000 or less
  5% Admit 25,000
  7% Admit fewer than 25,000
43% Admit none and instead assist refugees
        in safe zones close to their home countries
9% Not sure

8* The Pew Research Center projects that immigration policies are on course to add at least 100 million people to the United States over the next 50 years.  Which action of the government is more likely to be better for environmental quality and the quality of life for future Americans -- reduce immigration and slow down population growth, keep immigration the same and add the 100 million people, increase immigration to add more than 100 million people over the next 50 years, or does it not make any difference?

55% Reduce immigration and slow down population growth
20% Keep immigration the same and add 100 million people
  4% Increase immigration to add more than 100 million people
13% It doesn't make any difference
  9% Not sure

9* I'm now going to ask you a few more questions about how businesses should bring in immigrant workers.  First, do you strongly support, somewhat support, somewhat oppose or strongly oppose a rule prohibiting an employer from hiring an immigrant from abroad if that would displace an American worker?

33% Strongly support
18% Somewhat support                51%   Support
19% Somewhat oppose                38%   Oppose
19% Strongly oppose
12% Not sure

10* Next, how should job-based and other non-family immigrant green cards be given out each year -- by the order that applications are submitted, by lottery, or to those applicants with the most points in a merit system based on criteria like education, English-language ability and sought-after skills?

24% By the order that applications are submitted
  6% By lottery
57% By a merit-based points system
12% Not sure

11* In an immigration merit-based point system, should the United States invite only high-skilled immigrants, mostly high-skilled immigrants, about the same number of high-skilled and low-skilled immigrants, or mostly low-skilled immigrants?

23% Only high-skilled immigrants
23% Mostly high-skilled immigrants
43% About the same number of high-skilled immigrants
        as low-skilled immigrants
  4% Mostly low-skilled immigrants
8% Not sure

12* In an immigration merit-based points system, how important should it be that a potential immigrant has an advanced college degree -- very important, somewhat important, not very important, or not important at all?

21% Very important
40% Somewhat important                    61%  Important
24% Not very important                       33%  Not very important or at all
  9% Not important at all
  5% Not sure

13* In an immigration merit-based points system, how important should it be that a potential immigrant be at least moderately fluent in English -- very important, somewhat important, not very important, or not important at all?

50% Very important
32% Somewhat important                         82%   Important
12% Not very important                            16%   Not very important or at all
  4% Not important at all
  2% Not sure

14* If an immigrant comes to the United States on a merit-based visa, how important is it that they and their families not be eligible to receive welfare benefits -- very important, somewhat important, not very important, or not important at all?

46% Very important
22% Somewhat important                   68%   Important
15% Not very important                      26%   Not very important or at all
11% Not important at all
  5% Not sure

15*  Do you find most immigrants you have met personally to be hard-working people who would make good neighbors?

62% Yes
18% No
20% Not sure

16* In the question of ILLEGAL immigration, do you favor or oppose requiring every business to use the government’s online E-Verify system to make sure every job goes to an American or other authorized worker instead of to an illegal worker?

69% Favor requiring E-Verify
15% Oppose requiring E-Verify
16% Not sure

Methodology:  The NATIONAL survey of 1,000 likely midterm voters was conducted by Pulse Opinion Research on July 24-25, 2017.  Pulse Opinion Research, LLC is an independent public opinion research firm using automated polling methodology and procedures licensed from Rasmussen Reports, LLC. 

“Likely Midterm Voters” are those who answered “always” or “usually” to the question: “How often do you vote in congressional elections when there isn’t a presidential contest?”
The margin of sampling error for the full sample is +/- 3.0% percentage points with a 95% level of confidence. This means that an identical survey conducted under the same circumstances would generate a result within the margin of sampling error 19 times out of 20.

The survey was conducted using an established automated polling methodology. For 75%, sample calls were placed to randomly-selected phone numbers through a process that insures appropriate geographical representation.  Twenty five percent (25%) of the sample was conducted via online surveys of those individuals who use a cell-phone as their primary telephone.  After the calls and on-line surveys were completed, the raw data is processed through a weighting program to insure that the sample reflects the overall population in terms of age, race, gender, political party, and other factors.  The processing step is required because different segments of the population answer the phone in different ways.  For example, women answer the phone more than men, older people are home more and answer more than younger people, and rural residents typically answer the phone more frequently than urban residents.

The population targets were based upon census bureau data, a series of screening questions to determine likely voters, and other factors. Pulse Opinion Research determines its partisan weighting targets through a dynamic weighting system that takes into account voting history, national trends, and recent polling.

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2017 state polls