As Democrats and Republicans grapple with immigration reform, the Pew Research Center is out with a new poll aimed at figuring out what immigrant communities want most out of a deal.
Their answer: stopping deportations.
By a 55 to 35 margin, Hispanic respondents told Pew they thought “being able to live/work in U.S. legally without fear of deportation” was a higher priority than “having [a] pathway to citizenship for those who meet requirements.” The same was true for Asian respondents, who favored stopping deportations over a path to citizenship 49 to 44.
Given Republican concerns about citizenship, the results suggest that one compromise politicians have hinted at — legalizing many of the undocumented while not providing them a clear path to naturalization — might have legs.
According to Pew, 46% of Hispanic respondents and 59% of foreign-born Hispanic respondents said they worried “some” or “a lot” about either being deported or someone close to them meeting the same fate. The numbers were significantly lower for Asian respondents: 18% of foreign-born residents and 16% overall said they feared deportations.
Frank Sharry, executive director of pro-reform America’s Voice, pushed back against the premise that Pew’s results indicated a desire to sacrifice citizenship for legal status. He noted that 89% of Hispanic respondents and 95% of foreign-born Hispanics told Pew they support a path to citizenship — hardly lukewarm support.
“Pitting an end to deportations against a path to citizenship is a false choice,” Sharry told msnbc. “Immigration reform provides both an immediate end to the deportations and an eventual path to citizenship. One is relief right now and the other is full membership later. For the vast majority of immigrants it’s not ‘either/or,’ it’s ‘both/and.’”
Democratic leaders, including Obama, have generally said a path to citizenship is absolutely necessary to any reform package, warning that a failure to include it would create a permanent group of second class Americans. Most major pro-immigration groups have said the same.









