Most
Americans support Obama's contested immigration plan: poll
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[January 28, 2016]
By Roberta Rampton
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Most Americans say
they back a plan that would allow certain illegal immigrants to stay in
the country, but support for the idea slips when President Barack
Obama's name is attached to the question, according to a recent
Reuters/Ipsos poll.
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The results underscore the polarized nature of the debate over how
to overhaul immigration laws and how to address the estimated 11
million people living illegally in the country.
Congress has been unable to agree on reforms for years. In 2014,
Obama bypassed the Republican-controlled Congress to issue an
executive order to shield more than 4 million undocumented
immigrants from deportation and offer them work permits, but he was
blocked by court challenges from Republican-governed states.
The Supreme Court is set to rule by the end of June on whether Obama
had the power to make the change. The decision will come just weeks
before Republicans choose their nominee for November's presidential
election.
 Republican front-runners Donald Trump and Ted Cruz have called for a
crackdown on illegal immigration, with Trump promising to build a
wall along southern U.S. border with Mexico.
But Hispanic voters are an increasingly powerful voting bloc, and
the debate over Obama's immigration action could hurt Republican
attempts to make inroads into the important demographic.
The Reuters/Ipsos poll was taken in the week following the Supreme
Court's decision to hear the immigration case.
The poll shows 61 percent of Americans support the plan to relax
immigration policy for some undocumented people when it is described
in general terms without using Obama's name, including 42 percent of
Republicans. Half of Republicans opposed the idea.
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But when the same plan was described as being an executive action
taken by Obama, support fell to 54 percent overall, with only 31
percent of Republicans supporting it and 62 percent opposing the
measures.
For Democrats, 78 percent supported the plan when it was described
without using Obama's name, and 80 percent supported it when the
president's name was attached to it.
The online poll of 1,200 people has a credibility interval of 3.2
percentage points, including 5 percentage points for Democrats and
5.4 percentage points for Republicans.
(Reporting by Roberta Rampton; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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