Economy, immigration top concerns among Texas voters

November 4, 2011

By BY ROSS RAMSEY

THE TEXAS TRIBUNE

Texas voters think the economy is the biggest problem facing the country, but immigration is the most pressing issue facing the state, according to the new University of Texas/Texas Tribune Poll.

That coincides with the rise of Gov. Rick Perry’s policies on illegal immigration as an issue in the presidential race, and with his relative electoral weakness in Texas where the UT/Tribune Poll has the governor in a virtual tie with former business executive Herman Cain among the state’s Republican voters.

Texas voters are also much more likely to say the state is moving in the right direction than the country, and the state’s economy is faring better than the national economy. And half of them say the state government in Texas is a good model for other states to follow.

The economy, unemployment and federal spending overshadow other issues on the list of the most important problems facing the country, Texas voters told the pollsters. The economy, chosen by 27 percent of the respondents, leads the pack, followed by unemployment/jobs at 19 percent, and federal spending/national debt at 18 percent. The first two items grabbed 46 percent of the responses, dominating the list of concerns. Only one other issue — political corruption/leadership — broke into double digits; it was most important to 10 percent of the respondents.

Other issues that have risen to the top or near the top of the national debate found little traction among Texas voters as issues facing the country. That list includes national security and terrorism, energy, Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan, and gay marriage. Immigration, for example, was chosen by only 3 percent of the respondents on the list of the country’s problems, and border security by only 1 percent.

On issues facing the state, those two topics zoom to the top, with 18 percent ranking immigration as the most important problem facing the state, followed by border security at 16 percent, and the economy and unemployment/jobs, each at 14 percent. Put another way, 34 percent ranked immigration and border security highest, while 28 percent put the economy, unemployment and jobs at the top of their lists of the state’s most pressing problems.

Nothing else among problems facing the state got comparable attention. Education and political corruption/leadership were each chosen as the top state issue by 8 percent of the respondents. And some previously high-profile issues sank to zero, including transportation/roads/traffic, electoral fraud, and insurance and utility rates.

“Once again, immigration plus border security beats economy plus jobs. That’s astounding,â€