Latinos Souring on Illegal Immigration

Inland Valley Daily Bulletin
November 8, 2010
By Ryan Hagen, Staff Writer

A new study shows Latinos have soured considerably on illegal immigration in the last three years.

In 2007, 50 percent of Latinos surveyed told the Pew Hispanic Center that the growing number of illegal immigrants was a positive force for the existing Latino population.

In a recent Pew survey released last week, that number had plummeted to only 29 percent.

Thirty-one percent of Latinos said illegal immigration has a negative effect, and 20 percent said it had no effect.

Although the wording of the question changed slightly in 2010 - striking the phrase "growing number" to reflect studies that show illegal immigration declining - several local advocates on different sides of the issue weren't surprised with the change in perception.

Those Inland Empire voices diverged significantly, however, when it came to explaining the shift and what it means for immigration policy.

Raymond Herrera, president and founder of a Claremont- based anti-illegal-immigration group called We the People, California's Crusader, said political will has been shifting since 2004.

Herrera said that's when activists like him began loudly calling for reform, slowly building what he said is a national consensus that illegal immigrants should be deported.

"The Minutemen stood up six years ago and brought the awareness level to the American people," he said. "It is now at an apex where ... enough people have had their American dream stolen (by illegal immigrants)."

The head of a center that provides legal and other assistance to immigrants disagreed.

Emilio Amaya, the executive director of the San Bernardino Community Resource Center, said the growing negative attitudes are an understandable but flawed response to a faltering economy.

"In these difficult financial times, even immigrants see themselves competing against new immigrants," Amaya said. "(But) they don't really compete because most people, older immigrants, they already have different (job) skills."

Amaya said illegal immigrants should be fined and "sent to the back of the line," matching the opinion of 53percent of Latinos. The Pew survey found 13 percent of Latinos advocate deportation, while 28 percent said illegal immigrants should not be punished.

Political and economic factors often shift Latino opinions of immigration, noted Cherstin Lyon, who studies the history of citizenship and civil rights at Cal State San Bernardino.

"Mexican-American populations have been divided throughout the 20th century, and (opinions) largely changed since the 1970s," she said. "Most famously, Cesar Chavez came under intense attack from others within the Chicano movement because he ... encouraged punishments of those hiring illegal immigrants."

Lyon had not yet read the study but said crackdowns - such as Arizona's Senate Bill 1070, which allows police to check immigration status if they suspect a person they've already stopped is in the country illegally - tend to encourage discrimination against Hispanic-looking people.

However, 34 percent of Latinos said they, a family member or a close friend experienced discrimination because of their race or ethnic group in the last five years - up 2 percentage points from 2009, before Arizona's law was proposed.

Pew surveyed 1,375 Latino adults in English and Spanish from Aug. 17 to Sept. 19.

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