Fifty -six percent of probable voters say it is “very important” to deport migrant criminals, while only five percent say “it is not important,” according to a Rasmussen reports.
The survey from April 15 to 17 also showed that Democratic voters reflect the national result of eleven and one.
Forty -three percent of the Democrats say that deportations are “very important”, compared to the eight percent that said “is nothing important.”
The remaining voters say that the issue is “something important” or “not very important”, and that it is not likely that their voting decisions are influenced by the problem.
Related: Trump: The illegals know that they do not come, because “they will not enter”
Most Hispanic and black voters chose the option of “very important” deportations as a vote form, as well as a third of liberals.
Reventón’s results are a political victory for President Donald Trump. He is gathering public support for his vigorous actions in favor of deportation as Democrats urged that border policy is governed by judgments and lawyers for migrations.
President Trump published his political message of deportations on social networks:
How can they make up let millions of criminals enter our country, totally deactivated and without veterans, without legal authority to do so, but I, to compensate for this assault on our nation, are expected to happen and the process of each?
“We cannot give everyone a trial, because doing so, without exaggeration, 200 years,” Trump said through social networks. “We would need sinks of thousands of judgments for the hundreds of thousands of thousands of illegal that we are sending outside the country. Such thing is not possible to do.”
The Rasmussen survey also showed a strong bipartisan public agreement with the law and order policy established by the popular president of El Salvador, Nayib Bukele.
In a second question, Rasmussen asked voters for his answer to a statement that Bukele made to President Donald Trump at his oval office meeting:
Mr. President, has 350 million people to release. You can’t simply, you know, free criminals and think that crime will go down magically, you have to imprison them [criminals] Therefore, it can release 350 million Americans who request the end of crime and the end of terrorism, and can be done.
Forty -three percent of Rasmusses respondents were strongly eggs with Bukele’s statement, and 23 percent “something” agreed with Bukele’s statement.
A single nine percent disagree “strongly” with Bukele, including only 24 percent of liberals.
Many surveys show that Americans are ambivalent about migration. They want immigrants to like migration. But they also firmly oppose the migration that makes economic or civic damage follow Americans, and more and more oppose the statement of the establishment that is a “nation of immigrants” and the rule of the “citizenship of birth law.”
But the entry of migrant interest rates, consumers and workers is a stimulus for Wall Street, business groups, progressive reporters and the political ambitions of the Democrats.
Elizabeth Weibel contributed to this story