The survey’s findings reveal a deep and durable public instinct to see immigrationthrough a law-and-order lens, not as an abstract policy debate. Large majorities saythrough a law-and-order lens, not as an abstract policy debate. Large majorities sayentering the country illegally is, plainly, breaking the law, and they want those laws enforced — including deportations. That instinct doesn’t stop at partisan borders:
independents and swing voters track much closer to Republicans than
Democrats on enforcement questions.
For Democrats, the danger isn’t just in what they say, but how their positions are framed.
When voters hear “oppose ICE enforcement” or “shutdown to defund ICE,” the party’s
generic ballot advantage evaporates, and Republicans gain ground nationally.
The polling suggests that symbolic anti-enforcement stances may resonate with activists
while alienating the very voters who decide close races. As immigration protests swell in
major cities, the political fault line is already drawn —
and it cuts straight through the Democratic coalition.