California Republicans are divided on Trump's immigration enforcement policies, poll finds
Published in News & Features
LOS ANGELES — Republicans in California have diverging opinions on President Donald Trump's immigration enforcement policies, according to a study published by the UCLA Latino Policy and Politics Institute on Monday.
The Trump administration has deployed a sweeping crackdown on immigration, launching ICE raids across the country and removing legal barriers in order to make deportations faster. The study found that while Democrats were largely consistent in their opposition to these immigration policies, Republican sentiment varied more, especially by age, gender and ethnicity.
"At least some subset of Republicans are seeing that these immigration strategies are a step too far," said G. Cristina Mora, a sociology professor and co-director of the UC Berkeley Institute of Governmental Studies, which administered the poll. The polling data were collected from nearly 5,000 registered voters in mid-August. Just over 1,000 of those surveyed were registered Republicans.
Latino Republicans, with whom Trump made historic gains during the 2024 elections, showed the highest levels of disagreement with the party's aggressive stance on immigration. Young people from 18 to 29 and moderate women in the Republican Party also more significantly diverged from Trump's policies.
The majority of Republican respondents expressed approval of Trump's immigration strategy overall. However, the study found respondents diverged more from Trump's policies that ignore established legal processes, including due process, birthright citizenship and identification of federal agents.
"On these legalistic issues, this is where you see some of the bigger breaks," Mora said.
Of those surveyed, 28% disapproved of the end of birthright citizenship, which Trump is pushing for, and 45% agreed that ICE agents should show clear identification. Four in 10 Republican respondents also support due process for detained immigrants.
Young people, who make up about 15% of the party in California, were on average also more likely to break from Trump's policies than older Republicans.
The analysis also found that education level and region had almost no impact on respondents' beliefs on immigration.
Latinos and women were more likely to disagree with Trump on humanitarian issues than their demographic counterparts.
Nearly 60% of moderate Republican women disagree with deporting longtime undocumented immigrants, compared with 47% of moderate men. 45% of women believe ICE raids unfairly target Latino communities.
The political party was most split across racial lines when it came to immigration enforcement being expanded into hospitals and schools. Forty-four percent of Latinos disagreed with the practice, compared with 26% of white respondents, while 46% of Latino respondents disagreed with deporting immigrants who have resided in the country for a long time, compared with just 30% of their white counterparts.
Trump had gained a significant Latino vote that helped him win reelection last year. Democratic candidates, however, made gains with Latino voters in elections earlier this month, indicating a possible shift away from the GOP.
The data could indicate Latino Republicans "are somewhat disillusioned" by the Trump administration's handling of immigration, Mora said. "Latinos aren't just disagreeing on the issues that we think are about process and American legal fairness. They're also disagreeing on just the idea that this is cruel."
Mora said the deluge of tense and sometimes violent encounters posted online could have an impact on Republican opinion surrounding immigration. A plainclothes agent pointed his gun at a female driver in Santa Ana last week, and two shootings involving ICE agents took place in Southern California late last month.
"You now have several months of Latinos being able to log on to their social media and see every kind of video of Latinos being targeted with or without papers," Mora said. "I have to believe that that is doing something to everybody, not just Latino Republicans or Latino Democrats."
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