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Latino voters strongly support Obama immigration action, poll finds

President Obama speaks about immigration at Del Sol High School, in Las Vegas, on Friday. His announcement of new rules limiting deportations has drawn strong support from Latinos, according to a new poll.
President Obama speaks about immigration at Del Sol High School, in Las Vegas, on Friday. His announcement of new rules limiting deportations has drawn strong support from Latinos, according to a new poll.
(Carolyn Kaster / Associated Press)
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President Obama’s decisions on immigration last week have angered Republicans, but have drawn strong support from a key audience, Latino voters, according to a new survey.

Roughly nine in 10 Latino registered voters said they supported Obama’s move to shield parents of U.S. citizens and permanent residents from deportation, according to the survey by Latino Decisions, a polling firm that specializes in Latino voters.

The support cut across demographic categories, with English speakers and Spanish speakers, Mexican and non-Mexican immigrants and Democratic and Republican Latinos saying they supported Obama’s actions, the poll said.

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“This is the highest and the most unified we have ever found Latino public opinion,” said pollster Matt A. Barreto, who conducted the survey.

About two-thirds of the registered voters surveyed said they blamed Republicans for Congress’ inability to pass immigration legislation over the past two years. About one in four said they primarily blamed Obama and Democrats. And about 80% said they would oppose efforts, which some Republicans have pushed, to try to block Obama’s move by cutting off government funds to administer it.

As previous surveys have done, the poll also provided evidence of how much the population of immigrants in this country illegally is intertwined with the Latino citizen population.

About two-thirds of Latino registered voters said they personally know someone who is in the U.S. illegally, and about a third of Latino voters said they had a family member who was in the country without legal authorization.

The Latino Decisions poll surveyed 405 Latino registered voters nationwide. It has a margin of error of plus or minus 4.9 percentage points.

For more on politics and policy, follow @DavidLauter on Twitter.

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