What Triggers Public Opposition to Immigration? Anxiety, Group Cues, and Immigration Threat
University of Michigan · The University of Texas at Austin
Abstract
We examine whether and how elite discourse shapes mass opinion and action on immigration policy. One popular but untested suspicion is that reactions to news about the costs of immigration depend upon who the immigrants are. We confirm this suspicion in a nationally representative experiment: news about the costs of immigration boosts white opposition far more when Latino immigrants, rather than European immigrants, are featured. We find these group cues influence opinion and political action by triggering emotions—in particular, anxiety—not simply by changing beliefs about the severity of the immigration problem. A second experiment replicates these findings but also confirms their sensitivity to the…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 74.60
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 53
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Immigration
- Opposition (politics)
- Public opinion
- Anxiety
- Social psychology
- Political science
- Elite
- Psychology
- Reduced inequalities