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'FINISH THE WALL.' WHY THE SOUTHERN BORDER BECAME A BIG ISSUE FOR THIS NEW
ENGLAND STATE.

Savannah Kuchar
USA TODAY


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Johnny Burgess, 55, is thinking about the southern border when he casts his
ballot this November.  

Burgess also lives over 2,000 miles from the border he says is being taken
advantage of. 

“I mean, we're all one America,” said Burgess, a resident of Tuftonboro, New
Hampshire. 

The self-employed registered Republican is like many in his state – particularly
his state’s party – who say illegal immigration is top of mind in the 2024
election.  

Almost a quarter of New Hampshire voters surveyed said immigration is the most
important issue facing the country, in a USA TODAY/Suffolk University poll from
January, just ahead of the state’s first in the nation Republican presidential
primary.  

Prep for the polls: See who is running for president and compare where they
stand on key issues in our Voter Guide



Exclusive:It's not the economy, stupid. In NH, democracy is the top issue for
Dems, independents

The issue led the economy, which was number one for 17% of respondents, and
abortion, which earned only 6% of voters’ top concern. New Hampshire Republicans
specifically ranked immigration above all else, with 51% saying it was most
important to them. 



Republicans have worked to push immigration as the focus of the 2024 election −
an issue their party tends to score well on − especially compared to other hot
buttons like abortion. The strong reception in places like New Hampshire may
signal an opening for the GOP in the race for the White House and down the
ballot. 

A University of New Hampshire poll in March found Republican presidential
candidate and former President Donald Trump with a slight edge over Democratic
candidate President Joe Biden when voters were asked who they trusted more on
the issue.  



But the gap between candidates grew significantly among independents: 49% say
they prefer Trump handling immigration policy compared to 32% who picked Biden.
 

And though the Granite State shares a northern border with Canada, voters and
officials there told USA TODAY it’s the southern border capturing most of their
attention. 



“Because they have televisions,” Andrew Smith, director of the University of New
Hampshire survey center, said of why voters in New England are paying such close
attention to a national issue rooted on the other side of the country. 

“They can see it on television, they read it in the paper, they hear politicians
talking about it. And that makes it a major issue,” Smith said. "And I think
it's going to continue to be that way.” 




TRUMP FANS THE FLAME WITH RHETORIC

And almost no politician is better known for talking about the southern border
than Trump. 

His inflammatory language on immigration has brought condemnation from
opponents, while rousing supporters. 

“Walls work. We need to finish the wall,” Burgess said, referring to Trump’s
infamous border wall between the U.S. and Mexico, which he proposed as a
candidate in 2016 and broke ground on as president. 



With immigration being signature issue for Trump over the past eight years, the
former president has continued to employ explosive rhetoric in his campaign.
More recently, he said undocumented migrants were “not people” and bashed what
he called “Biden’s Border Bloodbath.” 

Potty mouth president:3 takeaways on Trump's 'bloodbath' rhetoric

"There’s never been a border like this,” Trump said during a speech in Grand
Rapids, Michigan.

Sunmin Kim, assistant professor of sociology at Dartmouth College with a focus
on race and immigration, said Trump is the “mastermind” behind what he called
“intense political engineering” and fearmongering. 



“I suspect that the knowledge held by average Americans on immigrants are very
secondhand and not very deep. It's very impressionistic,” Kim said. “So it's
easy for them to accept new information as opposed to grounding their thoughts
on their experience or reality.” 

And the debate isn’t just resonating in New Hampshire. Voters in the neighboring
New England state of Vermont ranked the border and immigration as their top
issue in 2024, according to a February University of New Hampshire poll.  

In Michigan and Wisconsin – key battleground states – most voters prefer Trump
on the issue: 84% of Michiganders and 54% of Wisconsinites say they trust the
former president more to handle immigration, according to recent polls. 





“The border is a bigger issue than anybody can think of,” former House Speaker
Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., told an audience at Harvard University's Kennedy
School of Government last Wednesday. He noted that last summer Massachusetts
Gov. Maura Healey declared a state of emergency due to an influx of migrant
families in the state.



Iowa Gov. on immigration:Kim Reynolds signs Texas-style law criminalizing
'illegal reentry' into Iowa

Within New Hampshire, Kim said while he’s surprised residents are quick to point
to immigration as their top concern, it also fits in what has been a pattern of
immigration-related anxiety throughout American history. 

“People seem to care much (more) about immigration when they feel like they're
losing control over the country or society in general,” Kim said. “And I think
that's what's happening today as well. People feel like they're losing control
of their lives, with the inflation, with the political instability and the
globalization, the changing status of the U.S. as a superpower.” 

“And when they see the southern border, that's a perfect expression of what they
see as anarchy or chaos or their governments losing control of the things.” 




NEW HAMPSHIRE VOTERS FRUSTRATED WITH FEDERAL GOVERNMENT ON ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION

New Hampshire has a “relatively good handle” on its economy and crime, with some
of the country’s lowest unemployment and violent crime rates, said New Hampshire
Republican party Chair Chris Ager.  

As a result, immigration has more room to occupy in voters’ minds, he said. 



“Those issues are more under control. And so the one that looks completely out
of control is the border in comparison to everything else,” Ager said. 

Biden's pivot:Why the president is moving to the right in 2024 on immigration

Congress has continued to stall on border legislation.

Earlier this year, a $118 billion bipartisan deal, which would have enacted
widespread immigration policy changes, fell apart in the Senate, after House
Republicans protested the bill did not go far enough and announced it dead on
arrival.



Anxiety around the southern border is symptomatic of voters’ growing frustration
with the federal government, said Jim Merrill, a Republican strategist in New
Hampshire. 

“An issue that should have been a national issue for everybody from the start, I
think was seen as just a Republican issue, but is kind of now spilled over,”
Merrill said. "Clearly it's something that has just, no matter where you are or
what your partisanship, it's a concern, and it's on the minds of voters." 




IMMIGRATION DEBATE SEEPS INTO NEW HAMPSHIRE GOVERNOR'S RACE

The presidential race is not the only high stakes election for Granite Staters
this year where immigration will be a hotly contested topic.

New Hampshire has one of 11 gubernatorial elections in the country this year,
and with well-liked Republican Gov. Chris Sununu stepping aside, the contest is
wide open for the first time in years. 



The New Hampshire GOP has targeted Democratic candidates Cinde Warmington and
Joyce Craig for their stances advocating for immigration policy reform.  

Meanwhile, leading Republican candidate Kelly Ayotte came under fire for falsely
claiming that neighboring Massachusetts was displacing veterans to make room for
housing migrants. Her GOP competitor, Chuck Morse, also used the issue against
Ayotte and said he "vehemently" opposes amnesty for migrants and would "work to
fortify Granite State defenses" as governor.

Burgess for one said he will consider the issue when voting in the governor’s
race, though he has not decided on a candidate yet.  



Still, the issue remains a predominantly national one.

While 83% of New Hampshire voters said illegal immigration was a very or
somewhat serious issue for the country, 43% said it’s serious in their state and
34% in their town or city, according to the University of New Hampshire's poll.




NEW HAMPSHIRE VOTERS WANT ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION ADDRESSED

Voters USA TODAY spoke with in New Hampshire emphasized that their concern is
with illegal immigration and that they want people to follow the legal process
for entering the U.S.

“Our country was built on immigration and diversity, and that diversity brings a
ton of value to our country,” said Amanda Butcher, 37, from Londonderry, New
Hampshire. “And I'm all for that. But it needs to be done the right way and be
done responsibly.” 

Butcher, a first-generation American whose mother immigrated to the U.S. from
Portugal, said her concern is primarily for other parts of the country and less
for her own town and state. A registered Democrat who leans moderate, Butcher
said she would “never, ever” vote for Trump and is hopeful Biden could address
immigration in a second term. 



Kim, of Dartmouth, said America’s current immigration system has reached a
“breaking point” in today’s age of globalization. But increasing politicization
has made substantive reform near impossible. 

“Fearmongering is always coming back to haunt us,” Kim said. 







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