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GOP candidate for California governor Travis Allen GOP candidate for California governor Travis Allen

GOP candidate for California governor Travis Allen

Chris Nichols
By Chris Nichols January 9, 2018

No, Californians do not overwhelmingly oppose sanctuary policies

Are nearly three quarters of Californians strongly opposed to so-called sanctuary state policies?

That’s what GOP Assemblyman and candidate for governor Travis Allen claimed in a Jan. 2, 2018 interview on Fox News’ Tucker Carlson Tonight.

"Seventy four percent of Californians are absolutely against sanctuary state" policies.

Allen made a similar claim in a Washington Examiner op-ed in October 2017, calling the state’s opposition to sanctuary policies "overwhelming."

The Orange County lawmaker has vowed to defund sanctuary cities if elected governor.

Background on sactuary state

California became a sanctuary state in October 2017 when Democratic Gov. Jerry Brown signed a law that limits cooperation between local law enforcement and federal authorities on immigration holds.

The topic is controversial in California and nationally.

President Trump has threatened to cut off funding to sanctuary jurisdictions. And earlier this month, Trump’s acting head of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Thomas Homan, threatened to jail elected officials in sanctuary cities.

"This isn’t the America I grew up in," Homan said in a separate Fox News interview, also on Jan. 2, 2018. "We got to take these sanctuary cities on. We got to take them to court. And we got to start charging some of these politicians with crimes."

Sacramento Mayor Darrell Steinberg, a strong supporter of sanctuary policies, was defiant in response, telling the Sacramento Bee: "They certainly know where to find me."

There’s no doubt some Californians oppose sanctuary policies. But we wanted to know whether 74 percent are "absolutely against" them as Allen claimed.

We set out on a fact check.

Our research

Several polls have asked Californians about sanctuary policies in recent years. The four most recent we found all contradict Allen’s claim:

 A November 2017 USC Dornsife/Los Angeles Times survey found 53 percent favored and 29 percent opposed California’s sanctuary state legislation. Only 18 percent strongly opposed it, nowhere near the 74 percent Allen asserted. The survey asked "Do you favor or oppose the new law that says California law enforcement personnel will not hand over immigrants in the country illegally to U.S. immigration agents, unless the person has committed a serious crime?"

 A March 2017 UC Berkeley Institute of Governmental Studies poll found conflicting results depending on the question asked. It showed 56 percent supported and 44 percent opposed "local communities declaring themselves sanctuary cities and instructing local police and government employees not to automatically turn immigrants over to federal immigration officers when they are found to be in the country illegally." When asked about the topic in a slightly different way, 53 percent opposed and 47 percent supported allowing cities and counties the right to ignore requests from federal authorities to detain illegal immigrants who have been arrested and are about to be released.

 A May 2017 Public Policy Institute of California poll asked more specifically about California’s sanctuary state legislation. It found 48 percent of adults were in favor and 42 percent were opposed.

Featured Fact-check

 A January 2017 Public Policy Institute of California survey showed 58 percent of likely voters "favor California’s state and local governments making their own policies and taking actions—separate from the federal government— to protect the rights of undocumented immigrants living in the state." Only 39 percent opposed.

Outdated survey

Allen’s campaign responded to our request for evidence after publication. See our update at the end of this fact-check for its full response. 

The lawmaker relied on a separate UC Berkeley IGS survey from September 2015. Results from that older survey do match up with the 74 percent figure Allen stated.

It found 74 percent opposed the idea of local authorities ignoring a federal request to hold a detained person in the country illegally. The IGS survey asked essentially that same question in its March 2017 poll and found only a slight majority, 53 percent, opposed that idea.

Jack Citrin, who led the IGS survey in 2015, explained the shift in Californians’ opinions to the New York Times this way, "Partisanship was much less a factor" in 2015, he said. "But now I would say in California, whenever you ask pretty much any political question that may have some connection to Trump, you get a huge, huge partisan divide."

Recent polls show a majority of Californians disapprove of Trump and disagree with his policies, with the results falling along partisan lines.

Mark DiCamillo, the current director of the IGS survey, said opinions on sanctuary policies, meanwhile, "vary according to how you frame the issue."

Californians strongly favor cities having the ability to declare themselves sanctuaries and the option to not automatically turn over immigrants to federal authorities. But, as DiCamillo added, "just ignoring a federal request is not as popular, it’s very divisive."

"There are nuances to the issue, in my opinion, that affect public opinion and how it’s gauged," he said.

Our ruling

Republican Assemblyman Travis Allen recently claimed "74 percent of Californians are absolutely against sanctuary state" policies.

Allen appears to have based his numbers on a September 2015 survey. But much has changed since then: Donald Trump was elected president and recent polls show Californians’ opinions have evolved.

Most importantly, we found four recent polls that contradict Allen’s statement. They show Californians generally favor cities having the ability to declare themselves sanctuaries. Two specifically found greater support than opposition for California’s sanctuary state law.

We rate Allen’s claim False.


FALSE – The statement is not accurate.

Click here for more on the six PolitiFact ratings and how we select facts to check.

UPDATE: A spokeswoman for Allen’s campaign responded to our request for evidence after we published our fact check. She confirmed in an email that Allen was referring to the September 2015 IGS survey. The spokeswoman described that poll as"the most accurate and appropriate to use" regarding California’s sanctuary state legislation.

She claimed the March 2017 IGS poll "was biased" and "adds politics and inaccurate descriptions of sanctuary policies into the poll."

Her statement did not address the other recent surveys that show a majority, or near-majority, of Californians support sanctuary policies.

Our rating remains the same.

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"Seventy four percent of Californians are absolutely against sanctuary state" policies.
Tuesday, January 2, 2018

Our Sources

Travis Allen, Fox News interview, Jan. 2, 2018

Travis Allen, Washington Times, California's 'sanctuary state' policy exposes disconnect between Democrat elites and ordinary Californians, Oct. 16, 2017

Mark DiCamillo, director, UC Berkeley Institute of Governmental Studies, interview, Jan. 8, 2018

Los Angeles Times, More than half of Californians support 'sanctuary state' legislation, poll finds, Nov. 10, 2017

Public Policy Institute of California, Statewide Survey: Californians and their government. May, 2017

UC Berkeley Institute of Governmental Studies Poll, March 29th, 2017

Public Policy Institute of California, Statewide Survey: Californians & their government, January 2017

UC Berkeley Institute of Governmental Studies, News Release: IGS Poll: Californians Say Cities Should Not Be Sanctuaries, Sept. 4, 2015

Los Angeles Times, More than half of Californians support 'sanctuary state' legislation, poll finds, Nov. 10, 2017

PolitiFact National, Anatomy of a statistic: Do 80 percent of Americans oppose sanctuary cities? February 24th, 2017

The Washington Post, Do 80 percent of Americans oppose sanctuary cities? March 28th, 2017

New York Times, California Today: A Big Swing on Sanctuary Cities, April 24, 2017

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No, Californians do not overwhelmingly oppose sanctuary policies

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