Only a third of Americans think Trump's travel ban will make them safer

Demonstrators hold placards during a protest against US President Donald Trump's executive order travel ban in London, Britain on Jan 30, 2017. PHOTO: REUTERS

NEW YORK (REUTERS) - One-third of Americans believe that President Donald Trump's temporary travel ban on citizens from seven Muslim countries will make the US safer, according to a Reuters/Ipsos opinion poll released on Tuesday (Jan 31).

The Jan 30-31 poll found roughly one in two Americans backed the ban, which also suspends admission of all refugees for 120 days, although there were sharp divisions along party lines.

Mr Trump has pushed back against critics who say the travel ban targets Muslims. He says the "extreme vetting" is necessary to protect the country and its borders.

"This is not about religion," he said in a statement after announcing the travel ban last Friday. "This is about terror and keeping our country safe."

In the Reuters/Ipsos poll, some 31 per cent of people said the ban made them feel "more safe," while 26 per cent said it made them feel "less safe". Another 33 per cent said it would not make any difference and the rest said they don't know.

Mr Trump's executive order blocked citizens from Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen and placed an indefinite ban on Syrian refugees.

Some Republican lawmakers criticised Mr Trump's order and said it could backfire by giving terrorist organisations a new recruitment message.

"This executive order sends a signal, intended or not, that America does not want Muslims coming into our country," senators John McCain of Arizona and Lindsey Graham of South Carolina said in a joint statement.

The Reuters/Ipsos poll found that 49 per cent of Americans agreed with the order and 41 per cent disagreed. Some 53 per cent of Democrats said they "strongly disagree" with Mr Trump's action while 51 per cent of Republicans said they "strongly agree".

Democrats were more than three times as likely as Republicans to say that the "US should continue to take in immigrants and refugees" and Republicans were more than three times as likely as Democrats to agree that "banning people from Muslim countries is necessary to prevent terrorism".

Ms Cheryl Hoffman, 46, of Sumerduck, Virginia said she was thrilled that Mr Trump ordered the ban.

"I understand that the country was founded on immigrants,"said Ms Hoffman, who participated in the poll. "Please, I get that. But I'm worried that refugees are coming in and being supported by my tax dollars."

Another poll respondent Veronica Buetel, 57, of Green, Ohio, felt just the opposite: "Yes, we do live in scary times, but there are other, better ways to root out terrorism."

Mr Westy Egmont, director of the Immigrant Integration Lab at Boston College, said Americans have grown increasingly hostile towards refugees and immigrants as the influx has shifted from Eastern Europeans to people from countries like Iraq, Somalia and Afghanistan.

"The rise of those numbers, as relatively small as they are, have gathered just enough attention to set off a small reaction from people who are genuinely uncomfortable with the diversity around them," he said.

Most Americans, however, don't think the country should show a preference for Christian refugees, as Mr Trump has suggested. Some 56 per cent, including 72 per cent of Democrats and 45 per cent of Republicans, disagreed that the country should "welcome Christian refugees, but not Muslim ones".

On Tuesday, the Trump administration sought to clarify that citizens of US ally Israel who were born in Arab countries would be allowed into the United States.

The Reuters/Ipsos poll was conducted online in English in all 50 states. It gathered poll responses from 1,201 people including 453 Democrats and 478 Republicans. It has a credibility interval, a measure of accuracy, of 3 percentage points for the entire sample and 5 percentage points for the Democrats and the Republicans.

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