Okey dokey, I suppose I deserve to be hit with, "citation please".What study post links.
The Religious Affiliation of U.S. Immigrants: Majority Christian, Rising Share of Other Faiths
A Pew Research Center report looks at how the religious makeup of legal immigrants to the U.S. has changed over the past 20 years. While Christians continue to make up a majority of new legal permanent residents, a growing share belong to other faiths
www.pewresearch.org
The Religious Composition of the World’s Migrants
The globe’s 280 million immigrants shape countries' religious composition. Christians make up the largest share, but Jews are most likely to have migrated.
www.pewresearch.org
The Conservative Case for Immigration
Why are Republicans so opposed to immigration? From religion to the economy, the argument doesn't add up.
time.com
Report Shows Foreign-Born Citizens Are More Socially Conservative Than Their Native-Born Counterparts and Are Less Likely to Identify with Either Political Party
Learn more from New American Economy
www.newamericaneconomy.org
When Demography Isn’t Destiny
Demography isn't destiny when it comes to immigration and politics.
www.city-journal.org
On the counterpoint there's this:
Many Immigrants, Including Naturalized Citizens, Don’t Feel Well-Represented by Either Political Party, Though More Align with Democrats than Republicans | KFF
Immigrants, including those who are naturalized citizens, are more likely to align with the Democratic party and its positions on immigration issues than they are with the Republican party and its positions, though many say that neither party represents their views, the KFF-Los Angeles Times...
www.kff.org
And part of that is that the GOP has been quite xenophobic, so can you blame them?
Then there's the fact that immigrants voter turn out rate is lower.
Why Do Immigrants Participate in Politics Less Than Native-Born Citizens? A Formative Years Explanation | Journal of Race, Ethnicity, and Politics | Cambridge Core
Why Do Immigrants Participate in Politics Less Than Native-Born Citizens? A Formative Years Explanation - Volume 5 Issue 1
www.cambridge.org