Only 28 percent of those surveyed approve of Obama’s response to the surge of children along the border, while twice as many (56 percent) say they disapprove of his efforts, according to the poll by the non-partisan Pew Research Center.

“That is one of the lowest ratings for his handling of any issue since he became president,” the report said.

Republicans don’t get off the hook in the report’s finding. More respondents said Republicans need to do a better job on immigration (42 percent) than those who said Democrats need to do better (40 percent).

A majority (53 percent) said the United States should speed up the deportation process for those children, even if it means that some who are eligible for asylum end up getting deported.

More Republicans favor that option – 60 percent. Democrats are more divided on the issue: 47 percent say they’d rather keep the policy of a slower deportation process, while 46 percent support faster deportation.

Those numbers help explain the difficulty Washington has faced in getting a handle on the flood of immigrant children crossing the southwest border with Mexico.

The White House has responded with a range of proposals. It has requested $1.8 billion to help the Department of Health and Human Services provide better care and housing for the children, who have been packed in overcrowded Border Patrol facilities along the border. The White House also requested $1.6 billion to tighten border security and add dozens of judges, prosecutors and asylum experts to speed up deportation hearings.

Republicans in Congress, have pushed for a change in a 2008 law that allows children from Central American countries to remain in the country for a longer period of time while their immigration cases are resolved.

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