Poll: 50 years after MLK’s death, civil rights goals unmet
WASHINGTON – Fifty years after the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., only 1 in 10 African-Americans thinks the United States has achieved all or most of the goals of the civil rights movement he led, according to a new poll by the Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.
Three-quarters of African-Americans said there has been little or no progress on fair treatment by police, and more than half answered the same about fair coverage by the media, political representation or equal economic opportunities.
Even when it comes to voting rights – the high point for perceived progress for all of Americans in the poll – just 34 percent of blacks said there has been a lot of progress made toward equality. Another 29 percent said there has been at least some progress.
Americans overall were only slightly more optimistic. More than half said major progress has been made toward
equal voting rights for African-Americans, but just a quarter said there has been a lot of progress in achieving equal treatment by police or the criminal justice system.
Among whites, 64 percent think there’s been a lot of progress and another 25 percent think there’s been minor progress on voting rights, while 28 percent think there’s been a lot of progress and 31 percent partial progress toward equality in the criminal justice system.
The poll found that 30 percent of American adults – 35 percent of whites and just 8 percent of blacks – said all or most of the goals of the 1960s civil rights movement have been achieved. Most of the remainder said partial progress has been achieved.
The poll was taken about six weeks ahead of the 50th anniversary of King’s death.
King was shot and killed April 4, 1968, outside his second-floor room at the Lorraine Motel in Memphis, Tennessee, by segregationist James Earl Ray.
King has since been acknowledged as an American hero for his quest for freedom, justice, equality and peace among all races.
The poll found only one area – voting rights – where a majority said a lot of progress has been made for racial equality since the civil rights movement. I
n total, 57 percent of Americans said there has been major progress on equal voting rights, though just 39 percent said there has been major progress on political representation for AfricanAmericans.
Close to half said there has been major progress on reducing segregation in public life – 47 percent – and equal access to good education – 48 percent. About a third said there has been at least some progress in those areas.
On the lowest end of the spectrum, just 23 percent said there has been a great deal of progress in fair treatment of blacks by police or the criminal justice system, and nearly half said there has been little to no progress in either of those areas.
Whites were more likely than blacks to think there has been progress in every area asked about in the poll.
In general, 54 percent of Republicans and just 14 percent of Democrats think most or all of the goals of the civil rights movement have been achieved.
That ranged from 76 percent of Republicans and 46 percent of Democrats saying there has been a lot of progress on voting rights, to 43 percent of Republicans and 9 percent of Democrats saying there has been a lot of progress on fair treatment by police.
Just over half of all Americans – including 79 percent of blacks and 44 percent of whites – said AfricanAmericans continue to face disadvantages to getting ahead in the United States.
That’s compared with 22 percent who said blacks actually have advantages and 26 percent who said their race makes no difference in getting ahead.