Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Poll: Most in US support protests

About 8 in 10 Blacks, half of whites approve

- Aaron Morrison and Hannah Fingerhut

Ahead of the Juneteenth holiday weekend’s demonstrat­ions against systemic racism and police brutality, a majority of Americans said they approve of recent protests across the country. Many think they will bring positive change.

And despite headline-making standoffs between law enforcemen­t and protesters in cities nationwide, the poll from the Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research finds a majority of Americans think law enforcemen­t officers have generally responded to the protests appropriat­ely. Somewhat fewer said the officers used excessive force.

The findings follow weeks of peaceful protests and unrest in response to the death of George Floyd, a Black man who died pleading for air on May 25 after a white Minneapoli­s police officer held his knee on Floyd’s neck for nearly nine minutes. A dramatic change in public opinion on race and policing has followed, with more Americans today than five years ago calling police violence a very serious problem that unequally targets Black Americans.

Bill Ardren, a 75-year-old retired resident of Maple Grove, Minnesota, a suburb of Minneapoli­s, said he supports the protests. He blames protesters and law enforcemen­t equally for why some Floyd demonstrat­ions turned into ugly clashes scarred by looting and arson.

“People finally got fed up because of this last incident,” said Ardren, referring to Floyd’s death, “and it spread all over the country.”

The new AP-NORC poll found 54% of Americans said they approved of the protests, and 32% disapprove­d. Another 14% said they hold neither opinion.

More Americans think the protests will mostly change the country for the better rather than bring about negative change, 44% to 21%. A third said the protests won’t make much difference.

An Associated Press total of known arrests through June 4 found more than 10,000 people were arrested at demonstrat­ions in the U.S., many of which defied citywide curfews and some daytime orders to disperse. The count grew by the hundreds each day, as protesters were met with overwhelmi­ng shows of force by local officers, state police and National Guard members. Los Angeles had more than a quarter of the nation’s arrests, according to the AP’s total, followed by New York, Dallas and Philadelph­ia.

One of the nation’s largest demonstrat­ions was in Philadelph­ia on June 6, when tens of thousands of people met near the Philadelph­ia Museum of Art and peacefully marched through Center City. Kipp Gilmore-Clough, a resident of the city and associate pastor at Chestnut Hill United Church, joined that day’s protest and said that kind of response to police abuse was “long overdue.”

“I’ve been fairly heartened by the ongoing presence in the streets, because the systemic racism that has generated these protests is longstandi­ng and deeply embedded,” said GilmoreClo­ugh, who’s among those who believe the protests will have a positive impact.

Seven percent of Americans said they have participat­ed in a protest in the past few weeks. Although Black Americans were significantly more likely to say so than white Americans, the poll found about half of those who said they protested were white. The demonstrat­ions have been noted as diverse compared with those seen as affiliated with the Black Lives Matter movement that emerged nearly seven years ago.

About 8 in 10 Black Americans said they approved of the protests. About half of white Americans approved, and about a third disapprove­d.

Overall, Americans are somewhat more likely to say the protests have been peaceful than violent, 27% vs. 22%, but 51% said they think there has been a mix of both. White Americans are more likely than Black Americans to call protests violent, 20% to 7%, though 54% of white Americans said there has been a mix.

Gilmore-Clough said he was disappoint­ed by law enforcemen­t’s use of excessive force at the protests. At times, police officers across the country were caught on video indiscrimi­nately swinging batons, firing rubber bullets, deploying tear gas and pepper spray – even shoving people to the ground. Officers in many other places joined protesters, including some symbolical­ly kneeling alongside demonstrat­ors.

A majority of Americans, 55%, say law enforcemen­t responded to recent protests appropriat­ely, while fewer, 44%, say they used excessive force. And 54% say President Donald Trump’s response to the recent unrest – he suggested sending the U.S. military into cities where local officials struggled to quell unrest, before later backing off the idea – made things worse.

Just 12% say Trump made things better, while 33% say his response had no impact.

Anne Oredeko, a supervisin­g attorney in the racial justice unit of the Legal Aid Society of New York, one of the nation’s largest public defender agencies, said the New York Police Department’s response to peaceful protests undermined civil rights. Mass arrests also threatened public health during the coronaviru­s pandemic, making the idea that anyone believes the law enforcemen­t response was appropriat­e troubling, she said.

“There’s something deeply bankrupt about our inability to see the value of life, across color and ethnicity,” Oredeko said. “There’s something missing in this country. If you understand the point that protesters are making, saying that there is a deep distrust of police and a need for systemic reforms, your response shouldn’t be to maim them.”

Although 7 in 10 Black Americans said law enforcemen­t officers responded to the protests with excessive force, about half as many white Americans said that. Roughly 6 in 10 white Americans said law enforcemen­t officers responded to protests appropriat­ely.

Destiny Merrell, a 20-year-old Black college student from Unadilla, Georgia, said she has not participat­ed in the protests out of fear she could be harmed by police or other demonstrat­ors.

“We matter, but we don’t matter to certain people,” she said.

The AP-NORC poll of 1,310 adults was conducted June 11-15 using a sample drawn from NORC’s probabilit­y-based AmeriSpeak Panel, which is designed to be representa­tive of the U.S. population. The margin of sampling error for all respondent­s is plus or minus 3.7 percentage points.

 ?? CAROLYN KASTER/AP ?? People gather during a service outside St. John’s Episcopal Church near the White House in Washington on June 12.
CAROLYN KASTER/AP People gather during a service outside St. John’s Episcopal Church near the White House in Washington on June 12.

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