The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

In Old Confederac­y, racial gap still wide

Blacks, whites have differing views of opportunit­y, poll says.

- By Rosalind Bentley rbentley@ajc.com

Black Southerner­s and white Southerner­s are so profoundly split on central questions of equality and opportunit­y that the only thing they seem to share is geography, a new poll of the South suggests.

The Winthrop University poll of the 11 states of the Old Confederac­y, released last week, finds some common ground between the races on certain issues. But 61 percent of white people in the survey believe that all Americans have an equal chance to succeed if they work equally hard. Only 33 percent of black people surveyed feel that way.

Likewise, 60 percent of black Southerner­s believe strongly that the legacy of slavery and discrimina­tion continues to hold black people back. But only 19 percent of white Southerner­s share that strong conviction.

“I came from a modest background and built something because I stuck with it and took some risks,” says Lyza Sandgren, a white business owner in Suwanee.

“That is available to everyone in this country. Does everyone have the same ability to succeed on the same level? Of course not. The only avenues that any of us have are education, hard work and the willingnes­s to take a few risks. Nobody’s going to do it for us. On that level, I say that everyone in the United States has an equal chance to succeed.”

Sandgren said she finds the poll results unpersuasi­ve.

“To anyone who in these polls says, whites think this, blacks think that: I don’t care. I listen to the person, not the race,” she said.

Courtney Spencer, an African-American resident of Paulding County, argues that the deck has been stacked against black people since the earliest days of colonial America.

“During slavery you have the slave owners, who actually created wealth off of the ones that they put into slavery,” said Spencer, who works in the pest control business in Hiram. “So, basically that wealth trickled down from generation to generation. But when black people finally got their freedom, they were already hundreds and hundreds of years behind. They’re having to play catch up, and it’s hard to play catch up because there are people who don’t want them to.”

The key to racial understand­ing? “I really think progress can only come from uncomforta­ble conversati­ons,” Spencer said. “There are a lot of people, regardless of race, who don’t want to talk about race. They’d rather be silent about it and hope it will go away. But it never does.”

Attitudes hardening

The poll comes as the South is struggling with a variety of issues, from what to do with Confederat­e monuments to the resurgence of white supremacis­ts — and the people who oppose them — to renewed culture wars. It also comes near the end of the first year of the Trump presidency, which many believe has exacerbate­d racial tensions and further polarized the nation.

Interestin­gly, blacks and whites in the poll were in general agreement that the country is moving in the wrong direction. They also gave the economy reasonably good marks. But when it comes to the future, the wedge returns: 63 percent of whites believe economic conditions are getting better; 63 percent of blacks believe they’re getting worse.

The election of Donald Trump may have much to do with those polarized views, said Emory University political scientist Andra Gillespie.

“Last year, before the election, would whites have felt as sanguine about the economy, particular­ly when the message coming from the Trump campaign was that the economy was in bad shape?” Gillespie said.

Racially differing views about the economy have been revealed in other polls since Trump took office, said Scott Huffmon, the Winthrop University professor who administer­ed the latest Winthrop poll.

In the other polls, among whites, “there was a magical overnight swing after Trump was elected, that the economy was much better than when Obama was president,” Huffmon said.

But William Boone, a political science professor at Clark Atlanta University, said the poll results might not hinge completely on the election results themselves.

“Is this happening because of the Trump effect, or were things present long before Trump but we are seeing them flare up now?” Boone said.

He pointed to the poll question of whether people can get ahead, regardless of race, if they work hard. Sixty-one percent of whites said everyone has an equal chance at success, while only 33 percent of African-Americans felt that way. Boone said the legacy of legal discrimina­tion against African-Americans and subsequent affirmativ­e action policies have affected the way blacks and whites today view their chances in the workplace and in the economy.

“If you look at the policies of the 1930s, 1940s and 1950s, those policies were in harmony with the country’s mores at the time; school segregatio­n, housing segregatio­n, employment discrimina­tion,” Boone said. “Those things have driven us to where we are today. Now, blacks may argue that affirmativ­e action policies are still trying to correct the lingering effect of those policies, but whites may feel, ‘Well, the government is giving them special treatment.’ But that viewpoint is absent historical context.”

Some agreement

Despite these discrepanc­ies, blacks and whites in the poll overwhelmi­ngly agreed that “all races should be treated equally” and that “people of different races should be free to live wherever they choose.”

Another area where blacks and whites appeared to agree was whether “political correctnes­s threatens our liberty as Americans to speak our minds.” Majorities of both races agreed with that statement. Huffmon said it was possible that some African-Americans who vote Democratic but are socially conservati­ve on issues such as gay marriage and transgende­r rights may have feelings similar to white Republican­s who are also conservati­ve on similar social issues.

Whether blacks and whites can find middle ground on the other contentiou­s issues may not be resolved by this generation or even the next, said LaKeyta Bonnette, a political science professor at Georgia State University.

She shows a clip in one of her classes of a “Saturday Night Live” sketch where Tom Hanks portrays a white Trump voter and lone white contestant on an episode of “Black Jeopardy.” In it, the contestant­s find common ground on issues such as mistrust of government, the economy and even body type. But things begin to break down when the category turns to Black Lives Matter.

“That episode is a perfect example of the divide,” Bonnette said. “Race is going to be divisive.”

 ?? JOHN SPINK / JSPINK@AJC.COM ?? Southern blacks and whites in a Winthrop University poll did find areas of agreement. Both agreed that “all races should be treated equally” and that “people of different races should be free to live wherever they choose.”
JOHN SPINK / JSPINK@AJC.COM Southern blacks and whites in a Winthrop University poll did find areas of agreement. Both agreed that “all races should be treated equally” and that “people of different races should be free to live wherever they choose.”

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