The Commercial Appeal

Poll: Campus protests split Democrats

Majority of respondent­s worry about violence

- Susan Page, Sudiksha Kochi and Rachel Barber

Protests at American colleges over the Israeli-hamas war in Gaza are dividing Democrats and unifying Republican­s as fears of campus violence loom.

An exclusive USA Today/suffolk University Poll finds complicate­d attitudes toward the protesters, their motives and their tactics. On this there is agreement: Two-thirds of voters (67%) express concern that the demonstrat­ions and police response will end up leading to violent confrontat­ions.

Both the policy and political challenges are particular­ly steep for President Joe Biden.

Last week, he walked a careful line, condemning violence on college campuses while defending the free-speech rights of protesters. He has tried to balance support for Israel with calls for more humane treatment of Palestinia­ns in Gaza who have seen families killed and communitie­s destroyed in assaults that followed the Oct. 7 Hamas attacks in Israel. Famine is a rising threat.

“I think it’s a genocide and the way that they control water and humanitari­an aid is unethical and I just don’t see, like, how are they allowed?” said Tiffany Batton, 43, an independen­t from Chicago who backs Biden. She was among those surveyed. “I am thrilled to see young adults practicing their civil rights − freedom of speech and assembly − and they’re doing it in a pretty peaceful way.”

“I believe in peaceful protest, but it’s getting a little out of hand,” said Francis Spitale, 60, a Democrat from Charleston, South Carolina, who also supports Biden. Since the Oct. 7 attacks, Israel has been “a little extreme in their tactics, but they have to defend themselves.”

Biden voters are split: 30% support the protests, 39% agree with their demands but oppose their tactics, and 20% oppose them.

Trump voters are united: 78% oppose

the protesters. Just 5% support them and 9% support their demands but oppose their tactics.

The poll of 1,000 registered voters, taken by landline and cellphone from April 30 to May 3, has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.1 percentage points.

Trump calls police crackdowns ‘a beautiful thing to watch’

For Donald Trump, the issue has become a unifying force in a GOP that has been split on abortion and other issues. He has called the protesters “radical left lunatics” and praised the police crackdown on campus encampment­s at Columbia University and the University of California, Los Angeles, as “a beautiful thing to watch.”

The crisis in the Mideast has become a talking point for Republican­s against Biden. So has the footage of police arresting demonstrat­ors and dismantlin­g encampment­s as the protests spread to colleges across the country.

“This is all on Biden,” declared Devy Walta, 67, a Republican retiree from Helmight

ena, Montana. “Trump left office; all of a sudden now there’s a problem.” He said college administra­tors and law enforcemen­t officials “should be responding with an iron fist” if there is violence.

Among voters who tend to be in the GOP coalition, most of those surveyed oppose the demonstrat­ions: 77% of conservati­ves, 52% of whites, 52% of men.

Among key groups that Democrats rely on in national elections, there is no such majority consensus:

h Younger voters, those under 35, are a targeted demographi­c for Democrats. They are the age group most supportive of the protests: 35% support them and another 27% support their demands but oppose their tactics.

h The oldest voters, those 65 and older, is the age group that, along with those 35 to 49, is the most supportive of Biden. They are also the one most aligned against the protests; 54% oppose them and just 10% support them.

Swing voters illustrate the political conundrum. Among those voters who now support a candidate but say they

change their minds before Election Day, 24% support the protests, 24% support them but oppose their tactics, and 41% oppose them.

Overall, 19% of those surveyed support the protests, 24% agree with their demands but oppose the way they are conducting themselves, and 46% oppose them.

Are the protesters antisemiti­c? Pro-hamas?

Republican­s and Democrats have strikingly different views of the protesters’ motives and beliefs.

h Republican­s, by nearly 3-1, say the demonstrat­ions reflect antisemiti­sm. Democrats, by 2-1, say they don’t.

h Republican­s, by more than 3-1, say a majority of the demonstrat­ors are prohamas. Democrats, by 7-1, say they aren’t.

“I’m a free-speech absolutist, so any of these kids being arrested is sickening,” said Brett Watchorn, 36, a shipping clerk from Denver. An independen­t, he supports Robert F. Kennedy Jr. in the presidenti­al race. College administra­tors should “negotiate and actually, you know, hear their complaints and address them. Don’t just stand there and say, ‘Oh, they’re being antisemiti­c.’ It’s ridiculous.”

Watchorn said Biden “should be on that picket line with them.”

“I think they’re ridiculous,” Stephen Harrison, 52, a small-business owner from Manhattan, Montana, said of the protesters.

“If you look at it from a world view, you know, who runs Palestine? Hamas is a terrorist organizati­on. So, by proxy, supporting that region or supporting a free Palestine is supporting a terrorist organizati­on.”

He warned that violence could be ahead on American campuses. While there have been clashes between police and demonstrat­ors on some campuses, most of the protests have been peaceful.

“Somebody throws a punch, somebody pushes somebody, and then the next thing you know, you got 25 cops beating up three kids,” Harris said. “I don’t think that’s right, either, but you know what? Consequenc­es.”

 ?? ROBERT HANASHIRO/USA TODAY ?? Demonstrat­ors scuffle with security officers on the campus of the University of Southern California, where several hundred people protested the ongoing war in Gaza.
ROBERT HANASHIRO/USA TODAY Demonstrat­ors scuffle with security officers on the campus of the University of Southern California, where several hundred people protested the ongoing war in Gaza.

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