USA TODAY US Edition

Most back White House protests

Poll finds wide opposition to use of force at Lafayette Park

- Susan Page and Sarah Elbeshbish­i

The police crackdown to clear protesters from Lafayette Square last week looms as a defining moment in the national debate over race and law enforcemen­t that followed the death of George Floyd.

An exclusive USA TODAY/Ipsos Poll finds Americans overwhelmi­ngly endorse the right of peaceful protest outside the White House – a view held by nearly 9 of 10 people across racial and partisan lines. Nearly 9 of 10 heard about the clashes that cleared demonstrat­ors before President Donald Trump walked across the square to stand in front of historic St. John’s Church, holding aloft a Bible.

In their wake, Americans by 22 percentage points express more trust in the Black Lives Matter movement to promote justice and racial equality than they do in the president of the United States. Former President Barack Obama is more than twice as likely as Trump to be seen as a president who could best handle this moment of civil unrest.

Two-thirds of Americans, 63%, oppose the show of force that swept the protesters from the park just north of the White House, the scene of many demonstrat­ions in the past. Almost half, 44%, say they “strongly” oppose it.

“That was a bad call,” says Aaron Jones, 40, a Republican from Katy, Texas.

Charles Ritt, 56, a Democrat from Roseville, Minnesota, who watched the scene unfold on TV, called it “disgusting and ridiculous.”

Some of those surveyed side with law enforcemen­t.

“That’s kind of sad that force had to be used,” says Jane Gillespie, 26, a Republican from Glendale, Arizona. “But it seemed like they felt like there was a threat to the president, and that’s why they were acting the way they did.”

Thirty percent of those surveyed, including 50% of Republican­s, support the use of rubber bullets and tear gas in the park.

The online poll of 1,113 adults, taken Monday and Tuesday, has a credibilit­y interval, akin to a margin of error, of plus or minus 3.3 percentage points.

Divisions along racial and especially partisan lines remain, including when it comes to finding the right balance between protecting peaceful protests and ensuring law and order. Americans are split down the middle: 45% say law and order should be the priority, 44% say the right to protest should be the priority.

Biden more trusted

The poll underscore­s the degree to which the president’s provocativ­e comments about the demonstrat­ions in particular and the issue of racial justice in general seem out of step with the mood of the country.

The poll was in the field when Trump posted a tweet Tuesday that promoted an unsubstant­iated conspiracy theory about a 75-year-old protester who was pushed to the ground and injured by police in Buffalo, New York.

Thirty-eight percent of Americans say they trust Trump to promote justice and equal treatment for people of all races – much lower than the Black Lives Matter movement, trusted by 60%, or the presumptiv­e Democratic presidenti­al nominee, Joe Biden, trusted by 51%.

Asked to choose among the current president and the four former presidents who are living, 45% of Americans identify Obama as the one best suited to handle the challenges. Twenty percent choose Trump.

Among Democrats, 75% choose Obama. Among Republican­s, 43% choose Trump, lower than the support he and his actions generally command within the GOP. Eighteen percent of Republican­s choose former President George W. Bush and 15% choose Obama.

“I think it speaks volumes that the (former) presidents have kind of unified and that so much of the country is unified in its feeling,” says Brittany Baca, 31, a Democrat from Oregon City, Oregon. Trump “is making opposite, opposing statements” that she calls “atrocious.”

Baca, the daughter of a police officer, says cellphone videos showing police violence against Floyd and other African Americans were an awakening for her and others. “It just breaks our hearts to hear what’s going on in the country,” she says. “This feels terrible to say, but it’s really opened our eyes to the fact that it’s happening.”

Mostly peaceful or mostly violent?

On some questions, the partisan divide is yawning.

❚ Three-fourths of Democrats, 73%, say the protests after Floyd’s death have been mostly peaceful; a 54% majority of Republican­s say they have been mostly violent.

❚ Two-thirds of Democrats, 65%, say the right to protest is the most important thing to ensure, “even if it means there are some incidents of violence.” Two-thirds of Republican­s, 69%, say law and order is the most important thing to ensure, “even if it means limiting peaceful protests.”

❚ Three-fourths of Democrats, 75%, oppose the idea of deploying U.S. military forces to states in the wake of the Lafayette Square protest. Two-thirds of Republican­s, 68%, support the idea.

“Views toward George Floyd’s killing and the subsequent protests tell a tale of two Americas,” says Cliff Young, president of Ipsos.

There are jarring difference­s along partisan lines about what institutio­ns and forces can be trusted to promote justice and equal treatment. Republican­s most trust the U.S. military (89%) and police and law enforcemen­t (79%). Democrats most trust Black Lives Matter (84%) and Joe Biden (78%).

The divide is also racial. Black people express much lower levels of trust in police and law enforcemen­t than white people do, 28% compared with 65%.

A solid majority of Americans agree on some basics. Sixty percent say Floyd was murdered; just 2% say the police officer “did nothing wrong.” Sixty-five percent support the protests, and 87% support protesting peacefully outside the White House.

Lafayette Square continues to be a center of protest activity. D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser renamed a section of the street “Black Lives Matter Plaza,” and a makeshift shrine to Floyd covers part of an expanded security fence around the White House.

“By protesting and reacting, that shows me that people still have a sense of humanity about them, and they believe ... that their expression of how they feel and what they think can still have the desired effect,” says Maira Nigam, 62, a Democrat from Stamford, Connecticu­t. “We’ll see if that holds up.”

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