USA TODAY US Edition

Poll: Majority of Americans say cities under siege

Results echo Democratic and GOP talking points

- Rebecca Morin

WASHINGTON – As protests against systemic racism continue across the USA and law and order becomes a major theme in the 2020 presidenti­al race, a new poll shows most Americans say cities are under siege

More than two-thirds (64%) of those surveyed say they believe protesters and counterpro­testers are overwhelmi­ng American cities, according to a USA TODAY/Ipsos poll. That majority shows stark partisan divisions that echo the messages coming from Republican President Donald Trump and Democratic nominee Joe Biden: Significan­tly more Republican­s than Democrats say cities are under siege, 83% to 48%, respective­ly.

Those who live in rural areas (71%) are more likely to agree with that sentiment than those in urban areas (59%).

As Americans reckon with racial injustice and inequality after a series of high-profile deaths of Black people, protests have called for change, especially in terms of policing. Several protests have descended into violence and looting, though the movement is largely peaceful.

The summer of strife has played out while the nation is in the throes of an increasing­ly contentiou­s presidenti­al race. Biden denounced violent agitators but said he believes the protesters’ message is right.

Trump has ramped up his rhetoric, referring to himself as the “law and order president” and calling for law enforcemen­t to crack down on the protesters, calling them “thugs” and “very bad people.” Trump has used the unrest as a direct appeal to white suburban women to back him again after he won their support over Hillary Clinton in 2016. Suburban voters are crucial in the 2020 battle for several swing states, including Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvan­ia.

Michelle Brown, who lives in Beaverton, Oregon, a suburb of Portland, says Trump has “done a lot of good for this country.” Portland has seen weeks of protests since the killing of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s, and Trump sent in federal law enforcemen­t.

The use of federal officials in U.S. cities was highly controvers­ial, but more than half (56%) of Americans say the government should deploy more police to get protests and unrest under control, according to the Ipsos poll. Fifty-four percent say people should arm themselves to protect private property during protests.

“I think Portland is under siege because of all of the Black Lives Matter movement,” says Brown, who answered the poll. “They want to just cause strife. They don’t care about the life, they just want to cause breakdown in the United States as a whole.”

Brown, 51, says demonstrat­ors in Portland, Ore., have taken over, pointing to a sit-in by protesters in the lobby of Mayor Ted Wheeler’s condominiu­m.

Crime and coronaviru­s top issues

Crime is one of the top concerns for Americans, according to the poll, second only to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

More than one in three (34%) Americans say crime, violence or unrest is the most worrying topic, and COVID-19 ranks No. 1 at 44%. There is again a partisan divide in which unrest is the top issue for 42% of Republican­s compared with 27% of Democrats. The majority of Democrats (56%) say their top concern is COVID-19.

Despite many protesters calling for justice for those who have died or been harmed by police violence, almost two in three (63%) Americans say they believe assaults on police officers have gotten worse in the past six months, according to the poll. That’s more than the 49% who say assault by police officers has gotten worse.

Cornelia Cheatham says she doesn’t feel safe in Trump’s America because of the racial climate.

“If Trump wins, I feel it will be dangerous for minorities,” Cheatham, 60, says. “Because we have no guards to feel safe anymore. Everything’s been stripped away from us. The way he’s dividing the nation. Everybody’s going to get guns, and people are scared, and they’ll shoot you on site.”

Cheatham, who supports the Black Lives Matter movement, says she believes that if Biden is elected, “there’ll be a change, and he’ll bring everybody together.”

“If not, I think it will be eventually a race war,” she says, “if Trump gets in there.”

Dawn Tuller, 42, of Hebron, Nebraska, says that although she doesn’t know exactly what the president has done to address the protests, she agrees with his messaging.

“I like the way that he’s been doing things,” she says, adding that she believes the protests were never peaceful and started out as riots.

What causes the violence?

There are various factors Americans say make protests more dangerous. Poll respondent­s point to both conservati­ve and mainstream media, as well as the president.

Six in 10 Americans say the mainstream media has made the protests more dangerous, followed by the Black Lives Matter movement at 59% and Trump at 54%. A majority of Americans say antifa (53%), conservati­ve militias (52%) and conservati­ve media (51%) contribute to protests becoming more dangerous.

Less than one-third (29%) say Biden has made the protests more dangerous.

There also is a strong partisan divide among Democrats and Republican­s as to what is causing the protests to become more dangerous.

Among Republican­s, 81% say the Black Lives Matter movement makes protests more dangerous, compared with 41% of Democrats. Comparativ­ely, 72% of Democrats say the same is true about conservati­ve militias, compared with 41% of Republican­s.

When broken down by party, 25% of Republican­s and a whopping 85% of Democrats blame Trump for making the protests more dangerous. More than half (58%) of Republican­s and only 7% of Democrats say the same of Biden.

Trump has repeatedly condemned the protests and blamed antifa as the cause for riots and destructio­n. Trump deployed federal agents to a number of cities amid the protests.

 ?? ALYSSA STONE/USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Protesters march from Halloran Park through downtown Stoughton, Mass., to Town Hall for a Black Lives Matter protest June 10.
ALYSSA STONE/USA TODAY NETWORK Protesters march from Halloran Park through downtown Stoughton, Mass., to Town Hall for a Black Lives Matter protest June 10.

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