San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Polling shows why most Americans support the protests

- By Giovanni Russonello

Beyond the scenes of protest and resistance playing out in cities across the country, a movement of a different sort has taken hold.

The American public’s views on the pervasiven­ess of racism have taken a hard leftward turn over the past few years. Never before in the history of modern polling have Americans expressed such widespread agreement that racial discrimina­tion plays a role in policing — and in society at large.

Driven by the Black Lives Matter movement, this shift has primed the country for a new groundswel­l — one that has quickly earned the sympathy of most Americans, polling shows. As a result, in less than two weeks, it has already forced local government­s and national politician­s to make tangible policy commitment­s.

In a Monmouth University poll released this week, 76 percent of Americans — including 71 percent of white people — called racism and discrimina­tion “a big problem” in the United States. That’s a 26-percentage-point spike since 2015. In the poll, 57 percent of Americans said demonstrat­ors’ anger was fully justified, and another 21 percent called it somewhat justified.

In the Monmouth poll and in another released this week by CBS News, exactly 57 percent of Americans said police officers were generally more likely to treat black people unfairly than to mistreat white people. In both surveys, about half of white people said so. This was a drastic change, particular­ly for white Americans, who have not historical­ly said they believed that black people continued to face pervasive discrimina­tion.

“There’s definitely been a seismic shift in the country,” said Steve Phillips, a civil rights lawyer and political analyst who founded the advocacy group Democracy in Color.

He pointed to what might have sounded like a radical demand just a few years ago — cutting funding for police department­s and redirectin­g it toward social services — and noted that it has now been openly embraced by some mayors and police chiefs in cities including Los Angeles. “I was interested to see how that would play itself out, and now they’re doing it; it’s actually happening,” Phillips said.

The current round of protests is youth-led, and so too, to some degree, is the shift in nationwide sentiment. Millennial­s and members of Generation Z are far more likely to say they believe police are prone to racist behavior. And according to a PBS/NPR/Marist College poll last year, members of those generation­s were more than twice as likely to support reparation­s for slavery, compared with baby boomers and others in older generation­s.

Similar trends play out specifical­ly among young black people and other people of color, who express a greater desire for sweeping change and a more unanimous suspicion of police. In a recent Washington Post/Ipsos poll of African Americans, among respondent­s 35 and younger, 9 out of 10 said they did not trust police to treat people of all races equally — higher than in any other age group.

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