San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Study: Most voters support racial protests

- By Astead W. Herndon and Dionne Searcey

A majority of American voters support the demonstrat­ions against police brutality and racial injustice that have roiled the country over the past month, embracing ideas about bias within the criminal justice system and the persistenc­e of systemic racism that are central tenets of the Black Lives Matter movement, according to a new national poll of registered voters by The New York Times and Siena College.

Fifty-nine percent of voters, including 52 percent of white voters, believe the death of George Floyd at the hands of the police in Minneapoli­s was “part of a broader pattern of excessive police violence toward African Americans,” the poll found. The Black Lives Matter movement and the police had similar favorabili­ty ratings, with 44 percent of registered voters viewing the movement as “very favorable,” almost identical to the 43 percent rating for the police.

The numbers add to the mounting evidence that recent protests have significan­tly shifted public opinion on race, creating potential political allies for a movement that was, within the past decade, dismissed as fringe and divisive. It also highlights how President Donald Trump is increasing­ly out of touch with a but his hair sprouting in a riot of colors in curvilinea­r fashion, put in graphic form the 1960s philosophy that letting your hair fly free was a way to free your mind. (For him, though, it wasn’t a drug-inspired image: He said he borrowed from Marcel Duchamp and Islamic art.)

The poster was inserted in Dylan’s “Greatest Hits” album, so it made its way into the hands of millions of fans. country he is seeking to lead for a second term: Though he has shown little sympathy for the protesters and their fight for racial justice, voters feel favorably toward the protests and their cause.

A survey of battlegrou­nd states critical to November’s election largely mirrored the national results: 54 percent of voters in those states said the way the criminal justice system treats black Americans was a bigger problem than the incidents of rioting seen during some demonstrat­ions. Just 37 percent said rioting was a bigger problem, though Trump and his allies have tried to discredit the protests by focusing on some isolated incidents of violence.

Every age bracket said the use of force by the police against black Americans was a bigger problem than looting at demonstrat­ions; however, support for Black Lives Matter gets more tepid among older voters, the polls found.

Though the poll overall shows former Vice President Joe Biden in a very strong position, especially on racial justice and voters’ belief in his ability to unite a divided country, it also indicates how difficult a task that could be: More than 40 percent of white respondent­s agreed in some measure that discrimina­tion against whites has become as big a problem as other forms of discrimina­tion. the 28th U.S. president from 1913 to 1921, supported segregatio­n and imposed it on several federal agencies not racially divided up to that point. He also barred black students from Princeton while serving as university president and spoke approvingl­y of the Ku Klux Klan.

 ??  ?? Protesters participat­e in a Black Lives Matter march in Phoenix on June 13. A poll found that 44 percent of voters view the Black Lives Matter movement as “very favorable.”
Protesters participat­e in a Black Lives Matter march in Phoenix on June 13. A poll found that 44 percent of voters view the Black Lives Matter movement as “very favorable.”

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