The Day

Trump biased against blacks, if you believe polls

One survey found 83% of African-Americans think president is racist

- By PHILIP BUMP

When President Donald Trump announced plans to attend the grand opening of the Mississipp­i Civil Rights Museum on Saturday, it quickly kicked up a political firestorm. The NAACP called for Trump to skip the event, writing that the president’s “statements and policies regarding the protection and enforcemen­t of civil rights have been abysmal, and his attendance is an affront to the veterans of the civil rights movement.” Several black lawmakers who had planned to attend publicly weighed avoiding the president. One, Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., announced that he would not go. The White House responded. “We think it’s unfortunat­e that these members of Congress wouldn’t join the president in honoring the incredible sacrifice rights leaders made to right the injustices in our history,” press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said in a statement — without recognizin­g that Lewis himself is a civil rights leader who led the Student Nonviolent Coordinati­ng Committee in the mid-1960s.

The White House statement also seems to cordon off skepticism about Trump’s visit to a small group of black leaders. That’s almost certainly not the case.

Last week, Quinnipiac University released a new poll that included a question about Trump’s attitudes toward people of color. Most respondent­s — 57 percent — said they did not believe that Trump respects people of color as much as he does white people. Among whites, 50 percent held that view. Among black Americans, the number was 86 percent.

Last month, The Washington Post and ABC News asked a similar question specifical­ly about black Americans.

Half of respondent­s said that Trump was biased against black people. Three-quarters of black respondent­s held that view, as did three-quarters of Democratic respondent­s. Well over half of the respondent­s from those two groups said they strongly believed he is biased against black people.

In both polls, women were more likely than men to say that Trump held a bias against black people (or that he respected people of color less). The Post’s poll asked whether people thought that Trump was biased against women; a larger percentage of the total (and a larger percentage of women) said they believed he was.

This is not necessaril­y a new attitude among Americans. The Post asked in a September 2016 poll whether people felt that Trump was biased against women and minorities. Sixty percent of respondent­s said they thought he was.

A separate poll from Suffolk University the same month — a few weeks after he unveiled his “what do you have to lose” pitch to black voters — asked the question more starkly: Is Trump racist? A minority of Americans — 44 percent — said that he was, but 83 percent of black Americans did. Seven percent of Trump’s own supporters thought he was racist.

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