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Political Strategy for a Permanent Democratic Majority

Teixeira: Public Opinion on the Protests, Black Lives Matter and the Police

The following article by Ruy Teixeira, author of The Optimistic Leftist and other works of political analysis, is cross-posted from his blog:

It’s important to understand what public opinion is and is not saying about the protests, BLM and the police.

First, as widely understood, net favorability toward Black Lives Matter has spiked upward in the last few weeks. The public generally sees the associated protests as justified, overwhemingly condemns the killing of George Floyd and police brutality generally and is increasingly likely to see a racial bias problem in policing.

Not surprisingly, support for reforming the police and police practices is now very strong indeed, as poll after poll has shown (see graphic below for one example).

But that does not mean the public is suddenly on an anti-police vendetta and wants to defund or abolish (!) police forces. That is a view among some BLM and associated activists but it is wildly unpopular with the public (see below for a representative polling result). Even “cutting funding” for the police isn’t popular and the most anodyne formulation possible–reducing the police budget in your community to shift funding to mental health, housing and education–only garners 39 percent support vs. 60 percent opposition (Ipsos). This result no doubt reflects the fact that most people are very or somewhat satisfied with the job the policy are doing in their local community (71 percent, Monmouth).

Finally, the embrace of the Black Lives Matter by the public does not mean the embrace of what you might call the ideology of the movement, which sees the US as a white supremacist society where radical steps like defunding the police are a necessity. It reflects, rather, horror at the specific George Floyd incident and a general opposition to racism and policy brutality that is rooted in the deeply-held value that all should be treated fairly. This is shown by a recent Yougov/Economist result where people were asked about whether they had positive or negative reactions to different slogans, including Black Lives Matter and All Lives Matter. The associations with Black Lives Matter were 52 percent positive/22 percent negative. The associations with All Lives Matter were….56 percent positive/23 percent negative.

So it’s a different world out there than you find on Twitter or among activists or within elite media circles. But that world is the real one and the one where change has to take place.

I’ll give the last word to the very wise James Clyburn:

“When you allow people to use incendiary terms, we create a climate within which we can’t get much done,…‘Defund the police’ is unnecessarily confusing, I think all of us know that sound bites tend to get interpreted in all kinds of ways and if you’ve got to explain the sound bite, you’re losing the whole issue.

For me, the word defund means what Merriam-Webster says that it means. So if you’re talking about reallocating resources, say that. If you mean reimagining policing, say that. If you’re going to reform policing, say that. Don’t tell me you’re going to use a term that you know is charged — and tell me that it doesn’t mean what it says.

Nobody wants George Floyd to be remembered by a burning building — we want to remember him by reforming policing,”

Amen.

One comment on “Teixeira: Public Opinion on the Protests, Black Lives Matter and the Police

  1. Candace on

    It was mentioned here somewhat recently that unlike Republicans, Democrats prefer paragraphs to slogans. What it didn’t say is that some Democrats may have similar slogan obsessive, word game sympathies to the gop and that some other Democrats are ready to abandon what they claim they believe in just by the thought of Republicans attacking them for it.
    If some people can’t get beyond their feelings about three words, then sure why not change them? Have 2 slogans. What the hell. Who cares? Considering the reason for the birth of the slogan, how is this important? And is it rational to lecture thousands of protesters like their one person or one organization making all of the decisions?

    “I’ll give the last word to the very wise James Clyburn”

    you forgot some of those words:

    “Clyburn also offered advice for his white colleagues in Congress looking to be better allies to black people and communities of color: “Admit the truth.”

    “There’s nobody around who does not know that our judicial system, our law enforcement system, our police practices have all been built on two pillars that hold up two sets of experiences,” he said. There’s “the white experience of people who came to this country on own free will, who came looking for freedom and justice, running away from tyranny. And the other pillar, holding up black experiences of people who came to this country against their will — chain and shackles and enslaved. The whole law enforcement and policing system has been established to preserve that phenomenon. We all know that. And we’re getting a few white people just now beginning to admit that.”

    To that comment I’d say that I don’t know if you can admit something you aren’t aware of and have no personal experience with. I can say it is disturbing and terrifying to see people in a profession I previously had respect for so consistently dehumanize, target and kill one group of Americans because of their skin color/who they are and protect each other from legal consequences of doing this. And so It would be hard not to give consideration to the idea our law enforcement (and judicial system) was deliberately designed that way even while knowing there are plenty of individuals who didn’t decide to be a cop with that thought in mind.

    Reply

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