AP poll: Majority harbor prejudice against blacks
|
FILE
- In this Oct. 25, 2012 file photo, President Barack Obama speaks to
supporters at a campaign event at Cleveland Burke Lakefront Airport, in
Cleveland Ohio. Racial attitudes have not improved in the four years
since the United States elected its first black president, an Associated
Press poll finds, as a slight majority of Americans now express
prejudice toward blacks whether they recognize those feelings or not.
Those views could cost Obama votes as he tries for re-election, the
survey found, though the effects are mitigated by some Americans' more
favorable views of blacks. |
WASHINGTON
(AP) -- Racial attitudes have not improved in the four years since the
United States elected its first black president, an Associated Press
poll finds, as a slight majority of Americans now express prejudice
toward blacks whether they recognize those feelings or not.
Those
views could cost President Barack Obama votes as he tries for
re-election, the survey found, though the effects are mitigated by some
people's more favorable views of blacks.
Racial
prejudice has increased slightly since 2008 whether those feelings were
measured using questions that explicitly asked respondents about racist
attitudes, or through an experimental test that measured implicit views
toward race without asking questions about that topic directly.
In
all, 51 percent of Americans now express explicit anti-black attitudes,
compared with 48 percent in a similar 2008 survey. When measured by an
implicit racial attitudes test, the number of Americans with anti-black
sentiments jumped to 56 percent, up from 49 percent during the last
presidential election. In both tests, the share of Americans expressing
pro-black attitudes fell.
"As much as we'd
hope the impact of race would decline over time ... it appears the
impact of anti-black sentiment on voting is about the same as it was
four years ago," said Jon Krosnick, a Stanford University professor who
worked with AP to develop the survey.
Most
Americans expressed anti-Hispanic sentiments, too. In an AP survey done
in 2011, 52 percent of non-Hispanic whites expressed anti-Hispanic
attitudes. That figure rose to 57 percent in the implicit test. The
survey on Hispanics had no past data for comparison.
The
AP surveys were conducted with researchers from Stanford University,
the University of Michigan and NORC at the University of Chicago.
Experts on race said they were not surprised by the findings.
"We
have this false idea that there is uniformity in progress and that
things change in one big step. That is not the way history has worked,"
said Jelani Cobb, professor of history and director of the Institute for
African-American Studies at the University of Connecticut. "When we've
seen progress, we've also seen backlash."
Obama
has tread cautiously on the subject of race, but many African-Americans
have talked openly about perceived antagonism toward them since Obama
took office. As evidence, they point to events involving police
brutality or cite bumper stickers, cartoons and protest posters that
mock the president as a lion or a monkey, or lynch him in effigy.
"Part
of it is growing polarization within American society," said Fredrick
Harris, director of the Institute for Research in African-American
Studies at Columbia University. "The last Democrat in the White House
said we had to have a national discussion about race. There's been total
silence around issues of race with this president. But, as you see,
whether there is silence, or an elevation of the discussion of race, you
still have polarization. It will take more generations, I suspect,
before we eliminate these deep feelings."
Overall,
the survey found that by virtue of racial prejudice, Obama could lose 5
percentage points off his share of the popular vote in his Nov. 6
contest against Republican challenger Mitt Romney. But Obama also stands
to benefit from a 3 percentage point gain due to pro-black sentiment,
researchers said. Overall, that means an estimated net loss of 2
percentage points due to anti-black attitudes.
The
poll finds that racial prejudice is not limited to one group of
partisans. Although Republicans were more likely than Democrats to
express racial prejudice in the questions measuring explicit racism (79
percent among Republicans compared with 32 percent among Democrats), the
implicit test found little difference between the two parties. That
test showed a majority of both Democrats and Republicans held anti-black
feelings (55 percent of Democrats and 64 percent of Republicans), as
did about half of political independents (49 percent).
Obama faced a similar situation in 2008, the survey then found.
The
AP developed the surveys to measure sensitive racial views in several
ways and repeated those studies several times between 2008 and 2012.
The
explicit racism measures asked respondents whether they agreed or
disagreed with a series of statements about black and Hispanic people.
In addition, the surveys asked how well respondents thought certain
words, such as "friendly," "hardworking," "violent" and "lazy,"
described blacks, whites and Hispanics.
The
same respondents were also administered a survey designed to measure
implicit racism, in which a photo of a black, Hispanic or white male
flashed on the screen before a neutral image of a Chinese character. The
respondents were then asked to rate their feelings toward the Chinese
character. Previous research has shown that people transfer their
feelings about the photo onto the character, allowing researchers to
measure racist feelings even if a respondent does not acknowledge them.
Results
from those questions were analyzed with poll takers' ages, partisan
beliefs, views on Obama and Romney and other factors, which allowed
researchers to predict the likelihood that people would vote for either
Obama or Romney. Those models were then used to estimate the net impact
of each factor on the candidates' support.
All
the surveys were conducted online. Other research has shown that poll
takers are more likely to share unpopular attitudes when they are
filling out a survey using a computer rather than speaking with an
interviewer. Respondents were randomly selected from a nationally
representative panel maintained by GfK Custom Research.
Overall
results from each survey have a margin of sampling error of
approximately plus or minus 4 percentage points. The most recent poll,
measuring anti-black views, was conducted Aug. 30 to Sept. 11.
Andra Gillespie, an Emory University political scientist who studies race-neutrality among black politicians,
contrasted the situation to
that faced by the first black mayors elected in major U.S. cities, the
closest parallel to Obama's first-black situation. Those mayors, she
said, typically won about 20 percent of the white vote in their first
races, but when seeking reelection they enjoyed greater white support
presumably because "the whites who stayed in the cities ... became more
comfortable with a black executive."
"President
Obama's election clearly didn't change those who appear to be sort of
hard-wired folks with racial resentment," she said.
Negative
racial attitudes can manifest in policy, noted Alan Jenkins, an
assistant solicitor general during the Clinton administration and now
executive director of the Opportunity Agenda think tank.
"That
has very real circumstances in the way people are treated by police,
the way kids are treated by teachers, the way home seekers are treated
by landlords and real estate agents," Jenkins said.
Hakeem
Jeffries, a New York state assemblyman and candidate for a
congressional seat being vacated by a fellow black Democrat, called it
troubling that more progress on racial attitudes had not been made.
Jeffries has fought a New York City police program of "stop and frisk"
that has affected mostly blacks and Latinos but which supporters contend
is not racially focused.
"I do remain
cautiously optimistic that the future of America bends toward the side
of increased racial tolerance," Jeffries said. "We've come a long way,
but clearly these results demonstrate there's a long way to go."
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