Products

Trump And Race Relations

Hispanic Community September 2019
An AP-NORC poll shows slightly more than half of all Americans think President Donald Trump’s actions have been bad for Hispanics.

Trump And Race Relations

AP-NORC Poll: Most Disapprove Of Trump On Race Relations

By RUSSELL CONTRERAS and DEEPTI HAJELA Associated Press

NEW YORK (AP) — Large majorities of black and Latino Americans think Donald Trump's actions as president have made things worse for people like them, and about two-thirds of Americans overall disapprove of how he's handling race relations, according to a new poll conducted by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.

About half of all Americans think Trump's actions have been bad for African Americans, Muslims and women, and slightly more than half say they've been bad for Hispanics.

Trump's 33% approval rating on handling race relations makes that one of his worst issues in recent AP-NORC polls. That stands in stark contrast to his handling of the economy: About half say they approve of his handling of that issue, while views of current economic conditions continue to be rosy amid robust employment numbers and a strong stock market.

Four in 10 Americans said they approve of Trump overall, according to the poll, conducted before the release of a rough transcript of a phone call showing Trump prodded the president of Ukraine to investigate Democratic political rival Joe Biden and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's announcement that she would launch a formal impeachment inquiry.

The poll provides a bleak assessment of how the nation views Trump on race issues as he runs for a second term and repeatedly boasts of his popularity among African Americans and Latinos. Trump has consistently said his economic policies have been good for African Americans and other people of color.

But the poll shows few black Americans think that's true. Just 4% say they think Trump's actions have been good for African Americans in general, while 81% think he's made things worse. Similar shares of black Americans think Trump has been bad for Hispanics, Muslims and women.

"He speaks nothing but hate rhetoric," said Chris Smith, 38, an African American information technology worker in Columbia, Tennessee, who considers himself independent but leans Democratic. "If the leader of this country is free to speak like that, there's going to be people who think it's OK to speak like that."

"He's making people live their life in fear," Smith said.

Trump has drawn widespread condemnation for racist rhetoric throughout his presidency. He's warned of an "invasion" at the southern border, posted racist tweets about four women of color in Congress and attacked Democratic U.S. Rep. Elijah Cummings' largely black district as a "rat and rodent infested mess." He's showered praise on Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee, a slaveowner who fought to protect the institution of slavery during the U.S. Civil War, and said there were "very fine people on both sides " of clashes between white nationalists and counterprotesters. But he has claimed he doesn't have a "racist bone" in his body.

The poll comes weeks after a suspected gunman, who is white, apparently wrote an anti-Hispanic rant before opening fire in El Paso, Texas, with an AK-47-style rifle on Walmart shoppers, many of them Latino. Some blamed Trump's rhetoric for inciting the gunman.

Simon Wey, 54, a Nigerian immigrant who lives in Houston and is a registered Republican, said the president's rhetoric on migrants makes him feel uncomfortable.

"I think some of his immigration policies have been hurtful to countries with large minority populations," Wey said. "There's a lot of uncertainty now."

Sixty-nine percent of Latinos think Trump's actions have been bad for Hispanics generally, while 19% think they've been good. Majorities of Latinos also think Trump's actions have been bad for African Americans, Muslims and women.

"It's his attitude. He just has this real cocky way about him," said Rose Haway, a 62-year-old Hispanic woman who lives in Albuquerque, New Mexico. "It's what he says in his speeches and the way he's treated migrant children. I'm appalled."

Haway also pointed to the Republican president's rhetoric about his desire to build a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border as especially hurtful.

Among white Americans, about a third think Trump's actions have been good for black Americans, women and Hispanics, while about a quarter think they have been good for Muslims. Forty-seven percent think Trump's actions have been bad for Hispanics, 44% say they've been bad for Muslims and 39% say they've been bad for women and black Americans.

Shane Chessey, a white Republican from Pittsburgh, lauded Trump's performance on the economy and thinks critiques of the president as racist or sexist are overblown, even as he acknowledges the president's language sometimes comes across as "crass."

"I think he's trying to bring this country up together," said Chessey, 54. "Everybody has a fair opportunity to make it in this country."

Among Republicans, about 6 in 10 say they think Trump has been good for women, Latinos and black Americans. Fewer, 4 in 10, think his actions have been good for Muslims. No more than 2 in 10 Republicans think Trump's actions have been bad for any of the groups asked about in the poll.

The share of Republicans saying Trump's actions have been good for each group has increased since an AP-NORC poll conducted in February 2018. In that poll, about half said Trump's actions had been good for African Americans and women and about 4 in 10 said they'd been good for Latinos, while about 3 in 10 said they'd been good for Muslims.

Large majorities of Democrats think Trump's actions as president have been bad for black, Hispanic and Muslim Americans and for women.

___

The AP-NORC poll of 1,286 adults was conducted Sept. 20-23 using a sample drawn from NORC's probability-based AmeriSpeak Panel, which is designed to be representative of the U.S. population. The margin of sampling error for all respondents is plus or minus 3.8 percentage points. Respondents were first selected randomly using address-based sampling methods and later were interviewed online or by phone.

___

Associated Press Writer Russell Contreras reported from Albuquerque, New Mexico. AP polling editor Emily Swanson contributed to this report from Washington. Hajela and Russell Contreras are members of The Associated Press' race and ethnicity team. Follow Hajela on Twitter at https://twitter.com/dhajela Contreras at http://twitter.com/russcontreras

___

Online: http://www.apnorc.org

 

In addition to bringing our readers stories about education issues in America, we here at Hispanic Outlook feature news articles on topics both related to and outside of the field of education on our website and in our social media.

Hispanic Outlook is an education magazine in the US available both in print and digital form.  Visit https://www.hispanicoutlook.com/education-magazine for information about our latest issue, including our new supplement Physician Outlook.

Renew your subscription to Hispanic Outlook https://www.hispanicoutlook.com/magazine-online-subscription

Hispanic Outlook’s Job Board allows applicants to search for jobs by category, by city and by state.  Both Featured and Latest Job Positions are available at https://hispanicoutlookjobs.com/ 

And for employers, Hispanic Outlook’s Job Board offers a wide variety of posting options.  Further information is available at https://hispanicoutlookjobs.com/employer-products/

Other articles from Hispanic Outlook:

Health Simplified And Expanded Back To School

I couldn’t resist the urge to join in on this cultural trend and post my OWN tongue-in-cheek “first day” picture as I celebrate starting what I hope to be my new forever job as the medical director at St. Bonaventure University’s Center for Student Wellness. After spending a year on the road as a locum and Urgent Care Physician, it feels good to set down roots. Prior to July of 2018, I had been struggling with Physician burnout.  For every 15 minutes I spent with a Patient, I often spent an additional 30 minutes (sometimes more) on my work laptop, clicking away in an EHR that created a pages-long document that didn’t tell my Patient’s story, and that very few read.  I was trained to be a medical detective, and my documentation style is very different from the “note bloat” produced by most systems. EHRs are designed to comply with complicated and…

Read full article here

America Can’t Kick The Habit

Drug abuse has always been part of the American landscape since the founding of this country. And it all follows a familiar pattern – introduce a drug with great fanfare and promise, but with little warning about its habit-forming indications or possible side effects. Predictably, people become addicted, and this is followed by restriction and regulation creating criminal enterprise and a criminal class of addicts. Access to illicit drugs like opium, cocaine, marijuana and heroin, as well as prescribed and Physician administered legal drugs such as amphetamines, oxycodone and morphine, continue to make America the world’s leading marketplace per capita for drug use. The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result. How many times do we have to live through this…

Read full article here

Hispanics’ Deadly Response To Opioid Bias

Opioids are sometimes necessary to treat Patient pain, but Physicians are now being cautioned about prescribing them. In an article entitled “How Racial Inequity Is Playing Out in the Opioid Crisis,” by Jenae Addison for Health Magazine, it is noted that the stereotyping of Patients of color influences the number of prescriptions dispensed. Addison quotes Kenneth Leonard, director of the Clinical and Research Institute on Addictions at the University of Buffalo explaining, “There is a bias issue there in terms of either believing [minorities are] more likely to be substance abusers or they can endure more pain.” The result is while overprescribing opioids is the most recent scourge in America’s war on drugs, under prescribing opioids to Hispanics is contributing to more and more addiction and death in those communities of…

Read full article here

Chi-Chi Rodríguez’s Youth Foundation

As another academic year begins at his public-private school in Clearwater, Florida, this 83-year-old golfer often thinks about his childhood friend. They both grew up in Puerto Rico. As teenagers, they became very close and eventually played on the same amateur, baseball team on the island. One was a talented, right-handed pitcher while the other – a pinch-runner – was an agile ballplayer who always hustled around the base path. The pitcher’s name was Juan Antonio Rodríguez, who one day became an acclaimed golfer where millions around the world still recognize him by his childhood nickname: “Chi-Chi.” Growing up in Puerto Rico, the pinch-runner also had a nickname too. His family and close friends called him “Momen.” But today, millions around the world recall his extraordinary life and legacy. He was called “The Great One,” “Arriba” and “Humanitarian,” but…

Read full article here

La Feria Del Libro En Madrid

More than 400 youngsters began lining up at 8 a.m. and remained in line until noon as the heat descended upon the Retiro park in Madrid, Spain. They weren’t waiting for some concert or latest video game on sale. Instead, they were on line to meet one of more than 1,800 authors who were signing books at Madrid’s historic book fair, La Feria del Libro de Madrid, in late spring from May 31 until June 16. “We are super happy to be able to have the success that we have had. The book has returned, and the people are very happy,” the fair’s director Manuel Gil told me in Spanish with a contagious passion. “The weight of paper is important, and, in the end, people want something physical, and they want that direct relationship with the author.” As an author myself, with my own novel, “NIÑA DUENDE: UN VIAJE DEL ESPÍRITU,” translated to Spanish and with…

Read full article here

5 Latino Authors You Should Be Reading Now

(AP)(THE CONVERSATION) You likely recognize that the depiction of Latin American immigrants in politics today – as a menacing mass of recalcitrant Spanish-speaking invaders – is overwhelmingly negative. What you may not know is that stereotypes suggesting that Latin Americans represent a threat to United States culture are not just morally repugnant – they’re also historically inaccurate. Spanish-language literature actually predates the Puritans’ writing in English by nearly a century. As my research reveals, many renowned Latin American writers actually produced some of their finest work while living in the United States. Latina and Latino writers have made exceptional contributions to American literary history. For a fresh take on what it means to be a Latina or Latino in the U.S. today, check out these five…

Read full article here

Share with:

Product information

Post a Job

Post a job in higher education?

Place your job ad in our classified page on the HO print & digital Edition