Current:Home > MarketsMost Americans are confident in local police, but many still want major reforms -TradeWise
Most Americans are confident in local police, but many still want major reforms
View
Date:2025-04-18 04:36:15
Three years after nationwide protests against police brutality and racial injustice, a majority of Americans, including Black Americans, say they feel confident in local police, according to a new report.
Data from Gallup’s Center on Black Voices revealed that 69% of Americans are confident in local police, a decrease from 2021 and 2022, when 73% of Americans said they had confidence in police. About 56% of Black Americans reported feeling confident in local law enforcement, Gallup found. About 64% of Hispanics said the same, compared with 74% of white people.
Still, Black Americans are more likely to support police reform, with 73% saying they want major changes to policing, compared with 56% of Hispanics and 48% of whites. About 53% of Americans backed police reform in the survey, which did not identify other racial groups in the results.
"Attitudes toward policing remain an important barometer of the need for and success of police reforms," the analytics and advisory company said in an analysis Monday. "It is also a matter of safety. Black Americans who report that they have confidence in their local police force are more likely to say they feel safe in other ways too."
In 2020, Americans' confidence in the police fell to a record low, driven in part by a growing racial divide on the issue, according to a Gallup poll conducted in the weeks after George Floyd was murdered by police officers in Minneapolis. About 48% of Americans said they had a "great deal" or "quite a lot" of confidence in police that year. That figure increased in 2021, but fell to 43% in 2023, according to Gallup's annual Confidence in Institutions poll.
Though the nation's overall confidence in the police has fluctuated, analyses show that the pattern of Black Americans’ perceptions of policing in their communities remaining less positive "has been consistent across three years of tracking," Gallup said in its analysis.
Using that same data, the Payne Center for Social Justice, a Washington D.C. think tank and research center, found that less than a third of Americans said they interacted with law enforcement in the last year. Of those that did, 71% of Black Americans said they were treated fairly during the interaction compared with 79% of Hispanic and 90% of white respondents.
The Payne Center report, which examines the overall wellbeing of Black Americans, and the Gallup analysis are based on a Gallup web study of more than 10,000 adults in the U.S. conducted in February after the high-profile death of 29-year-old Tyre Nichols, who was beaten by former Memphis police officers in January. The report found that though Black Americans and white Americans are thriving equally, "the data confirm their current life experiences are not equal."
“These findings underscore the amazing progress that has been made in our country, but also emphasize that our work is far from done,” Camille Lloyd, director of the Gallup Center on Black Voices, said in a statement. “There is a need for continued efforts to address racial disparities in the United States and to strive for the best life imaginable for all Americans, regardless of their race or ethnicity.”
veryGood! (36674)
Related
- Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
- Here’s when your favorite show may return as writers strike is on the verge of ending
- WGA Reached A Tentative Deal With Studios. But The Strike Isn't Over Yet
- Joe Burrow starts for Bengals vs. Rams after being questionable with calf injury
- Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
- Firefighter’s 3-year-old son struck and killed as memorial walk for slain firefighters was to begin
- An overdose drug is finally over-the-counter. Is that enough to stop the death toll?
- Costco partners with Sesame to offer members $29 virtual health visits
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- Rare tickets to Ford’s Theatre on the night Lincoln was assassinated auction for $262,500
Ranking
- Trump's 'stop
- Philadelphia officer to contest murder charges over fatal shooting during traffic stop
- Researchers have verified 1,329 hunger deaths in Ethiopia’s Tigray region since the cease-fire there
- The chairman of Hong Kong’s leading journalist group gets jail term for obstructing a police officer
- What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
- Russians committing rape, 'widespread' torture against Ukrainians, UN report finds
- Officials set $10,000 reward for location of Minnesota murder suspect mistakenly released from jail
- How much does tattoo removal cost? Everything you need to know about the laser sessions
Recommendation
Travis Hunter, the 2
South Korea’s Constitutional Court strikes down law banning anti-Pyongyang leafleting
Deal to end writers' strike means some shows could return to air within days
Video shows landmark moment when sample of asteroid Bennu touches down on Earth
Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
How Gwen Stefani and Blake Shelton Became Each Other's Sweet Escapes
Russian drone strikes on Odesa hit port area and cut off ferry service to Romania
Hollywood writers, studios reach tentative deal to end strike