FiveThirtyEight

Welcome to Pollapalooza, our weekly polling roundup.

Poll of the week

We in the press often write and talk about African-Americans and their political perspectives through a single, simple frame: Blacks overwhelmingly vote for Democratic candidates. As a result, the only real question about them politically tends to be how enthusiastic they are about whichever Democrat is on the ballot (and therefore how likely they are to vote). And it’s true: Exit polls suggest that in the past 12 presidential elections (so 1972 and every one since), the Republican candidate won only about 10 percent of the black vote, on average; the Democrat averaged 87 percent.

But two polls released over the last week by The Associated Press and CBS News — conducted as part of news coverage around the 50th anniversary of the death of Martin Luther King Jr. — show that there is considerable diversity in black political opinion outside of the often-binary question of voting.

The Associated Press/NORC Center poll, conducted in February, asked a series of questions on racial issues and surveyed a larger proportion of black adults than most polls do. The poll found, unsurprisingly, that 92 percent of blacks disapprove of President Trump, compared with 7 percent who approve of him. A whopping 84 percent of blacks think Trump is a racist, compared with 10 percent who do not.

But black opinion was less monolithic on other questions:

The CBS News poll, conducted in late March, didn’t ask a long battery of racial questions. But the network did ask African-Americans how many of the goals of King and the civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s had been achieved. Twenty-seven percent said “most” or “all” of the movement’s goals had been achieved, 10 percent said “almost none,” while 61 percent said “only some.” That bloc answering “most” or “all” is a larger bloc than the GOP-supporting blacks who might be inclined to downplay racial problems.

I don’t think this data suggests that Trump should be expecting to do much better in 2020 than his 8 percent of the black vote in 2016, or that Democrats should be particularly worried about blacks not backing Democratic candidates in 2018 or 2020. Trump and his presidency are likely to maintain, if not harden, the alliance between black voters and Democratic candidates.

But on questions of policy and racial attitudes, I suspect the views of many blacks are somewhere in between the standard-bearers who get a lot of public attention in the Trump era: conservative blacks like Housing and Urban Development Secretary Ben Carson, who aggressively downplays the role of systemic racism in American society; and liberals like writer Ta-Nehesi Coates of The Atlantic, who describes America’s racial history and white supremacy as one of the defining forces of politics and policy in the U.S. today.

That said, the diversity of black opinion does have some political and electoral implications, even if it’s not likely to affect general election results that much. In the 2016 Democratic primaries, for example, Hillary Clinton won more than 70 percent of black voters overall, but Bernie Sanders ran even with her among blacks under 30. I suspect that these divides — among both black voters and black political elites — will affect questions about which candidates to nominate in key congressional and state races in 2018, if or how much Democrats should push for the impeachment of Trump if they win the House this year, and who the party should nominate for president in 2020.

Then, most likely, Democrats generally and black voters in particular will unify to try to vote out Trump.

Other polling nuggets

Trump’s approval rating

Trump’s job approval rating is 40.2 percent; his disapproval rating is 53.8 percent. Last week, his approval rating was 40.2 percent, compared with a disapproval rating of 53.6 percent.

The generic ballot

The Democrats hold a 47.1 percent to 39.1 percent advantage on the generic congressional ballot this week. Last week, Democrats were up 46.4 percent to 39.7 percent.


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