A Division on Imus With a Vast Racial Gap
Americans divide on whether it was right to fire radio personality Don Imus for his controversial remark about a women's college basketball team, with a vast gap between blacks and whites on the issue.
Overall, 51 percent in this ABC News/Washington Post poll say it was right for Imus to have lost his job over the comment; 45 percent say he should have kept his position. Within that overall result is a broad racial division: Seventy-three percent of blacks support Imus' firing, while many fewer whites, 47 percent, agree.
Should Imus have lost his job?
Yes No
All 51% 45
Blacks 73 25
Whites 47 49
The gap echoes longstanding differences in experience and attitudes on racial issues. In a 2005 ABC News poll, for example, 54 percent of blacks said they'd been discriminated against because of their race, while just 19 percent of whites said the same. In 2006, 55 percent of blacks saw the government's response to Hurricane Katrina as an example of racial inequality; many fewer whites, 32 percent, agreed.
GROUPS – There are differences on Imus beyond race: Democrats, Liberals, and women all are more apt than their counterparts to favor his firing, while support for his removal is lowest among Republicans. (His remark included both racial and sexual content.) In the political center, 52 percent of self-described moderates and 48 percent of independents say it was right for him to have lost his job. Among other groups, young adults are more likely than their elders to favor firing Imus.
Should Imus have lost his job?
Yes No
All 51% 45
Women 55 41
Men 48 50
Democrats 61 37
Independents 48 48
Republicans 45 52
Liberals 58 39
Moderates 52 45
Conservatives 47 49
Age 18-29 61 38
Age 30+ 49 47
A regression analysis holding these factors (plus education) constant finds that two of them independently predict support for Imus' firing – being black and being a Democrat.
COMMENTS – Regardless of the differences on Imus, this poll finds that racially charged comments are commonly heard in this country, targeting blacks and whites alike, and that people of both races are more apt to consider such remarks offensive when they're directed against blacks.
More than eight in 10 Americans (blacks and whites equally) say they've heard racially insensitive or insulting remarks about blacks. Sixty-two percent of whites, as well as 65 percent of blacks, say they were personally offended by it.
Again, eight in ten of blacks and whites (80 and 81 percent, respectively) also say they've heard racially insensitive or insulting remarks about white people. In this case, more than half of blacks and whites alike were offended (59 and 51 percent, respectively).
Heard a racially insensitive Offended
comment about blacks by it
All 86% 62%
Blacks 84 65
Whites 86 62
Heard a racially insensitive Offended
comment about whites by it
All 80 52
Blacks 80 59
Whites 81 51
In other areas, as noted, blacks and whites long have reported dramatically different experiences of racial equality in this country. In a 2003 ABC/Post poll, 66 percent of whites said they believed that blacks and whites received equal treatment from the police in their community; just 28 percent of blacks agreed.
There was a similar gap in perceptions of equal treatment of blacks in access to good public schools, or when visiting shops, restaurants or banks. Indeed, reporting personal experience, 61 percent of blacks said they'd felt that a shopkeeper had tried to make them feel unwelcome because of their race, and 41 percent felt they'd been stopped by a police officer just because of their race.
There also, however, have been positive trends. In 2005, three- quarters of whites and more than eight in 10 blacks reported having a friend of the other race (both up sharply from 1981); seven in 10 adults reported living in racially mixed communities; and just over half of Americans (48 percent of whites, 63 percent of blacks) said they'd had a friend of the other race to dinner, compared with 20 percent in 1973.
METHODOLOGY – This ABC News/Washington Post poll was conducted by telephone April 12-15, 2007, among a random national sample of 1,141 adults, including an oversample of African-Americans for a total of 206 black respondents. The results have a three-point error margin for the full sample, seven points for blacks. Sampling, data collection and tabulation by TNS of Horsham, PA.
Analysis by Gary Langer and Peyton Craighill. ABC News polls can be found at ABCNEWS.com at http://abcnews.com/pollvault.html.