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Poll
Shows California Voters Believe Race Discrimination Still a Problem,
Government Should Seek Solutions
By
Rico Oyola
A recent
poll commissioned by Equal Justice Society, the Lawyers' Committee
for Civil Rights and the ACLU of Northern California to gauge
California voters' perceptions on race, discrimination and federal
judicial nominations revealed widespread agreement that race discrimination
is a serious problem in the state and the government must take
steps to address it.
The
poll was conducted by the nationally renowned Lake Research Partners,
with support provided by the Open Society Institute. The statewide
survey of registered voters in California, included over-samples
of African-Americans, Latinos, and Asian-Americans, in order to
more fully understand the opinions of particular communities.
The survey, conducted in February, focused on attitudes toward
racial discrimination; important insight on how Californians view
the judicial nominations process was also revealed.
"California
voters strongly believe that civil rights and affirmative action
are important issues and want to know judicial nominees' positions
on them," concluded David Mermin, a pollster with Lake Research
Partners.
Most
importantly, voters strongly believe that government has a responsibility
to take action to address racial and ethnic discrimination and
that California needs to lead the country in formulating innovative
solutions to racial disparities and discrimination.
When
asked to judge the importance of issues the Supreme Court may
rule on in coming years, civil rights and voting rights are overwhelmingly
important to California voters (91% and 89% rate them "important"
respectively). Ranking just below these are presidential power
(88%), privacy and government surveillance (85%), and abortion
(80%). Compared to these issues, affirmative action is further
down the list (74%).
Voters
believe it is important to know a judicial nominee's position
on issues such as affirmative action (54% say it is "very
important"; 78% "important").
Equal
Justice Society Law and Policy Director Kimberly Thomas Rapp said,
"The poll validates our understanding that people are dedicated
to fair and independent judges and that it is appropriate to know
the judicial temperament of upcoming nominees. We need a United
States judiciary that allows for fairness and balance."
"The
key challenge identified by this research will be to reframe the
policy actions needed to achieve equal opportunity, drawing on
and enhancing the core values shared across racial groups, rather
than allowing opponents to splinter and divide voters," noted
Mermin.
To
see the full analytical report, please
click here.
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