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Americans Divide Over Slavery
Apology

Most Blacks Support; Most Whites Oppose

Analysis By Dalia
Sussman, ABCNEWS.com
July 12
Should the federal government apologize to black Americans for the
slavery that once existed in this country? Americans divide on the question,
with most blacks supporting an apology and a narrow majority of whites
opposed.
Overall, 42 percent say the
government should apologize and 49 percent say it should not. The sharpest
division in this ABCNEWS.com poll is along racial lines 53 percent of
whites oppose an apology, while two-thirds of blacks favor one.
Still, opposition to issuing an
apology has eased somewhat, down from 56 percent in 1997. And the change was
greatest among whites: A seven-point gain in support for an apology, and a
12-point drop in opposition.
The issue regained attention last
month when Rep. Tony Hall, D-Ohio, introduced a resolution in the House of
Representatives calling for a congressional apology to black Americans for
slavery. (Hall unsuccessfully sought an apology three years ago.) And last
week a Connecticut newspaper, The Hartford Courant, issued a
front-page apology for profiting from ads for the sale of slaves.
Among groups, apart from blacks,
support for an apology commands a majority of younger adults, age 18 to 34.
Its also higher, but not quite a majority, among Democrats, lower-income
and less-educated Americans.
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Groups |
| |
Should
Apologize |
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Age 18-34 |
53% |
|
Age 65+ |
33% |
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Republican |
28% |
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Independent |
43% |
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Democrat |
50% |
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Income <$25K |
49% |
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$75K+ |
37% |
Methodology
This ABCNEWS.com survey was
conducted by telephone from June 28 to July 9, 2000, among a random national
sample of 2,018 adults. The results have a three-point error margin.
Fieldwork by ICR- International Communications Research of Media, Pa.
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