Is America scared of diversity?
NBC NEWS - 'Diversity' is on the rise in America and people are 'very anxious' about it, according to a sweeping new Esquire-NBC News survey...
“Diversity” is on the rise in America and people are “very anxious” about it, according to a sweeping new Esquire-NBC News survey.
The large-scale, bipartisan study — co-created by leading Republican and Democratic pollsters — mapped “the new American center,” as well as the ideological wings, and the data are a rich, complex portrait of the issues that unite voters today, regardless of party or ideology. As a guide to the winning political messages of the future, says Republican pollster Robert Blizzard, who helped produce the results, the work is nothing short of “a bible.”
But at a glance the results may concern people, especially immigrants, minorities and people of color.
A third of the center is worried about how “increasing diversity” in America will affect the country’s future, with almost one in five saying diversity makes them “very anxious” — and a super-majority (65 percent) reporting that diversity inspires in them no sense of hope in the future, or at least no sense stronger than the anxiety they reported here.
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At the same time, while most people of the center support laws that protect minorities in the workplace, the center seems to think that these laws have gone too far: Nearly two-thirds (63 percent) believe that in respecting the rights of minorities, “we’ve limited the rights of a majority of Americans.”
And if the center were in power, it would favor ending affirmative action in hiring decisions and college admissions (57 percent) and requiring all voters to show photo-ID (58 percent), a move which disproportionately locks out minority voters. Likewise most of the center (54 percent) is against a path to citizenship for people who came to this country illegally — and less than a third (32 percent) support such a path as part of any bipartisan immigration reform.
The overwhelmingly white complexion of the center (78 percent) may cast these positions in an unflattering light, especially when a plurality (40 percent) is worried that “racial tensions” will turn violent in the near future. But while the center may seem unnervingly nativist and almost openly hostile to people of color, say the pollsters, these data points don’t tell the whole story.
“Keep in mind,” said Blizzard, “the center voted for Obama by a decent margin in 2012.”
When asked which public figure they trust the most, more people in the center picked Obama (9 percent) and Oprah Winfrey (6 percent), making them America’s most relied-upon public figures by a long shot. And a degree of pragmatism may be at work: 64 percent of the center say racial discrimination is on the wane and our laws should be modernized to reflect this happy change.
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