Actions

Poll finds majority of Americans want Confederate statues to remain

Posted at 4:32 PM, Aug 17, 2017
and last updated 2017-08-17 16:41:08-04

A majority of Americans polled in an NPR/PBS News Hours/Marist poll believe that statues of honoring leaders of the Confederacy should remain as a historical symbol.

Of the 1,125 adults surveyed, 62% believe they should remain, 27% believe they should be removed because they are offensive and 11% are unsure. Thefull breakdown is here.

In that poll, a majority of Americans said they disapprove of President Donald Trump’s handling of the situation in Charlottesville, Virginia. Fifty-two percent didn’t feel Trump’s response to the violence was strong enough, 21% were unsure, and 27% felt it was strong enough.

A separate survey released Thursday found the same sentiment echoed among those polled, and a majority also believes Trump’s policies have done more to encourage racial division than racial unity,

A CBS News survey found the majority of Americans polled (55%) said they disapproved of the President’s response to the deadly violence that occurred at a white supremacist rally over the weekend, while most Republicans approved (67%). Just 10% of Democrats said they approved.

Interviewing for this poll began the night before Trump’s stunning news conference on Tuesday and continued for two nights after it.

CBS6-News-at-4pm-and-Jennifer-Hudson-480x360.jpg

Entertainment

Watch 'The Jennifer Hudson Show' weekdays at 3 p.m. on CBS 6!

📱 Download CBS 6 News App
The app features breaking news alerts, live video, weather radar, traffic incidents, closings and delays and more.