Morning Consult asked roughly 2,000 U.S. adults to describe their reaction to news they had seen, read or heard about Floyd’s death, former Minneapolis policeman Derek Chauvin and the resulting Black Lives matter protests. Respondents were able to write whatever they wanted in a blank space.
The open-ended responses reveal a country that is aware, conflicted and confused on how to feel about the killing, which occurred on May 25 and drove millions worldwide to take to the streets to protest police brutality and racial inequality. While roughly 2 in 5 U.S. adults expressed outrage, relatively few called for action, and most stopped short of acknowledging systemic racism in their answers.
Morning Consult analyzed and visualized the open-ended responses, collected May 31-June 1, which varied from one word to one paragraph. Responses fell into five major categories, with many belonging to more than one:
- General outrage over the incident, which at 41 percent is the largest share.
- Calls for order as some protest became violent, at 23 percent.
- Labeling both sides as wrong, including placing blame on Chauvin but admonishing protesters, at 17 percent.
- Calls for justice for Floyd and the black community, at 12 percent.
- Calls for societal or government change, at 3 percent.
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