New Poll Shows Racial Split Over How Chicago Views Rahm and Chicago Police
CHICAGO — There's a wide disparity between how African American, white and Hispanic Chicagoans view the Chicago Police Department in the wake of the Laquan McDonald police shooting video and the protests that followed its release, new poll results show.
The gulf between Chicago's voters on Rahm Emanuel is less severe, although the mayor is facing an overall disapproval rating of 56 percent, according to the Aldertrack/DNAinfo/WGN Radio poll, which surveyed about 1,100 Cook County voters on Tuesday, the day before Emanuel apologized to the city amid calls for his resignation.
According to the data, compiled by North Carolina-based Public Policy Polling, 62 percent of black Chicago voters now disapprove of the job the Chicago Police Department is doing. Just 34 percent approve.
Among Hispanic voters in Chicago, 27 percent disapprove of the Chicago Police Department's work, with 70 percent approving. Among white voters in Chicago, 49 percent disapprove and 50 percent approve.
Overall, 51 percent of Chicago voters polled disapprove of the job the Police Department is doing, compared to 46 who approve. The remainder were unsure.
As for the embattled mayor, more than half (53 percent) of black voters in Chicago disapprove of how Emanuel is doing his job. That's compared to 67 percent of Hispanic voters and 56 percent of white voters in the city, according to the data.
Overall, 56 percent of city voters polled said they either somewhat disapprove or strongly disapprove of the job Emanuel is doing, compared to 40 percent who either somewhat or strongly disapprove of the mayor's work.
And if there were an election for mayor of Chicago today, 51 percent of voters polled said they would vote for someone other than Emanuel. Twenty-eight percent said they would vote for Emanuel, and 21 percent said they weren't sure.
In April, Emanuel won reelection, beating Cook County Commissioner Jesus "Chuy" Garcia, 56 percent to 44 percent.
Emanuel's media office declined to comment on the poll.
The results show a wide disconnect between Hispanic voters' opinions on the mayor and the Police Department, which is under siege and the subject of a federal probe since the release of dashcam video showing a white officer fatally shooting 17-year-old Laquan McDonald, who was black.
The disconnect did not surprise aldermen representing the city's Latino communities.
"The communities we live in are working-class communities that depend on the cops,” said Ald. Ricardo Munoz (22nd). “People don't want the thugs on the corner or dealers running open drug markets, and they depend on the police to keep them safe.”
Ald. George Cardenas (12th), a member of the City Council's Latino Caucus, said Hispanic communities' relationship with the police differs from that of African-American communities, which factors into the vast difference in police support.
"Hispanics are very conservative when it comes to law enforcement," Cardenas said. "When it comes to gun violence, the relationship with the police has been different. … The relationship with police is more tense in African-American communities where there’s more conflict."
Ald. Willie Cochran (20th), a former Chicago police officer, said the poll numbers show Emanuel has a tough job ahead to improve his standing in the black community — and citywide for that matter — if he hopes to rebuild trust some Chicagoans have lost in him as mayor.
“That poll reinforced the fact that the mayor has a lot more work to do to improve his image with the community at large, and not just the black community,” Cochran said. “This is not just about black people as [far as] the mayor is concerned. A lot of people of all classes are upset with the mayor. Medical students and doctors were laying down in front of City Hall today. This isn’t a race issue. This is a trust issue.”
Cochran said the low approval rating for the Police Department in the African- American community isn’t shocking for “an agency not put in a welcoming light in some neighborhoods.”
Public Policy Polling surveyed more than 1,100 likely Democratic Primary voters in Cook County Tuesday. Fifty-nine percent of those polled lived in Chicago.
Munoz said Emanuel isn’t viewed as warmly by Latinos as his predecessor, Mayor Richard M. Daley, because the former mayor spent more time in the neighborhoods.
“There’s a huge difference in how Rahm and Rich govern. Rich was a neighborhood kind of guy and he understood neighborhoods,” Munoz said. “Rahm tends to govern from City Hall, and that’s a challenge he’ll have to overcome, not just in Latino communities but all over the city.”
Cardenas said Emanuel's disapproval in the Hispanic community is fueled by a lack of communication and engagement.
"Daley did things differently and had more direct communication with people in Hispanic communities,” Cardenas said. “I don’t think it’s irreparable. Emanuel will have to keep fighting for their approval.”
The poll was taken amid rallies calling for Emanuel and Cook County State's Attorney Anita Alvarez to resign in the wake of the Laquan shooting controversy.
Chicago voters viewed Alvarez in a more positive light than Emanuel. The prosecutor had 54 percent approval among Hispanic voters, 47 percent among white voters and 30 percent among African Americans.
RESULTS FROM CITY OF CHICAGO VOTERS:
Do you strongly approve, somewhat approve, somewhat disapprove or strongly disapprove of the job Mayor Rahm Emanuel is doing?
- Strongly approve - 17%
- Somewhat approve - 23%
- Somewhat disapprove - 28%
- Strongly disapprove - 28%
- Not sure - 4%
Do you strongly approve, somewhat approve, somewhat disapprove or strongly disapprove of the job the Chicago Police Department is doing?
- Strongly approve - 17%
- Somewhat approve - 29%
- Somewhat disapprove - 28%
- Strongly disapprove - 23%
- Not sure - 3%
The Chicago Police Department had a video of the shooting of Laquan McDonald for over a year before it was released. Do you think the Police Department deliberately withheld the video from the public, or not?
- The Police Department deliberately withheld the video of the shooting of Laquan McDonald from the public - 62%
- The Police Department did not deliberately withhold the video of the shooting of Laquan McDonald from the public - 22%
- Not sure - 15%
If there was an election for Mayor of Chicago today, would you vote for Mayor Rahm Emanuel or would you vote for someone else?
- Rahm Emanuel - 28%
- Someone else - 51%
- Not sure - 21%
(Asked of April 2015 election voters) If you’d seen the video of the shooting of Laquan McDonald before the election for Mayor last April, would it have changed your vote for Mayor, or not?
- Seeing the video of the shooting of Laquan McDonald would have changed your vote for Mayor - 28%
- Seeing the video of the shooting of Laquan McDonald would not have changed your vote for Mayor - 56%
- Not sure - 15%
RESULTS FROM COOK COUNTY VOTERS:
If the primary election for Cook County State Attorney were today, and the candidates were Anita Alvarez, Kim Foxx, and Donna More, who would you vote for?
- Anita Alvarez - 33%
- Kim Foxx - 24%
- Donna More - 11%
- Not sure - 32%
If the primary election for Cook County State Attorney were today, would you vote to re-elect Anita Alvarez, or do you think it’s time for someone new?
- Vote to re-elect Anita Alvarez - 30%
- It’s time for someone new - 54%
- Not sure - 15%
Do you strongly approve, somewhat approve, somewhat disapprove or strongly disapprove of the job Cook County State Attorney Anita Alvarez is doing?
- Strongly approve - 19%
- Somewhat approve - 25%
- Somewhat disapprove - 26%
- Strongly disapprove - 24%
- Not sure - 6%
For more neighborhood news, listen to DNAinfo Radio here:
Hey-Hey! Bid On Jack Brickhouse's Trove of Chicago Sports Memorabilia
WRIGLEYVILE — Before there was the "Holy Cow!" of Harry Caray, there was Jack Brickhouse calling out "Hey-Hey!"
The Chicago broadcast legend died in 1998, but his legacy lived on in 62 boxes of memorabilia, signed photos and awards. He even saved handfuls of old score cards from some of the most famous (or infamous) Cubs games of the century.
"Jack never threw anything out. I had drawers and drawers of it," said his wife, Pat Brickhouse. "I couldn't keep it all, but it was too precious and too priceless just to throw away."
Pat Brickhouse moved to Arizona a few months ago, and those 62 boxes "were staring me in the face," she said. Knowing her husband would want to share his lifetime collection with people who would treasure it, she decided to put most of it up for auction.
[Coy-Krupp Conducted Sales]
On Saturday, hundreds of the Brickhouses' possessions will be sold during an auctionat 1444 Old Skokie Road in Highland Park. From 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., fans of broadcast and sports can bid on everything from Jack Brickhouse's well worn, monogrammed briefcase to letters from five U.S. presidents.
The first face shown on WGN-TV in 1948, Jack Brickhouse spent over 40 years as a Chicago broadcaster, both on radio and television. He was the announcer for the Chicago Cubs from 1948 to 1981, when Caray replaced him, and also called games for the White Sox, Bears and Bulls during various stints in his career.
Brickhouse grew up in Peoria, Illinois, where his mother worked in a hotel after his father died when Brickhouse was two years old.
He got his start in radio in the 1930s at 18 years old — the youngest broadcaster in the nation. After an internship in New York that his wife said was "the worst year of his life," Brickhouse came to Chicago "and never wanted to leave."
"No. 1, they have the greatest sports fans in the nation, and No. 2, he just felt they were the most wonderful, friendly people on earth," Pat Brickhouse told DNAinfo Chicago.
The collection of items tells the fascinating story of Jack Brickhouse's life: his solid gold wristwatch engraved "In recognition of 40 years of service" with WGN, Emmy awards, a clock he received after telecasting the 1950 World Series and an old pair of much-used binoculars.
A gold watch honoring Jack Brickhouse's 40 years with WGN, his binoculars, Cubs memorabilia, his Rolodex and a 1950 World Series program are among hundreds of his items that will be up for auction on Saturday.[Coy-Krupp Conducted Sales]
While Brickhouse spent 24 consecutive seasons announcing for the Bears and was the first voice of the Chicago Bulls, his primary love was baseball, his wife said.
For Brickhouse, the "highest honor" was receiving the 1983 Ford C. Frick Award from the Baseball Hall of Fame, his wife said.
Through it all, though, Brickhouse remained humble.
"He never refused an autograph. He was friendly to everyone, and he was very low-key. That's one of the reasons fans still remember him," she said.
"He never did it for the money. He did it for the love of the game."
For more neighborhood news, listen to DNAinfo Radio here:
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please leave a comment-- or suggestions, particularly of topics and places you'd like to see covered