In early July, the Gallup Poll carried out an annual survey in which people are asked about their confidence in various institutions.
Here are some of the results, as reported at the Gallup website by Jeffrey M. Jones, “In U.S., Black Confidence in Police Recovers From 2020 Low” (July 14, 2021) and by Megan Brenan, “Americans’ Confidence in Major U.S. Institutions Dips” (July 14, 2021).
This figure shows the share of people who express “A great deal/Quite a lot of confidence” in each of these institutions. The overall percentage of approval is on the far right, and the breakdown by white, black, and Hispanic is shown by the dots.
For me, figures like this lead to lots of inner conversations, and I will spare you most of that. But since I’ve been reading a fair amount about policing lately, here are a few thoughts:
Here’s one more figure, this one showing a breakdown of the same categories by political party.
Republicans are vastly more confident in the police, organized religion, the military, and small business. Democrats are vastly more confident in the presidency, newspapers and television news, public schools, and organized labor. The lack of approval for Congress, the criminal justice system, banks, and big business is largely bipartisan.