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		<title>Americans see Martin Luther King Jr. as a hero now, but that wasn’t the case during his lifetime</title>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>Martin Luther King Jr. was a civil rights leader and an American hero. Almost every American adult (95% in CBS News polling) believes he was an important figure in US history. But it wasn’t always that way. The fact that King is now beloved and has a national holiday commemorating his birthday wasn’t something that obviously was going [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://apadanamedia.org/americans-see-martin-luther-king-jr-as-a-hero-now-but-that-wasnt-the-case-during-his-lifetime/">Americans see Martin Luther King Jr. as a hero now, but that wasn’t the case during his lifetime</a> appeared first on <a href="https://apadanamedia.org">APADANA MEDIA</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="paragraph inline-placeholder" data-uri="archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/paragraph_40777684-95C4-3984-9614-B79306558FE6@published" data-editable="text" data-component-name="paragraph" data-analytics-observe="on"><a href="https://apadanamedia.org/how-white-house-missteps-exacerbated-bidens-classified-documents-headache/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Martin Luther King Jr</a>. was a civil rights leader and an American hero. Almost every American adult (95% in <a href="https://apadanamedia.org/get-used-to-the-con-man-in-congress/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">CBS News polling</a>) believes he was an important figure in US history.</p>
<p class="paragraph inline-placeholder" data-uri="archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/paragraph_F5D05C22-FE7D-234C-6422-B7945A583A35@published" data-editable="text" data-component-name="paragraph" data-analytics-observe="off">But it wasn’t always that way. The fact that King is now beloved and has a <a href="https://apadanamedia.org/us-and-japan-strengthen-military-relationship-with-upgraded-marine-unit-in-attempt-to-deter-china/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">national holiday commemorating his birthday</a> wasn’t something that obviously was going to happen during his lifetime.</p>
<p class="paragraph inline-placeholder" data-uri="archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/paragraph_49729A42-56E7-222E-4F1A-B7945A580C39@published" data-editable="text" data-component-name="paragraph" data-analytics-observe="off">This shows us that often the fight for civil rights is unpopular at the time, and it only becomes popular retrospectively.</p>
<p class="paragraph inline-placeholder" data-uri="archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/paragraph_B18D83C4-F8DE-F098-6833-B7945A58782C@published" data-editable="text" data-component-name="paragraph" data-analytics-observe="off">During the 1960s, King was a very divisive figure. The last <a href="https://apadanamedia.org/bidens-document-scandal-eats-away-at-efforts-to-hold-republicans-accountable/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Gallup poll</a> to ask about his popularity during his lifetime, taken in 1966, found his unfavorable rating was 63%. This included 39% of Americans who gave him a -5 rating, on a scale with -5 being least favorable and +5 being most favorable.</p>
<p class="paragraph inline-placeholder" data-uri="archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/paragraph_2E6A7B21-1088-4562-F57B-B7945A590068@published" data-editable="text" data-component-name="paragraph" data-analytics-observe="off">King’s highly negative rating <a href="https://apadanamedia.org/pentagon-officially-rescinds-covid-19-vaccine-requirement-for-troops/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">came when he had turned</a> his attention from Southern de jure segregation toward de facto segregation in northern cities.</p>
<p class="paragraph inline-placeholder" data-uri="archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/paragraph_2A1147A8-6967-7252-AFD3-B7945A5D17B4@published" data-editable="text" data-component-name="paragraph" data-analytics-observe="off">But even before then, King was far from a universally liked person. In the middle of 1964, when Congress was in the midst of passing many landmark civil rights laws, King’s favorable rating was just 44%. His unfavorable rating was basically equal at 38%.</p>
<p class="paragraph inline-placeholder" data-uri="archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/paragraph_E85B7AEA-8B4F-0BB0-B762-B7945A5D40D1@published" data-editable="text" data-component-name="paragraph" data-analytics-observe="on">When Americans were asked which three Americans they had the least respect for in a 1964 Gallup poll, King came in second at 42%. This was barely less than the 47% registered by George Wallace, the segregationist governor of Alabama. Only 17% mentioned King’s name, when asked which three Americans they had the most respect for.</p>
<p class="paragraph inline-placeholder" data-uri="archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/paragraph_55B12642-36F2-D6D4-277D-B7945A5DD5CA@published" data-editable="text" data-component-name="paragraph" data-analytics-observe="off">Perhaps even more revealing is that a lot of White Americans thought King was doing more harm than good for the fight for civil rights. In a 1966 Harris poll, 50% of White Americans indicated that he was hurting the civil rights effort. A mere 36% said he was helping. King’s favorable rating among them was 27% in 1966.</p>
<p class="paragraph inline-placeholder" data-uri="archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/paragraph_4AD8C90E-1807-652A-5954-B7945A5D561D@published" data-editable="text" data-component-name="paragraph" data-analytics-observe="off">Black Americans saw things very differently. The vast majority in 1963 thought his work for equal rights was moving at the right speed (71%) or not fast enough (21%) compared with 8% who believed it was happening too fast. In 1966, 84% of Black adults had a favorable view of King, while 4% had an unfavorable view.</p>
<p class="paragraph inline-placeholder" data-uri="archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/paragraph_1A307FD8-DD0D-1BB2-74AB-B7945A5DECD6@published" data-editable="text" data-component-name="paragraph" data-analytics-observe="off">Even in the immediate aftermath of his death, many Americans had a negative view of King. Nearly a third (31%) said he brought his 1968 assassination upon himself. Less than a majority (43%) said they were sad (38%) or angry (5%).</p>
<p class="paragraph inline-placeholder" data-uri="archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/paragraph_DEB751ED-853F-80FF-D03A-B7945A5D7811@published" data-editable="text" data-component-name="paragraph" data-analytics-observe="on">By the mid-1970s, views toward King became more positive. The vast majority (67%) of Americans believed the protest marches he had led helped to speed up civil rights legislation.</p>
<p class="paragraph inline-placeholder" data-uri="archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/paragraph_6F159268-2C07-522D-B4E3-B7945A5EAA64@published" data-editable="text" data-component-name="paragraph" data-analytics-observe="on">That said, it was far from a sure thing that King would <a href="https://apadanamedia.org/bidens-documents-drama-gives-republicans-a-fresh-narrative-to-use-against-him/">be celebrated with a national holiday</a>. Early in 1983 – the year that legislation to create the eponymous holiday passed Congress and was signed by the president (Ronald Reagan) – opinion was split down the middle.</p>
<p class="paragraph inline-placeholder" data-uri="archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/paragraph_D91BA3A4-5BA2-929D-766C-B7945A5FF000@published" data-editable="text" data-component-name="paragraph" data-analytics-observe="on">A within-the-margin-of-error plurality (48%) indicated that they didn’t want it to be a national holiday, with a nearly equal 47% saying it should be, according to an ABC News/Washington Post poll. It was only by the end of the year when most Americans (59%) favored the national holiday in a Harris poll.</p>
<p class="paragraph inline-placeholder" data-uri="archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/paragraph_52B366A3-23C5-CABF-022A-B7945A5F4D71@published" data-editable="text" data-component-name="paragraph" data-analytics-observe="on">Some states, however, lagged behind. South Carolina was the last state to make Martin Luther King Jr. Day a non-optional state holiday, and that <a href="https://apadanamedia.org/biden-classified-documents-what-we-know-so-far/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">didn’t happen until 2000</a>.</p>
<p class="paragraph inline-placeholder" data-uri="archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/paragraph_81E8DD19-7685-8CDB-AC24-B7945A60AB1C@published" data-editable="text" data-component-name="paragraph" data-analytics-observe="on">Arizona was another state that took a long time to make King’s birthday a state holiday. The <a href="https://apadanamedia.org/mccarthy-gop-future-faultlines-2/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">bill failed to pass</a> the state legislature in 1986, and two ballot propositions failed in 1990.</p>
<p class="paragraph inline-placeholder" data-uri="archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/paragraph_9C32203A-8370-65F6-9A31-B7945A616614@published" data-editable="text" data-component-name="paragraph" data-analytics-observe="on">The following year, the NFL decided to move the 1993 Super Bowl away from the state, as a result.</p>
<p class="paragraph inline-placeholder" data-uri="archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/paragraph_5DFF876E-7C51-307E-00ED-B7945A613ECB@published" data-editable="text" data-component-name="paragraph" data-analytics-observe="on">When Americans were asked whether they favored or opposed this move, just 25% favored it. The vast majority (63%) said they were opposed to moving the Super Bowl.</p>
<p class="paragraph inline-placeholder" data-uri="archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/paragraph_1EBC327A-2E8F-62DD-3488-B7945A61EF82@published" data-editable="text" data-component-name="paragraph" data-analytics-observe="on">The move by the NFL had the intended effect. Voters in Arizona passed a law in 1992 to make King’s birthday a state holiday. The NFL put the 1996 Super Bowl in the state.</p>
<p class="paragraph inline-placeholder" data-uri="archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/paragraph_F6123DD0-DF4A-0F2E-DDD4-B7945A61D86E@published" data-editable="text" data-component-name="paragraph" data-analytics-observe="on">As the 20th century turned to the 21st, King’s legacy was cemented in the American mind. A near unanimous majority (89%) indicated he was a person they admired in 1999.</p>
<p class="paragraph inline-placeholder" data-uri="archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/paragraph_D1093C8D-E689-8BDE-C369-B7945A61DF4B@published" data-editable="text" data-component-name="paragraph" data-analytics-observe="on">In 2011, 94% of Americans had a favorable view of him in Gallup polling. This included an 89% favorable rating among those aged 65 and older, the vast majority of whom were born in 1927 or later. Among that same group in 1966, King’s favorable rating was 41%.</p>
<p class="paragraph inline-placeholder" data-uri="archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/paragraph_F99E10EC-B73A-8C65-E57B-B7945A61684E@published" data-editable="text" data-component-name="paragraph" data-analytics-observe="off">In other words, King’s now uniform popularity isn’t only because older generations died out. People’s minds changed. King became a lot more popular among many people who didn’t like him when he was alive.</p>
<p class="paragraph inline-placeholder" data-uri="archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/paragraph_6D326B3B-FC54-D9C2-76BA-B79F381815D6@published" data-editable="text" data-component-name="paragraph" data-analytics-observe="off">Yet, even as King has become enshrined in American culture, Americans still feel there’s a lot of work to be done to fulfill his dream of racial equality.</p>
<p class="paragraph inline-placeholder" data-uri="archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/paragraph_6247A52D-163C-7ACE-817C-B79F5063E840@published" data-editable="text" data-component-name="paragraph" data-analytics-observe="off">Far more Americans this past year said they were very dissatisfied with the state of race relations in this country (38%) than at the beginning of this century (14%), according to Gallup.</p>
<p class="paragraph inline-placeholder" data-uri="archive.cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/paragraph_53C152AF-D3D2-82EF-B0CD-B79F50659412@published" data-editable="text" data-component-name="paragraph" data-analytics-observe="off">Moreover, 58% of Americans believe White supremacy is still a major problem in the country, per a PRRI poll taken late last year, including 78% of Black Americans.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://apadanamedia.org/americans-see-martin-luther-king-jr-as-a-hero-now-but-that-wasnt-the-case-during-his-lifetime/">Americans see Martin Luther King Jr. as a hero now, but that wasn’t the case during his lifetime</a> appeared first on <a href="https://apadanamedia.org">APADANA MEDIA</a>.</p>
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