Compensating the descendants of American slaves is suddenly a hot topic on the campaign trail, with presidential candidates voicing support for slavery reparations.
New proposals also seek financial redress for decades of legalized segregation and discrimination against African-Americans in employment, housing, health and education.
Some history: The idea of giving black people reparations for slavery dates back to right after the end of the Civil War. For decades it’s mostly been an idea debated outside the mainstream of American political thought.
Why we talking about this now: Writer Ta-Nehisi Coates reintroduced it to the mainstream with a piece, “The Case for Reparations,” in 2014 in The Atlantic. And now several Democratic presidential candidates, who need the votes and energy of liberal voters to succeed in the primaries, have said they support some form of reparations for slavery.
So, what are the prospects of reparations moving forward? Despite the words of support from these Democratic presidential candidates, slavery reparations still face an uphill battle.
The idea isn’t popular with the American public. A 2016 Marist poll found that 68% of Americans don’t think the US should pay reparations to the descendants of slaves. Unsurprisingly there’s a racial divide to this. Some 81% of white Americans are against reparations, while 58% of African Americans support them. What is surprising is the generational divide the poll revealed. Millennials surveyed were much more likely than Baby Boomers or Gen-Xers to support reparations. Even still, a total of 49% of millennials opposed them.