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Jun 1, 2025  |  
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Brady Knox, Breaking News Reporter


NextImg:Nearly half of Californians believe US has 'gone too far in its attempts to give everyone equal rights'

Nearly half of Californians believe that the United States has "gone too far in its attempt to give everyone equal rights," according to a new poll.

The California Community Poll, organized by Strategies 360 and the Los Angeles Times, the Center for Asian Americans United for Self Empowerment, Hispanas Organized for Political Equality, and the Los Angeles Urban League, found that despite most respondents expressing pride in the state's diversity and liberal outlook, nearly half believe that the country is going too far.

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Roughly 47% of respondents said that the U.S. "has over-corrected and gone too far in its attempts to give everyone equal rights." The percentage of respondents disagreeing is slightly lower at 46%, while 7% were unsure.

The trend marks a reversal from February 2020, when just 42% believed the country was going too far, compared to 48% who disagreed.

The results were also split along racial lines; a majority of white respondents believed that the country was going too far, at 53%, compared to just 29% of black respondents. About 48% of Asian respondents agreed, while 46% disagreed. Among Hispanics, 44% agreed, compared to 44% who disagreed.

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The backlash comes as California has made headlines for its ambitious reparations payment schemes, which seek to pay black residents more than $800 billion in monetary payments alone, nearly 2.5 times the entire state budget of California.

The California Community Poll surveyed 1,354 Californians over the age of 18, from June 6 to 16, with an estimated margin of error of +/-3 percentage points.