Social impact A week into the protests,
The Washington Post stated that the current situation suggests that the
status quo was undergoing a
shock, with the article stating "the past days have suggested that something is changing. The protests reached into every corner of the United States and touched nearly every strand of society."
Joe Biden told
Politico that he had experienced an awakening and thought other White Americans had as well, saying: "Ordinary folks who don't think of themselves as having a prejudiced bone in their body, don't think of themselves as racists, have kind of had the mask pulled off." A number of journalistic and academic sources described the protests as forcing Americans to face racial inequality, police brutality and other racial and economic issues. Many stated that the unrest was due to the prevailing political and cultural habits of overlooking or ignoring forms of oppression of Black Americans.
Politico said the
murder of George Floyd, captured on video, had "prompted a reckoning with racism [...] for a wide swath of white America."
NPR said that "a change of attitude seems to have swept through the national culture like a sudden wind."
CNN's Brianna Keilar said that "[y]ou are watching America's reckoning" as she outlined the "profound change" the country had experienced, including that in mid-June 15 of the 20 bestselling books were about race. In late June,
The Christian Science Monitors editorial board wrote: "It may still be too soon to say the U.S. has reached a true inflection point in its treatment of its citizens of African descent. But it has certainly reached a reflection point."
Reuters reported that Black candidates in June's primaries had benefited from "a national reckoning on racism." By early July,
The Washington Post was running a regularly updated section titled "America's Racial Reckoning: What you need to know." On July 3,
The Washington Post said that "the Black Lives Matter protests following the police killings of Breonna Taylor, George Floyd and Rayshard Brooks focused the world's attention on racial inequities, structural racism and implicit bias."
The New York Times described the events in the wake of Floyd's murder and video that circulated of it as "the largest protests in the United States since the Civil Rights era."
Economic impact Jerome Powell noted on June 10 "
historically high unemployment" prevalent during the prelude of the protests. The Property Claim Services (PCS) of the U.S. Insurance industry states that in the "unrest that took place from May 26 to June 8" 2020 in 140 U.S. cities in 20 states was "the costliest civil unrest in U.S. history", and that insured losses are "estimated at over $2 billion". According to
Fortune, the economic impact of the protests exacerbated the
COVID-19 recession by sharply curtailing
consumer confidence, straining local businesses, and overwhelming public infrastructure with large-scale property damage. A number of small businesses, already suffering from the
economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, were harmed by vandalism, property destruction, and looting. Curfews instated by local governments – in response to both the pandemic and protests – have also "restricted access to the downtown [areas]" to essential workers, lowering
economic output. That same day reports from the
Bureau of Labor Statistics estimated the unemployment rate among African Americans (covering the first two weeks of protests) was up 0.1%, rising to 16.8%. The U.S. stock market remained unaffected or otherwise increased from the start of the protests on May 26 to June 2. The protest's first two weeks coincided with a 38% rise in the stock market. A resurgence of COVID-19 (facilitated by mass protests) could have exacerbated the
2020 stock market crash according to economists at
RBC. The protests disrupted national
supply chains over uncertainty regarding public safety, a resurgence of COVID-19, and consumer confidence. Several
Fortune 500 retail companies, with large distribution networks, scaled back deliveries and shuttered stores in high-impact areas. Estimates of property damages from fires and looting in the Minneapolis–Saint Paul area were $550 million to 1,500 property locations. A community organization in Atlanta's
Buckhead neighborhood said that between $10 million and $15 million in property damage (excluding losses from looting) was incurred over the weekend of May 29–31, mostly along storefronts along
Peachtree Street and
Phipps Plaza. The damage to
downtown Chicago's central business district (near the
Magnificent Mile) was reported to have sustained "millions of dollars in damage" according to
Fortune. On May 31,
Walmart temporarily closed several hundred of its stores as a precaution.
Amazon announced it would redirect some delivery routes and scale back others as a result of the widespread unrest.
Monuments and symbols of
Confederate general
Robert E. Lee in Richmond, Virginia, on July 1, 2020 A makeshift memorial emerged at the East 38th Street and Chicago Avenue intersection in Minneapolis where Floyd was murdered. Minneapolis officials renamed a stretch two block stretch of Chicago Avenue as
George Floyd Perry Jr Place and designated it as one of seven cultural districts in city. Scrutiny of, discussion of removal, and removal of civic symbols or names relating to the Confederate States of America (frequently associated with segregation and the
Jim Crow era in the United States) has regained steam as protests have continued. On June 4, 2020, Virginia governor
Ralph Northam announced the Robert E. Lee Monument in
Richmond would be removed. On June 5, making specific reference to events in
Charlottesville in 2017, the
United States Marine Corps banned the display of the
Confederate Battle Flag at their installations. The
United States Navy followed suit on June 9 at the direction of
Michael M. Gilday, the
Chief of Naval Operations.
Birmingham, Alabama, Mayor
Randall Woodfin ordered the removal of the
Confederate Soldiers and Sailors Monument in
Linn Park. The
Alabama Attorney General has filed suit against the city of Birmingham for violating the
Alabama Memorial Preservation Act. A statue of America's first president,
George Washington, has been torn down and
American flag was burned by rioters in Portland, Oregon.
Portland Public Schools was responding after protesters pulled down the
Thomas Jefferson statue in front of
Jefferson High School. Several protesters tore down the statue of the third President of the United States and wrote: "slave owner" and "George Floyd" in spray paint at its white marble base. PPS officials said they recognize that the act is part of a larger and very important national conversation. The statues targeted included a bust of
Ulysses S. Grant and statue of
Theodore Roosevelt. BLM activist
Shaun King tweeted that statues, murals, and stained glass windows depicting a
white Jesus should be removed. Protesters defaced
a statue of Philadelphia abolitionist
Matthias Baldwin with the words "murderer" and "colonizer". Protesters in San Francisco vandalized a statue of
Miguel de Cervantes, a Spanish writer who spent five years as a
slave in Algiers. Vandals defaced the
statue of Winston Churchill in London's
Parliament Square and
Queen Victoria's statue in Leeds. The
Lincoln Memorial, the
World War II Memorial and the statue of General
Casimir Pulaski were vandalized during the George Floyd protests in Washington, D.C. On June 7, the
statue of Edward Colston was toppled and thrown into
Bristol Harbour by demonstrators during the George Floyd protests in the United Kingdom. BLM activists in London are calling for the removal of 60 statues of historical figures like Prime Ministers
Charles Grey and
William Gladstone,
Horatio Nelson, Sir
Francis Drake, King
Charles II of England,
Oliver Cromwell and
Christopher Columbus. Protesters in Belgium have vandalized statues of King
Leopold II of Belgium. In Washington, D.C., a
statue of Mahatma Gandhi in front of the
Indian Embassy was vandalized on the intervening night of June 2 and 3. The incident prompted the embassy to register a complaint with law enforcement agencies.
Taranjit Singh Sandhu, the Indian Ambassador to the United States, called the vandalism "a crime against humanity". In London,
another statue of Gandhi was vandalized by Black Lives Matter protesters along with the statue of Winston Churchill. On June 12, the city council in
Hamilton, New Zealand removed
the statue of Captain
John Hamilton, a British officer who was killed during the
New Zealand Wars in 1864. A local
Māori elder Taitimu Maipi, who had vandalized the statue in 2018, has also called for the city to be renamed Kirikiriroa. New Zealand Deputy Prime Minister
Winston Peters called the scrutiny of colonial-era memorials a "wave of idiocy". statue that was thrown into the
Baltimore inner harbor on July 4, 2020 On June 22, a crowd of rioters unsuccessfully attempted to topple
Clark Mills' 1852 bronze
equestrian statue of Andrew Jackson in
Lafayette Square in
President's Park, directly north of the White House in Washington, D.C. Several days later, the
United States Department of Justice (DOJ) charged four men with destruction of federal property for allegedly trying to bring down the statue. The Justice Department alleged that a video showed one of the men breaking off and destroying the wheels of the cannons located at the base of the statue as well as pulling on ropes when trying to bring down the statue. Soon afterwards, the DOJ announced the arrest and charging of a man who was not only allegedly seen on video climbing up onto the Jackson statue and affixing a rope that was then used to try to pull the statue down, but had on June 20 helped destroy
Gaetano Trentanove's 1901
Albert Pike Memorial statue near Washington's
Judiciary Square by pulling it from its base and setting it on fire. The DOJ's complaint alleged that the man had been captured on video dousing the federally-owned Pike statue with a flammable liquid, igniting it as it lay on the ground and using the fire to light a cigarette. On , after the
Mississippi Legislature obtained a two-thirds majority in both houses to suspend rules in order to pass a bill addressing the Confederate Battle Flag on
the Mississippi state flag,
Governor Tate Reeves signed a bill that relinquished the state flag, mandated its removal from public premises within 15 days, and established a commission to propose a new flag design that excluded the Confederate Battle Flag and included the motto "In God We Trust". The flag contained the
Confederate symbol in the
canton (upper left corner) of the flag, and was the last
U.S. state flag to do so. During a speech on July 3 at
Mount Rushmore, U.S. president Donald Trump denounced the monument removals as part of a "left wing cultural revolution" to "overthrow the
American Revolution". On , the
Washington Redskins announced that
their name and logo would be retired upon completion of "a thorough review of the name" that was first announced on . A week-long tour began July 28 in which a
hologram of Floyd was projected on a monument to be removed, thereby "replacing" the monument with Floyd. Richmond, Virginia, was the first stop. In the response to the protests, Congress mandated the creation of a
Commission on the Naming of Items of the Department of Defense that Commemorate the Confederate States of America or Any Person Who Served Voluntarily with the Confederate States of America in the
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021. President Trump cited this provision in his veto of the NDAA, resulting in the only veto override of his presidency.
Impact on police activity during protests in Philadelphia on June 2, 2020 According to Lt.
Bob Kroll, the head of the Minneapolis police union, officers began retiring "en masse" The
New York City Police Department reported a 411% increase in police retirement application in the first week of July. As a result, the department has limited new retirement applications to 40 a day. On July 11, at least 150 Minneapolis police officers reported nondescript injuries as well as symptoms of
post-traumatic stress disorder, leading over half of them to leave their jobs with more likely to follow. The Minneapolis police have denied there being any serious injuries inflicted on officers. The Minneapolis police department banned police from using chokeholds; Denver's police department also banned the use of chokeholds without exception, and also established new reporting requirements whenever a police officer holds a person at gunpoint. In June 2020,
Democrats in
Congress introduced the
George Floyd Justice in Policing Act of 2020, a police reform and accountability bill that contains measures to combat
police misconduct,
excessive force, and
racial bias in policing. The impetus for the bill were the murder of Floyd and the killings of
Breonna Taylor and other African Americans at the hands of police. It passed the House of Representatives one month after Floyd's murder, 236 to 181, with support from Democrats and three Republicans. A Republican reform bill was blocked in the U.S. Senate by all but two Democrats; neither party negotiated the contents of the bill with the other. ", a phrase popularized by BLM during the George Floyd protests On June 16, President Trump signed an
executive order on police reform that incentivized departments to recruit from communities they patrol, encourage more limited
use of deadly force, and prioritize using social workers and mental health professionals for nonviolent calls. The order also created a national database of police officers with a history of using excessive force. On September 10,
Ted Wheeler, the mayor and police commissioner of
Portland, Oregon, banned city police from using
tear gas for
riot control purposes, but reiterated that police would respond to violent protests forcefully. Portland had seen over one hundred consecutive days of protests since they began on May 28.
Push to abolish police Nine members of the
Minneapolis City Council – a veto-proof majority – pledged on June 7 to dismantle the Minneapolis Police Department, despite opposition from Mayor
Jacob Frey. U.S. representative
Ilhan Omar stated, "the Minneapolis Police Department has proven themselves beyond reform. It's time to disband them and reimagine public safety in Minneapolis." Despite pledges by city council members to the end the Minneapolis Police Department, a proposed amendment to the Minneapolis city charter which was approved by the Minneapolis City Council on June 26 would only rename the police department and change its structure if approved by voters. In August, the review of another proposal to dismantle the department was delayed by 90 days, meaning it wouldn't be voted on in the November ballot because it passed the statutory deadline of August 21. The budget for the department was passed in December and the funding was reduced by $7.7 million.
Impact on television and films In the
media industry, the protests have spurred scrutiny for
cop shows and led to the
cancellation of popular television shows referred to by critics as copaganda. With long-standing criticism that it presented an unbalanced view of law enforcement in favor of police, encouraged police to engage in more dramatic behavior for the camera, and degraded suspects who had not yet been convicted of any crime, the
Paramount Network canceled the 33rd season of the TV show
Cops and pulled it from broadcast. The television network
A&E canceled a similar show,
Live PD, which was also found to have destroyed footage documenting the police killing of Javier Ambler in Austin, Texas, in 2019. The streaming service
HBO Max temporarily pulled the film
Gone with the Wind until video that explains and condemns the film's racist depictions could be produced to accompany it. In the United Kingdom, the
BBC pulled the famed "
The Germans" episode of
Fawlty Towers from its
UKTV streaming service, but later reinstated it after criticism from series star and co-writer
John Cleese. He later criticized their use of the word "fury" to describe his comments. This was later removed by the BBC. The episode, which included racial slurs about the
West Indies cricket team, now features a disclaimer at the beginning warning of "offensive content and language". The BBC also removed the
Little Britain series and its spinoff
Come Fly with Me from the
iPlayer and
BritBox services as well as
Netflix for its use of blackface. The week of June 24, 2020, several animated series that had black, mixed or non-white characters voiced by white actors, including
Big Mouth, Central Park, Family Guy and
The Simpsons, announced those characters would be recast with people of color. That same week, episodes of
30 Rock,
The Office, ''
It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia, Community, The Golden Girls, and Peep Show'' that involved characters using blackface were either removed or edited from syndication and streaming services. In light of the protests,
Brooklyn Nine-Nine co-star
Terry Crews said that the first four episodes of the show's eighth season had to be rewritten. The
Penny Dreadful: City of Angels episode "Sing, Sing, Sing", opens with an additional viewer discretion warning about its content, specifically the lynching of a character by members of the
Los Angeles Police Department. The episode originally aired less than one month after Floyd's murder, and was the only episode to feature this additional warning.
Impact on brand marketing In reaction to the higher sensitivity by customers for racial issues in the aftermath of Floyd's murder, multiple companies decided to rebrand some products. The brands
Aunt Jemima,
Uncle Ben's, and
Fair & Lovely made adaptations to eliminate racial stereotypes. In sports, the
NFL football team in Washington, D.C., dropped the "
Redskins" nickname and the
MLB baseball team in Cleveland said it would discontinue the "
Indians" nickname after the 2021 season and adopt the "
Guardians" nickname. In June 2020,
Disney announced that their theme park attraction
Splash Mountain, which had been themed to the 1946 film
Song of the South, controversial for its depiction of African Americans, would be re-themed based on the 2009 film
The Princess and the Frog, which had Disney's first depiction of a black princess.
Public art Artistic impressions of George Floyd's likeness became an icon of the protest movement that unfolded following his murder. Paintings of Floyd appeared on exterior walls in many cities in the United States and around the world. A mapping project of
protest art after Floyd's murder had by May 19, 2021, documented 2,100 entries of George Floyd-related and anti-racism art around the world, though much of it was from the Minneapolis and Saint Paul area. Many works appeared on
plywood that covered up boarded-up windows and doors as result of unrest.
COVID-19 pandemic The protests occurred during the early, pre-vaccination phase of the global
COVID-19 pandemic, which led officials and experts to express concerns that the demonstrations could lead to further spread of
SARS-CoV-2. The demonstrations thus sparked debate among commentators, political leaders, and health experts over coronavirus restrictions on gatherings. In June 2020 the CDC released the "Considerations for Events and Gatherings" which assesses large gatherings where it is difficult for people to stay at least six feet apart, and where attendees travel from outside the local area as "highest risk". Public health experts and mayors urged demonstrators to
wear face coverings, follow physical separation (
social distancing) practices, engage in proper
hand hygiene, and seek out
COVID-19 testing. Subsequent studies and public health reports showed that the protests in 2020 did not drive an increase in COVID-19 transmission. Epidemiologists and other researchers attributed this to the location of the demonstrations outdoors (where the virus is less likely to spread as compared to indoors); Outdoor events were analyzed to have a substantially lower risk of spreading the virus than indoor ones, and transient contact was considered less risky than extended close contact. Some law enforcement personnel in New York City who responded to protests were criticized for failing to wear face masks. An
outbreak was detected among Houston, Texas, police department officers, but it was not clear if the officers were exposed on or off of their police duty. While many U.S. states experienced growth in new cases during the initial wave of protests, these upticks are thought to be attributed to reopenings of workplaces, bars, restaurants, and other businesses. ==Gallery==