
KQED's Forum Remembering George Floyd and the Racial Reckoning He Sparked
May 30, 2025
Join Robert Samuels, a National Political Reporter at The Washington Post and co-author of 'His Name is George Floyd', alongside Clyde McGrady, a National Correspondent at The New York Times. They reflect on the five-year mark since George Floyd’s murder, exploring the lasting societal changes and the racial reckoning that followed. Samuels questions whether the backlash against progress overshadows the gains made. They discuss the emotional legacy of Floyd’s story and the ongoing struggles within the racial justice movement.
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Hope and Complexities of Protests
- The multiracial unity and protests after Floyd's death felt like a historic moment of potential progress on racial justice.
- Yet the later erasure of Black Lives Matter signs reflected the complexities and resistance still present.
Backlash Narratives Undermine Progress
- The backlash to 2020 racial justice momentum is led from high offices, rewriting narratives to portray white people as victims.
- Denying Floyd's murder and protests aims to delegitimize the movement's moral and political gains.
Reversals Threaten Racial Education
- Support for Black Lives Matter dissipated quickly after 2020, with movements like CRT being mischaracterized and books banned.
- Education about systemic racism is under threat, even in majority-Black communities, restricting opportunities to understand history.







