Boston Herald

GOP needs to extend outreach to black voters

- By STAR PARKER Star Parker is president of the Center for Urban Renewal and Education.

The disproport­ionate number of African American special guests hosted by President Trump at the State of the Union address made clear how very serious he is about courting the support of this community.

The question, of course, is whether meaningful change in how African Americans vote is possible or is just wishful thinking by Republican­s.

Since 1964, Democrats have picked up an average of 90% of the black vote in every presidenti­al election, and Republican­s have picked up an average of 10%. Have the Democrats served the black community so well that they deserve such disproport­ionate support?

I say no way.

The Council of Economic Advisers published a paper a few weeks ago titled “The Blue-Collar Labor Boom Reduces Inequality.” It highlights the incredible economic achievemen­ts among lower-income families during the Trump administra­tion.

“Average wage growth for African Americans has outpaced wage growth for white Americans,” it says.

Per the data reported, “Nearly 2.5 million people were lifted out of poverty in 2017 and 2018, and the poverty rates for African Americans and Hispanics both fell in 2018, reaching new historic lows.”

We’re seeing historic increases in net worth among the bottom 50% of households. Employment has surged, and unemployme­nt has reached all-time lows.

How do Republican­s translate this into votes?

In my organizati­on, the Center for Urban Renewal and Education, we’ve been looking at recent polling data to see what it tells us about why African Americans vote overwhelmi­ngly for Democratic candidates every presidenti­al election.

One thing that jumps out from the data is how different black voters are from typical Democrats.

According to Gallup, 49% of all Democrats define themselves as liberal. Only 28% of blacks do.

On questions of religion and morality, blacks poll far more like Republican­s than Democrats.

One example: Per Pew Research, 55% of blacks say belief in God is necessary to be moral. This compared with 26% of all Democrats and 46% of all Republican­s.

The real departure of blacks from Republican­s is on questions touching on fairness and inequality.

According to Gallup, 57% of Democrats feel the country is divided into “haves and “havenots.” Twenty-four percent of Republican­s believe this, but 70% of blacks do.

And, per Pew, 39% of whites compared with 66% of blacks say economic inequality is a major problem in the country. And 48% of whites compared with 74% of blacks say government should be doing more to solve problems.

President Trump ticked through much of the good economic news for low-income Americans in his State of the Union address.

Democrats will deny what is happening. They know that black voters have been listening to their big-government-dependence message for half a century. And the results have been dismal.

Republican­s have already got black voters on board with them regarding the importance of religion, faith and morality.

But they’ve got a big job to change black attitudes about reliance on big government.

The advantage they have is truth and plenty of glowing data from the last three years.

President Trump is laying the groundwork for a sea change in African American politics. Republican­s need to follow up.

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