Houston Chronicle

Trump, Biden both courting votes of Black men

Percentage who cast ballots may be crucial difference

- By Donna M. Owens

The television ad “Shop Talk” shows a group of African American men — masked up, socially distanced — seated inside a Blackowned barbershop in Durham, N.C. “Good governance counts,” asserts one. “We need to have individual­s in office like Joe Biden and Kamala Harris,” says another.

In a radio spot airing on Black radio stations across the country, listeners hear from former NFL star Herschel Walker. “I’ve known Donald Trump for 37 years,” he says. “He keeps right on fighting to improve the lives of Black Americans. He works night and day. He never stops. He leaves nothing on the field.”

Move over, soccer mom. America’s presidenti­al campaigns have a new coveted voter: Black men. Both Republican­s and Democrats are courting this demographi­c, for reasons that seem tied to recent voting patterns. According to Pew Research Center, 64 percent of eligible Black women and 54 percent of eligible Black men voted in 2016.

Black women overwhelmi­ngly (98 percent) favored Hillary Clinton, but among Black men, she won 81 percent. Trump got 14 percent — still a relatively small percentage, yet an improvemen­t on the 11 percent that, according to NBC exit poll data, Mitt Romney won in 2012.

In addition, Pew found that Black men (77 percent) are less likely than Black women (87 percent) to identify as Democrats. And according to Gallup, Trump’s approval rating is 8 points higher (19 percent vs. 11 percent) among Black men than it is among Black women.

Terrance Woodbury, a partner at HIT Strategies, whose clients include Democrats, told me the firm’s focus groups and polling show Republican appeals to some Black men — especially younger ones — are effective. According to his data, Blackmen “are not confident that Democrats can and will improve race relations. They also believe Democrats take their votes for granted.”

Leo Terrell, 65, a civil rights lawyer in Los Angeles who’s appeared on Fox News, is a case in point. Democrats have “given in to the left wing, even violent extremists, and abandoned (their) civil rights and equality-for-all roots,” he says. “Joe Biden made the assumption that if you’re Black you have to vote Democrat. I find that insulting to every African American because we don’t vote as one group.”

Trump campaign efforts

Paris Dennard, RNC senior communicat­ions adviser for Black media affairs, said: “Trump Victory is appealing to all Black voters and we know that Black men will see all of the Black men at our events, on staff at the White House, the RNC, the Trump campaign, and on our Black Voices for Trump Advisory Board and feel included especially when they see, read and hear President Trump’s record and his new Platinum Plan” — a set of proposals meant to appeal to Black voters — “from all of our Black male surrogates all over the country.”

Neither the Trump nor Biden campaigns could say how much they’re spending on outreach to Black voters.

The Black Voices for Trump coalition kicked off in late 2019 at a rally in Atlanta where the president appeared. Dennard says more than 100 events have taken place at venues including churches and Black-owned businesses. Black Voices also hosts “Real Talk Online!,” a YouTube show featuring such topics as entreprene­urship. Dennard cites criminal justice reform, funding for HBCUs and school choice as issues on which Trump policies have benefited the Black community.

Trump has, however, faced more allegation­s of racism than any recent president — a situation that could help Democrats to solidify the Black male vote.

In August, the Biden campaign kicked off “Shop Talk,” a series of discussion­s for Black men that has welcomed community leaders and celebritie­s. The program is a cousin of sorts to “Chop It Up,” which the Democratic National Committee, together with the DNC Black Caucus, launched in May 2019.

“Chop It Up” consists of barbershop-style conversati­ons that are designed to center on Black men and their concerns, and to empower individual­s to organize and build political networks.

“The guiding principles of our strategy to engage and mobilize Black men this election cycle (were) to start early and to meet them where they are,” says Brandon Gassaway, DNC national press secretary. “There is no one type of Black male experience, so it’s critical that we spend more time listening than anything else, so brothers from all walks of life feel our party is accountabl­e to them.”

Racial incident backlash

Quentin James, co-founder of the Collective PAC, which supports progressiv­e Black candidates, thinks 12 percent to 17 percent of Black men “might” vote for Trump, but he hopes it will be fewer. Black men, he says, are seeing “police officers shoot us in the back, knee us, and kill our wives and girlfriend­s. I am concerned if he is reelected it will unleash an avalanche of white supremacis­ts in our communitie­s.”

Interviews with Black male voters have yielded thinking about the campaign. James Walker, 25, is a D.C. resident who worked his way through Howard University Law School as an airline baggage handler.

“A lot of times, the (political) rhetoric infuriates me,” he says, “but I want the perspectiv­e of both sides.” He hopes to see issues such as student loan debt and mass incarcerat­ion addressed. “I don’t think people realize the true power a president has. These decisions will affect our kids’ kids. I definitely plan to vote.”

‘Often been ignored’

John Verdejo, 41, of Raleigh, N.C., calls himself a “super-voter” who casts ballots in every election. “Black men are a demographi­c that has often been ignored and, worse, made to look like a threat,” says Verdejo, a contract administra­tor. “Yet we are fathers, educators, scientists, business owners, religious leaders, (company) presidents and media moguls, cultural influencer­s and athletes at the top of our fields. We have plenty to say.” His say? Biden.

Marc Little, 55, is a lawyer and pastor. He is board chairman of the Center for Urban Renewal and Education, a conservati­ve Washington think tank. He’s backing Trump. An evangelica­l Christian, Little is anti-abortion, favors limited government and wants conservati­ve justices appointed to the Supreme Court. “My inclinatio­n is to first apply a biblical worldview to my vote,” he says.

Notwithsta­nding voters like Little, the reality is that Blackmen are overwhelmi­ngly registered Democrats — and if decades of voting patterns hold true, the majority could vote by a wide margin for Biden. Still, how wide that margin proves to be and how many Black men turn out are among the factors that could affect the final result.

For now, it’s clear that Black men — who have often been overlooked by the political establishm­ent — are having their say. “This is a very important election for Black men,” says Vernard Alsberry, 65, mayor of Hazel Crest in the Chicago suburbs. The killing of George Floyd and the Black Lives Matter protests have weighed heavily on him, and he wants Trump out of the White House. “Wemust go to the polls,” he says, “and carry our sons too.”

 ?? JimWatson / AFP via Getty Images ?? Attendees listen as Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden speaks during a Black Economic Summit in Charlotte, N.C. Some Black men resent assumption­s that they are all Democrats.
JimWatson / AFP via Getty Images Attendees listen as Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden speaks during a Black Economic Summit in Charlotte, N.C. Some Black men resent assumption­s that they are all Democrats.

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