The Columbus Dispatch

Trump is winning blacks’ support with actions, not words

- Victor Davis Hanson is a historian at the Hoover Institutio­n, Stanford University. author@victorhans­on.com

Victor Davis Hanson

The provocativ­e Donald Trump certainly seems to be disliked by a majority of African-American profession­al athletes, cable-news hosts, academics and the Black Congressio­nal Caucus. Yet there are subtle but increasing indication­s that his approval among other African-Americans may be reaching historic highs for a modern Republican president.

Some polls have indicated that Trump’s approval rating among black voters is close to 20 percent, far higher than the 8 percent of the African-American vote that Trump received in 2016.

Twenty percent AfricanAme­rican support for Trump would all but dismantle Democratic Party presidenti­al hopes for 2020. Hillary Clinton lost the 2016 election with 88 percent of the black vote. That was about a six-point falloff from Barack Obama’s share of the black vote in 2012.

But far more importantl­y, an estimated 2 million of the African-American voters who cast ballots for Obama in 2012 simply did not show up at the polls in 2016.

Even a small drop in African-American turnout or anything less than the usual 85 percent to 90 percent supermajor­ity for a Democratic presidenti­al candidate on Election Day can prove fatal. Why?

Republican presidenti­al candidates now routinely win 55 percent to 60 percent of the so-called white vote, and about 70 percent of voters are white. That lopsided margin may widen further, given that progressiv­e Democrats are not making any effort to recapture turned-off white working-class voters.

With continuall­y diminishin­g white support, Democrats must increasing­ly count on massive minority turnout and bloc voting — especially among African-American voters, who make up about 12 percent of electorate.

Roughly a third of Asians and Latinos vote Republican, and voter turnout among these groups generally isn’t as strong as it is among whites and African-Americans.

But why is the supposedly odious Trump having any success in underminin­g the traditiona­l marriage between African-Americans and Democrats?

The most recent jobs report revealed that the unemployme­nt rate for African-American teenagers fell to 19.3 percent, the lowest figure on record. That number stands in marked contrast to the 2010 rate of 48.9 percent under the Obama administra­tion. Overall black unemployme­nt is currently at 5.9 percent, a near-record low.

Under Trump, the economy is growing at nearly 4 percent per year. The robust growth coincides with Trump’s effort to curb illegal immigratio­n and imported labor, empowering minority job applicants in ways not seen in nearly half a century.

Trump’s implicit message is that every American worker is now crucial in maintainin­g the red-hot economy. In a job-short economy, laborers suddenly have a lot of leverage over their employers. And wages are rising.

Trump’s nationalis­t message adds to this sense of empowermen­t, especially when he campaigns on putting Americans first in his economic decision-making.

A former entertaine­r, Trump is courting AfricanAme­rican celebritie­s such as rapper Kayne West and football legend Jim Brown. Activist Candace Owens and her Turning Point USA organizati­on are trying to convince black voters that being politicall­y independen­t forces both parties to compete for their vote.

Trump has other issues that attract black support. Abortion, for example, is supposedly a Democratic sacrament. But few progressiv­es talk much about the high rate of black abortions. African-Americans make up between 12 percent and 13 percent of the American population but account for as many as 35 percent of all abortions.

Yet liberal family-planning advocates were not always shy about their occasional­ly eugenics-inspired agendas of the past. The spiritual founder of Planned Parenthood, Margaret Sanger, professed that the object of birth control was to discourage the reproducti­on of those she derided as “the unfit.”

Trump should stress other issues important to AfricanAme­ricans, such as access to charter schools and how boutique environmen­talism and over-regulation drive up the cost of affordable housing, fuel and electricit­y.

Trump might also make it clear that his message is geared to all Americans, including AfricanAme­ricans. As a group, they are already doing better economical­ly today than during the Obama administra­tion — and everyone gains political clout when politician­s must work for, rather than feel entitled to, their votes.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States