Houston Chronicle

Democrats have a Black male voter problem

- Charles M. Blow Charles Blow is a columnist for the New York Times.

Last month, in a videotaped appearance for a “Pod Save America” live show, Stacey Abrams, a celebrated Democratic activist and the Democratic nominee for governor of Georgia, said Black men have the power to determine the election in that state.

After explaining that some Black men chose not to vote because “often the leadership that gets elected is not reflective of their needs,” she said: “I know that if we have the kind of turnout possible among Black men and they vote for me, I will win this election. That is why my campaign has been so focused on making sure we’re addressing those challenges.”

Why this specific focus on Black men? It is most likely because an AJC poll from July found that she was significan­tly underperfo­rming with Black voters, with just 80 percent of the Black electorate supporting her, although Georgia Democrats usually get more than 90 percent of the Black electorate. The campaign seems to be focusing specifical­ly on Black men when considerin­g this deficit.

Notably, Raphael Warnock, a Black Democratic senator from the state who is running for re-election, got the support of about 85 percent of Black people in the poll.

Now, there may be something different in the appeal of these candidates; there is definitely a difference in the quality of their opponents. Or we might simply be seeing the familiar sight of misogyny creeping in.

It’s hard for me to tell. Although I wish I had the answers here, I don’t. But I will say that this trend appears to be bigger than just Georgia. We have seen a similar differenti­al between Black men’s and Black women’s votes on the national stage. According to the Associated Press’ VoteCast survey, 12 percent of Black men voted for Donald Trump in 2020, compared with just 6 percent of Black women.

It should be noted that Black men vote Democratic at a higher rate than other men, but the slippage is concerning for Democrats.

What’s happening nationally may well be bleeding down into what’s happening in states such as Georgia.

In 2019, political consultant W. Mondale Robinson founded the Black Male Voter Project, an advocacy group, to solve this very problem by trying to “help Black men believe in the electoral process again.” As he wrote on the group’s website in 2019:

“I wound up doing campaign work for a long time, and one thing I noticed right away was that most of the people who determine what’s said about politics generally, but progressiv­e politics more specifical­ly, are white men. The messaging they convey doesn’t speak to my lived experience as a Black man. It’s not motivating to me or to the brothas I know — uncles, cousins, friends, men like my father.”

I think that for many progressiv­es, this dispositio­n can be hard to fathom. For them, the choice seems clear and binary, like night and day. They can’t conceive of a reality in which voters become pessimisti­c about the entire process.

I also don’t think it registers with progressiv­es just how disappoint­ed and disaffecte­d many Black men have become with our current politics.

There has been quite a bit of speculatio­n about why Black men’s votes are not more in line with Black women’s, and although some of the theories are interestin­g, it is impossible for me to say that any of those theories completely pan out.

What is clear, however, is that the softening support for Democrats among Black men is not just a thing that people like me find interestin­g enough to write about. Democratic candidates such as Abrams find it disturbing enough to worry about, and that should worry all Democrats.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States