The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Trump brings hopeful message to Black voters during visit here

He seeks to pull support from Biden; Democrats blast ‘failed leadership.’

- By Ernie Suggs ernie.suggs@ajc.com and Greg Bluestein greg.bluestein@ajc.com

On the defensive in Georgia, President Donald Trump on Friday unveiled proposals in Atlanta that include promises to secure more lending for Black-owned businesses and a pledge to create a federal Juneteenth holiday commemorat­ing the end of slavery.

Speaking to a cheering crowd of hundreds of Black Republican­s, Trump spoke less about the individual policies and issued a broader challenge to Joe Biden’s supporters to question Democratic initiative­s as polls show the two are locked in a tight race in Georgia.

“Racial justice begins with Joe Biden’s retirement from public life,” said Trump, who reprised his 2016 appeal to Black voters: “What the hell do you have to lose?”

The president is seeking to undercut Biden’s support among African American voters in a state where Republican­s have long dominated by promising to generate millions of new jobs and $500 billion in capital for Blackowned businesses with tax incentives, regulatory changes and private partnershi­ps.

The Trump campaign has

focused intensely on Georgia, a state that’s crucial in his bid for reelection. Republican­s have carried Georgia in every presidenti­al election since 1996, but Biden’s campaign has forced Republican­s to shift resources to the state.

An Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on poll released this week showed the race couldn’t be closer in Georgia, pegging each at 47%. And Trump has sent a string of surrogates to the state, including three of his children and several Cabinet officials over the past two weeks.

And even as Trump prepared to speak at the Cobb Galleria Centre, the White House announced that Vice President Mike Pence would return to Georgia next week to headline a religious conference in another indication of the state’s battlegrou­nd status.

“Republican­s have to worry about Georgia,” said Lisa Babbage, a former congressio­nal candidate who was among the first to arrive at Friday’s event. “He’s got to play defense and offense at the same time. He’s got to build the plane and fly it.”

A ‘crisis’

The AJC poll showed only 5% of Black voters said they would support Trump, while 85% back Biden. About 8% of Black voters remain undecided. Eighty-seven percent of Black voters feel that Biden will do a better job of addressing America’s racial disparitie­s.

The former vice president’s campaign blasted Trump’s “failed leadership” during the coronaviru­s pandemic and the movement for social justice. State Democrats arranged for a truck emblazoned with stark figures about Trump’s record to circle the Galleria complex, where protesters jeered the president and promoted Biden’s campaign.

“Black Georgians won’t let this crisis get worse,” said Nikema Williams, a Democratic congressio­nal candidate and chairwoman of the state Democratic Party.

“We’ll do absolutely everything we can to make sure that we elect Democrats up and down the ballot to stop the Republican assaults on our rights and protect our democracy,” Williams said. “Black Georgians know what’s at stake, and we’re ready to send Donald Trump packing.”

Inside the conference center, Black Republican­s arrived hours early to demonstrat­e that Democrats don’t have a lock on African American voters.

“There’s no betrayal at all,” said Fitz Johnson, who is running for a seat on the Cobb County Commission. “Black Americans from the start, back to Abraham Lincoln, were Republican­s. We have conservati­ve values.”

He and other Republican­s praised the broad outline of Trump’s “platinum” plan, handed to audience members before the president arrived. Among other elements, it would designate the Ku Klux Klan and antifa as terrorist organizati­ons, commemorat­e Juneteenth and make lynching a federal crime.

Trump faced stinging criticism when he scheduled a campaign rally on June 19 — the date known as Juneteenth — amid protests over racial justice in Tulsa, Oklahoma, home to one of the nation’s most violent outbreaks of racist attacks. He delayed the rally rather than hold it on the day honoring the end of slavery in the U.S.

‘Fighting against evil’

Before Trump took the Galleria stage Friday, the campaign played a series of videos touting the president’s support for charter school initiative­s, criminal justice measures and new funding for historical­ly Black colleges and universiti­es.

A series of African American candidates, politician­s, pastors and activists echoed Trump’s plea to Black voters. Their message: Trump has done more for Black voters in four years than Biden has in decades of elected office.

“Aren’t you tired of being manipulate­d? Aren’t you tired of being lied to?” said Kelvin King, owner of a constructi­on business and one of Trump’s most prominent Black supporters in Georgia.

“We’ve come through a lot and we can go through a lot,” King said. “Right now, we’re not fighting against Donald Trump. He’s right outside. We’re fighting against evil, against factions that want to break up our family.”

During a wide-ranging speech, Trump veered in and out of Georgia political debates.

He credited U.S. Sen. David Perdue for persuading him to endorse Brian Kemp in the 2018 Republican runoff for governor against Casey Cagle. And he urged Republican rivals U.S. Sen. Kelly Loeffler and U.S. Rep. Doug Collins to stay in the free-for-all special election in November.

“I want to congratula­te you both for fighting the good fight,” he said, adding that their intense competitio­n will help drive turnout that could boost his campaign.

“Don’t anybody get out,” he said, turning to their conservati­ve supporters. “The only thing I know for sure: They’re all going to vote for me.”

It was the latest indoor rally staged by Trump, who spoke in a crowded ballroom dotted with many audience members who weren’t wearing masks.

Kemp, who was in the crowd, signed an executive order banning gatherings of more than 50 people to stem the spread of the coronaviru­s outbreak, but he and other officials have ignored those rules at recent rallies.

Several of the speakers left the event eager to support Trump — and touted what they called a “silent minority” of Black supporters for the president.

”He has given African Americans a fresh start,” said Andrea Smith, who attended the rally with her husband, Parett Smith, the pastor of the Vinings Worship Center. “We have been taken for granted for so long by the Democratic Party. But he is building a community of respect.”

Rena-Marie Moore, a 32-year-old real estate broker, said she has been impressed by Trump’s commitment to jobs and opportunit­y zones, a tax incentive aimed at Black communitie­s.

“The president didn’t get much support in 2016,” Moore said. “But he still did so much for our people. That just shows his character. And he is going to do more.”

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? President Donald Trump speaks to supporters during a Blacks for Trump campaign rally inside the Cobb Galleria Centre on Friday.
ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM President Donald Trump speaks to supporters during a Blacks for Trump campaign rally inside the Cobb Galleria Centre on Friday.
 ?? PHOTOS BY ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? A President Trump supporter checks in before the start of the campaign rally Friday inside the Cobb Galleria Centre, one of several recently scheduled campaign events planned for Georgia.
PHOTOS BY ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM A President Trump supporter checks in before the start of the campaign rally Friday inside the Cobb Galleria Centre, one of several recently scheduled campaign events planned for Georgia.
 ??  ?? A supporter wearing a Black Voices for Trump hat and mask becomes emotional while listening to speakers during the campaign rally at the Cobb Galleria Centre.
A supporter wearing a Black Voices for Trump hat and mask becomes emotional while listening to speakers during the campaign rally at the Cobb Galleria Centre.
 ??  ?? A Trump supporter, mask lowered to let his voice be heard, shouts in agreement to remarks made by the president during the Blacks for Trump campaign rally.
A Trump supporter, mask lowered to let his voice be heard, shouts in agreement to remarks made by the president during the Blacks for Trump campaign rally.

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