The Commercial Appeal

Black voters demand more action

Poll cites gun violence, police, safety, economy

- Mabinty Quarshie

Black Americans want the Biden administra­tion to address gun violence and declare white supremacis­t violence a national security threat, according to new polling released Wednesday and shared exclusivel­y with USA TODAY.

In the aftermath of last year’s midterm elections cycle, Black to the Future Action Fund and HIT Strategies polled 1,200 Black voters in Georgia, North Carolina and California.

Black voters are the most loyal voting bloc for Democrats and will once again be crucial for the party to maintain control of the White House in 2024. The survey results can help candidates and parties understand what motivated these Americans to vote or, in some cases, to stay home.

What were the top concerns?

The top concern for Black voters during the midterms was inflation, at 25%, and then jobs and the economy, at 23%. Third were abortion access, crime and gun violence, and discrimina­tion and race all tied at 22%.

Yet 44% of participan­ts in the latest poll said they wanted gun control legislatio­n enacted. And 42% said they wanted white supremacy declared a national security threat.

Those calls for action came before the death of 29-year-old Tyre Nichols this year, in Memphis, Tennessee, which reignited political pressure on the Biden administra­tion.

“I do think that the Biden/harris administra­tion is making progress on gun control specifical­ly. On police violence, not really,” said Alicia Garza, principal of Black to the Future Action Fund. “And some of that is an issue of who’s in Congress.

But some of it is also an issue of political pressure.”

More action on the economy

Black voters also said they wanted more action on financial topics; 42% said they want the minimum wage increased to $15 an hour and 40% said they wanted affordable housing, the poll showed.

In Georgia and North Carolina, support for increasing the minimum wage to $15 was most popular at 46% and 45%, respective­ly.

Like many other Democratic constituen­ts, 32% of Black voters want $50,000 of student debt canceled. They also wanted housing vouchers for lowincome families that cap rent at 30% of income.

Police and safety

Nearly half of Black voters, 47%, said they felt unsafe in the U.S. More than

half of Black women, 54%, said they felt unsafe, and 36% of Black men said the same.

As debates about crime roil major U.S. cities, 35% said they want to shift funding for police to preventati­ve measures like mental health support and social work. Only 20% of those polled said they wanted to increase police funding to reduce crime.

On white supremacy, 47% said they wanted extremists removed from federal, local and state police department­s, and 38% said anyone who committed a hate crime should be banned from gun purchases.

Messaging problems for Biden

Terrance Woodbury, founding partner and chief executive officer of HIT Strategies, said Democrats will have to champion economic and social issues to Black voters ahead of the 2024 presidenti­al election.

“Democrats cannot decide between addressing economic issues and social issues. They cannot make a forced choice between issues of identity and issues of economy, because for Black voters, they’re inseparabl­e,” Woodbury said.

They’ll also have to adjust how they interact with voters.

Nearly 80% of Black voters said they saw television ads from Democrats or liberal organizati­ons last year. Yet the same percentage of Black voters said no Democrats or liberal organizati­ons knocked on their door.

Meanwhile, 77% of those polled saw an ad from Republican­s or conservati­ve organizati­ons, and 84% said no Republican­s or conservati­ve organizati­ons knocked on their door.

Why some voters stayed home

Of the Black voters surveyed, 18% said they did not vote last year. In North Carolina, Georgia and California, the percentage­s of people who didn’t vote were 22%, 14% and 18%, respective­ly.

North Carolina Democratic senatorial nominee Cheri Beasely lost her election to then-gop Rep. Ted Budd by less than 4 percentage points.

Of the Black voters who didn’t vote in 2022, 42% said they were not informed about the candidates. In California, 56% of those who didn’t vote said they were uninformed about the candidates, as did 35% of Black voters in Georgia who didn’t vote.

Latosha Brown, co-founder of Black Voters Matter, a Georgia-based civic engagement group, said the disconnect with Black voters stems from campaigns focusing on white voters to the detriment of Black Americans. Another piece of disconnect is not just how campaigns engage with Black voters but who does the engagement.

The survey was done in December and has a 2.8% margin of error of the full sample and a 4.8% margin of error in each state.

 ?? HANNAH GABER/USA TODAY FILE ?? Demonstrat­ors mark the 60th anniversar­y of the Freedom Rides in June 2021 in Richmond, Va. Black voters will once again be crucial for Democrats to maintain control of the White House in 2024.
HANNAH GABER/USA TODAY FILE Demonstrat­ors mark the 60th anniversar­y of the Freedom Rides in June 2021 in Richmond, Va. Black voters will once again be crucial for Democrats to maintain control of the White House in 2024.

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