The Guardian (USA)

If we the Black voters ‘get loud’, neither the Tories nor Donald Trump will survive

- Al Sharpton

Donald Trump’s racist mentality has long been an open secret. In the 1970s, a federal lawsuit was brought against him for alleged racial discrimina­tion on one of his housing developmen­ts in New York. He led the campaign calling for the death penalty against the Central Park Five, who were accused of a brutal rape but later vindicated. Even after that exoneratio­n, he continued to suggest they were guilty.

So are Black Americans flocking to support Trump? Reports are mixed. Trump himself would tell you he has a unique affinity with the Black community, but personally, I don’t buy it. Polling in 2020 estimated Trump would take 20% of the black vote. The real number was closer to 8%.

After all, let’s remember what he says about us. Just this weekend, he said that Black Americans identified with him because he had faced criminal charges and we embraced his criminal mugshot. That was outright racist and insulting. For him to say that during Black History Month in the US is the epitome of an insult.

And the irony is that he is the one being prosecuted – and by Black profession­als at that. The New York state attorney general, Letitia James, brought the financiall­y ruinous civil financial fraud case against Trump. Fani Willis, Fulton county district attorney, was responsibl­e for challengin­g Trump’s alleged election interferen­ce in Georgia.

I spend a lot of time speaking with Black voters. I host a US radio show six days a week – and from what I hear, I’m not alone in thinking that claims that he has growing support among our community are grossly exaggerate­d. But I do think it is fair to say that Black citizens are asking questions of the Democrats.

Joe Biden has simply not done a good enough job on messaging. He needs to be more aggressive in speaking to Black voters – laying out his record, such as the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act (which Trump opposed) and his support for the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancemen­t Act (which almost every Republican voted down). Biden should not assume people know what they haven’t been reminded of.

US liberals must understand that if you take the high road and are not making noise about it, no one knows that you’re taking any road. They have to be more vocal, they have to challenge more, and not run away from the issue of race.

That goes for the left in the UK, too. Arriving yesterday, I was disgusted to hear racist, Islamophob­ic language being used by members of the Conservati­ve party. The Tories seem to be alarmingly Trump-like in their language. And that should be a mobilising cry to millions of Black British voters to register to vote.

It shocks me that the wider British public doesn’t seem to understand the gravity of the threat to Black voting in the UK. The UK’s new photo ID legislatio­n disproport­ionately disadvanta­ges Black and minority voters. We know – similar legislatio­n was used against us in the US. But Black people mobilised against it, and in 2021 helped to elect Raphael Warnock as Georgia’s first Black US senator. It shows the importance of fighting back.

That’s why I came here: to tell leaders to use our playbook to challenge laws that suppress the Black vote – and to impress on Black communitie­s the importance of turning out. It is imperative to democracy that we awaken the black vote in the UK and bring it alive. And we must do it simultaneo­usly in the US.

Biden has an opportunit­y to expose Trump’s lies and get disenfranc­hised communitie­s back on side. To do that, he must be candid: he must openly call out Trump’s blatant racism for what it is. He must tell Black voters how Trump stacked the courts in a way that is detrimenta­l to them, and that he will aggressive­ly fight that. The Democrats still have time to recapture those whom they think they are losing. If they do that, Trump will have no recourse. He can’t undo things he has already said and done.

You have to turn people on before you can turn them out. And if you turn them on to what is being done to us – what has already been said about us – you can turn people out. Liberal movements in the US and the UK have been blindly hoping that people will turn out on their own. But leaders must understand they won’t mobilise without a reason. It’s not enough to be proud in silence – we need to get loud again.

The Rev Al Sharpton is a civil rights leader, activist and founder and president of National Action Network (Nan). As told to Lucy Pasha-Robinson.

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 ?? Photograph: Erik S Lesser/EPA ?? Protesters in Atlanta, Georgia, urge the US Senate to pass voting rights legislatio­n, December 2021.
Photograph: Erik S Lesser/EPA Protesters in Atlanta, Georgia, urge the US Senate to pass voting rights legislatio­n, December 2021.

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