Kamala Harris Faces Challenges: Barack Obama’s Warning and Declining Black Support Amid Donald Trump Threat.

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(ThyBlackMan.com) Two things happened within the space of forty-eight hours that raise a red flag for Democratic presidential contender Kamala Harris. The first was the stern dress down by former President Obama of Blacks at a Harris campaign rally in Pittsburgh for even contemplating doing what he termed the unacceptable. That is not voting. Obama has read the news clipping and heard the chatter from many Blacks, especially some Black men, who profess either apathy toward the election or to his horror an affinity for Trump.

Kamala Harris Faces Challenges: Barack Obama’s Warning and Declining Black Support Amid Donald Trump Threat.

The second potential red flag was a New York Times poll that reiterated what various other polls have found. Black support for Harris was soft. How soft? It found that a stunning fifteen percent of Blacks said they’d back Trump and that Black support for the Democrats had plunged since the 2020 presidential election.

While the Times poll may be questionable, even overblown, Obama’s public reprimand of possible non-voting Blacks or those Blacks enamored of Trump isn’t. Trump, of course, takes special delight in claiming that Blacks love him because as he fraudulently and insultingly puts it he’s done more for them since Lincoln.

Still, there’s reason to worry about this deeply troubling possibility of measurable Black voter defection from the Democrats.

In Trump’s presidential victory in 2016 and loss in 2020, he did marginally better with Black voters than prior GOP presidential candidates. That alone was not much cause for concern, let alone cause to get out the worry beads that Trump, and the GOP had made any kind of real breakthrough in prying Blacks aways from the Democrats.

Despite all the supposed grousing among Blacks about Biden in 2020, there was no break in the solid Democratic ranks by Blacks. Focus groups during the election that year of Black voters confirmed that while more than a few Blacks continued to voice criticism and concern about some of Biden’s policies, and even dredged up his enthusiastic support of the punitive Clinton Crime Bill,    almost none said they had any love, like of, or desire to throw their lot in with Trump.

Yet, the harsh reality was that thousands of Blacks did vote for Trump in 2020. Their reasons were easy to explain. Trump touched a tiny nerve with his shout that poor, underserved Black neighborhoods are supposedly a mess with lousy public schools, high crime and violence, and chronic joblessness and poverty.

He dumped the blame for that squarely on the Democrats who run and have run most of these cities for decades. Trump doubled down on that slam with a handful of carefully choreographed appearances with high-profile Black preachers, at name Black churches. This was just enough to take the hard and sharp edge for some Blacks off the almost-set-in-stone image of Trump as a guy with a white sheet under his suit.

There was more. As far back as the 2004 presidential election, there was a sign that more than a few Blacks, most notably Black conservative evangelicals, were deeply susceptible to GOP conservative pitches on some issues. A considerable number of them voted for Bush that year and that was enough to give him the cushion he needed to bag Ohio and win the White House.

The same polls that election that showed Black’s prime concern was with bread-and-butter issues–and that Bush’s rival Democrat rival John Kerry was viewed as the candidate who could deliver on those issues–also revealed that a sizable number of Blacks ranked abortion, gay marriage, and school prayer as priority issues. Their concern for these issues didn’t come anywhere close to that of white evangelicals, but it was still higher than that of the general voting public.

In 2008 and 2012, Black GOP advocacy groups ran ads hammering the Democrats again for their alleged indifference to and outright aid and abet of black suffering in the inner cities, and touting the GOP’s emphasis on small business, school choice, and family values as the best path to black advancement. This pitch has always had some appeal to many Backs. And though it would never trigger any kind of stampede to the GOP by even most of these conservative-leaning Blacks, it was enough to take some of the sting out of the GOP’s naked history of racial abuse.

Trump understood enough of that history. He tailored the few pitches he made to Blacks for their votes to reflect the stock GOP pro-business, free enterprise, and the healthy economy line as something that blacks also could and should embrace. He’s using the same template in 2024 with the added twist that he’s supposedly a victim of a horribly racially skewed criminal justice system just as Blacks are.

The overwhelming majority of Blacks will remain dutifully loyal Democrats and will back Harris to the hilt. They recognize the mortal danger a Trump second presidency represents to civil rights and social justice progress in America. Still Obama was right to worry. Even a marginal increase in Black Trump backing could hurt. We pray that won’t happen.

Written By Earl Ofari Hutchinson

One can find more info about Mr. Hutchinson over at the following site; TheHutchinson Report.

Also feel free to connect with him through twitter; http://twitter.com/earlhutchins

He is also an associate editor of New America Media. His forthcoming book is From King to Obama: Witness to a Turbulent History (Middle Passage Press).


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