As Black Voters Drift to Trump, Biden’s Allies
Say They Have Work to Do
New York Times/Siena College polling painted a
worrisome picture of the president’s standing with a crucial constituency.
Democratic strategists warned that the erosion could threaten his re-election.
Maya King Lisa
Lerer
By Maya
King and Lisa Lerer
Published
Nov. 6, 2023
Updated
Nov. 8, 2023
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/11/06/us/politics/biden-trump-black-voters-poll-democrats.html
Black
voters are more disconnected from the Democratic Party than they have been in
decades, frustrated with what many see as inaction on their political
priorities and unhappy with President Biden, a candidate they helped lift to
the White House just three years ago.
New polls
by The New York Times and Siena College found that 22 percent of Black voters
in six of the most important battleground states said they would support former
President Donald J. Trump in next year’s election, and 71 percent would back
Mr. Biden.
The drift
in support is striking, given that Mr. Trump won just 8 percent of Black voters
nationally in 2020 and 6 percent in 2016, according to the Pew Research Center.
A Republican presidential candidate has not won more than 12 percent of the
Black vote in nearly half a century.
Mr. Biden
has a year to shore up his standing, but if numbers like these held up across
the country in November 2024, they would amount to a historic shift: No
Democratic presidential candidate since the civil rights era has earned less
than 80 percent of the Black vote.
The new
polling offers an early warning sign about the erosion of Mr. Biden’s
coalition, Democratic strategists said, cautioning that the president will
probably lose his re-election bid if he cannot increase his support from this
pivotal voting bloc.
A number of
Democratic strategists acknowledged that the downbeat numbers in battleground
states extended beyond Black voters to the party’s core constituencies, warning
that the Biden campaign had to take steps to improve its standing, particularly
with Black, Latino and younger voters. The Times/Siena polls surveyed
registered voters in Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvania and
Wisconsin.
Celinda
Lake, a Democratic pollster for Mr. Biden’s campaign in 2020, said the
president’s political operation had not been “present enough” for Black
Americans and younger voters.
“I don’t
think we’ve been voicing what we delivered to the African American community
and particularly among younger African American men,” she said. “We have to get
the numbers up and we have to get African American voters out to vote, and we
have to get the numbers up with young people and we have to get them out to
vote.”
Mr. Biden’s
numbers in the polling were particularly low among Black men. Twenty-seven
percent of Black men supported Mr. Trump, compared with 17 percent of Black
women.
Still,
there are signs that Democrats’ hurdles with Black voters, however alarming for
the party, leave room for improvement. About a quarter of Black voters who said
they planned to support Mr. Trump said there was some chance they would end up
backing Mr. Biden.
Cornell
Belcher, who worked as a pollster for former President Barack Obama, said he
doubted that many Black voters would switch their support to Mr. Trump. His
bigger fear, he said, is that they might not vote at all.
“I’m not
worried about Trump doubling his support with Black and brown voters,” said Mr.
Belcher, who focuses particularly on surveying voters of color. “What I am
worried about is turnout.”
He added:
“But that’s what campaigns are for. We build a campaign to solve for that
problem.”
Karen
Wright, a business consultant in McDonough, Ga., who immigrated to the United
States from Jamaica in 1982, said she had always voted for Democrats, seeing
them as the best option for younger immigrants, particularly those from
predominantly Black countries like hers.
Now,
though, she believes Mr. Biden has not followed through on his campaign
promises on immigration, worries that Democrats have gone too far in their
embrace of L.G.B.T.Q. issues and faults them for books used in public education
that she believes are too sexually explicit.
Next year,
Ms. Wright, 53, said that she planned to support Republicans up and down the
ballot — and that she was not alone.
“My clients
are mostly Black,” she said. “They voted Democrat last year and they all said
next election they’re going to vote Republican.”
Angela
Lang, the executive director of Black Leaders Organizing for Communities, a
group that aims to mobilize Black voters in Milwaukee, said canvassers who
worked with her organization had encountered an overwhelming number of Black
voters who did not want to vote or did not see the value in turning out again.
“People are
like: ‘Why should I vote? I don’t feel like voting. Voting doesn’t do anything.
My life hasn’t changed,’” she said, adding that the group had found that high
prices and housing instability had fed people’s pessimism. “If your basic needs
aren’t being met, it’s difficult to pay attention to politics and it’s
difficult to have faith in that system when you voted before but you’re still
struggling day to day.”
Still,
Cliff Albright, a veteran progressive organizer and a co-founder of Black
Voters Matter, said Democrats had time to get back on track. Black voters, he
said, are responding to the same fears about economic and global uncertainty
that many Americans are confronting.
“We’re a
year out from the election,” Mr. Albright said. “If you ask the very same
people the same question a year from now, when the choice is very clear, the
same 22 percent might have a very different answer.”
He added:
“Is there work to be done? Yes. But is the sky falling? No.”
Black
voters have long powered Democratic presidential victories. Their support in
South Carolina in 2020 set Mr. Biden on the path to becoming the nominee.
During the general election, Black voters were again crucial to his victory.
Biden
campaign officials now say they recognize they have work to do with Black
voters, and they and their allies have begun multimillion-dollar engagement
campaigns targeting them.
Last month,
the Biden campaign started an organizing program in Black neighborhoods in
Milwaukee. The campaign has dispatched top surrogates to hold events aimed at
Black voters and has bought advertising on Black radio programs that promotes
the “real difference for Black America” his policies have made. “President
Biden is getting it done,” a narrator says. “For us. And that’s the facts.”
Quentin
Fulks, the deputy campaign manager for Mr. Biden, said, “We know we have to get
to work and we have to communicate with these voters and we have to do it
earlier than ever before.”
In
interviews, Black voters said they had seen little progress from the Biden
administration on some of their top priorities, including student loan debt
relief, affordable housing and accountability for the police.
Some
worried that Mr. Biden was more focused on foreign policy than on domestic
issues like inflation. In the Times/Siena poll, 80 percent of Black voters
rated the economy as “only fair” or “poor.”
A few said
that their openness to supporting Mr. Trump, despite his offensive comments
about Black communities and the 91 felony charges he faces in several criminal
cases, reflected their disaffection with Mr. Biden and his party more than any
real affinity for the former president.
Keyon
Reynolds-Martin, a father of one in Milwaukee, praised what he saw as Mr.
Trump’s prioritizing of the economy and domestic policy, recalling the stimulus
checks he received during the pandemic. Mr. Trump initially did not support the
relief checks, which were spearheaded by Democrats. He later affixed his
signature to them, representing the first time a president’s name had appeared
on an Internal Revenue Service disbursement.
Mr.
Reynolds-Martin, 25, said he planned to vote for Mr. Trump next fall, when he
casts his first ballot ever.
Of Mr.
Biden, he said, “He’s not giving money to help the United States, but he’s
giving money to other countries,” adding, “At least Donald Trump was trying to
help the United States.”
Talitha
McLaren, 45, a home health aide in Philadelphia, said she was undecided about
whether to vote in 2024.
She worries
about a total erosion of democracy under a second Trump administration, but she
is also frustrated with Mr. Biden and his party for failing to tackle rising
costs that have not kept pace with her income and for not providing help with
her student loan debt. On Tuesday, she plans to vote for the Democrat running
for mayor of her hometown.
“Don’t get
me wrong, I’m going to support the Democrats,” she said. “But they haven’t won
me over yet on what they’re trying to do for the country. Because what they’re
doing now ain’t working.”
Alyce
McFadden and Ruth Igielnik contributed reporting.
Maya King
is a politics reporter covering the Southeast, based in Atlanta. She covers
campaigns, elections and movements in the American South, as well as national
trends relating to Black voters and young people. More about Maya King
Lisa Lerer
is a national political reporter for The Times, based in New York. She has
covered American politics for nearly two decades. More about Lisa Lerer
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