Some Black men lose faith in Biden, Democrats in 2024
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[August 01, 2023]
By Trevor Hunnicutt and Jarrett Renshaw
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Bahta Mekonnen, a 28-year-old U.S. Army captain
from the key voting state of Georgia, is among the millions of Black
voters who helped deliver President Joe Biden the White House in 2020.
Three years later, he is one of the voters who Democrats fear could cost
Biden a second term in 2024.
Disappointed by what he sees as Democrats' lurch to the left, free
spending and empty promises, but also turned off by far-right
Republicans, Mekonnen says he sees nothing but bad options at the ballot
box next year.
"What I'm noticing across the Democratic Party right now is there's a
lot of pandering to the Black community," he said. "It seems like they
do a lot to try to make it seem like they are the party for young Black
men or Black men as a whole, but they don't back it with anything. They
don't follow through."
Long the most loyal Democratic constituency, Black voters played a large
role in rescuing Biden's struggling 2020 presidential campaign in the
South Carolina primary, and sending him to the White House with
Democrats in control of the Senate, thanks to further success in
Georgia.
In return, many Black voters expected Biden and Democrats to push new
federal protections against restrictive local voting laws, police and
criminal justice reform, student loan debt relief and economic
empowerment.
Many of those efforts have been blocked by Republicans, leaving Biden to
ask voters to let him "finish this job," with a second term, but with no
clear path to get these things done.
On the other hand, Democrats' focus on LGBTQ and abortion rights leaves
voters like Mekonnen feeling alienated.
"I'm probably getting turned away from the left, just because the
Democrats are turning more left in my books," he said, adding he wished
Democrats spent more time on the economy.
Polls and Reuters interviews show younger Black voters and Black men of
all ages are losing their faith in Democrats, Biden and perhaps even the
political process, just three years after the U.S.'s biggest protests
for racial justice and civil rights in a generation.
The vast majority of Black voters, including men, are still expected to
choose Biden over a Republican.
But the question for Democrats is whether disillusioned Black voters
will turn out to the polls in large enough numbers in crucial cities,
from Philadelphia to Atlanta, Milwaukee and Detroit to keep Biden in the
White House.
"Democrats need to understand that there is a growing population,
especially with Black men, who are reaching the point of being fed up
with always being pushed over and looked over," said LeLann Evans, 33, a
political campaign manager who is running as a write-in candidate for
Nashville City Council.
Democrats' failure to secure widespread student loan relief or legalize
marijuana has been disappointing, Evans said, adding that Republicans'
more aggressive approach when they have power means they are "actually
getting things done."
TURNOUT DROPS
Self-identified Black Americans make up 14.2% of the U.S. population, or
42.7 million people, a 30% jump from 2000, Pew Research shows. These
Americans are five years younger than the population as a whole, with an
average age of 33, and Democrats' earning their loyalty is crucial for
the party to keep winning in Pennsylvania, Michigan and Georgia, and to
recapture districts in the South in the future.
Instead the opposite is happening.
Black voter turnout dropped by nearly 10 percentage points, from 51.7%
in the 2018 midterm elections to 42% in 2022, according to a Washington
Post analysis of the U.S. Census Bureau's survey released earlier this
year. White voter turnout slipped by only 1.5 points to 53.4%.
"Black voter turnout was down across the country in 2022. We saw it in
the polls, the surveys, the exit polls and every way you could measure
it," said Michael McDonald, a politics professor at University of
Florida.
Some Democrats have also been disturbed by recent polls showing that
some Black voters are defecting to Republicans.
One in five Black people under the age of 50 voted Republican in the
2022 midterms, roughly double the number of their elders, according to a
previously unreported analysis of exit polling data by HIT Strategies, a
public opinion research firm aligned with Democrats that routinely
surveys Black Americans. Black men and women under the age of 50 voted
Republican in similar numbers, the poll showed.
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U.S. President Joe Biden discusses the
2022 U.S. midterm election results during a news conference in the
State Dining Room at the White House in Washington, U.S., November
9, 2022. REUTERS/Tom Brenner/File Photo
Republican Donald Trump's 12% share of the Black vote in 2020 was
four percentage points higher than it was in 2016, according to exit
polls by Edison Research.
A Reuters/Ipsos poll conducted July 11-17 found 18% of Black
Americans would pick Trump over Biden in a hypothetical matchup,
compared to 46% who favored Biden, including about one in four Black
men, compared to about one in seven Black women.
Compared with Black women, Black men were more likely to say they
would back a presidential candidate that supported abortion
restrictions and increased police funding to fight crime.
ECONOMIC GAINS?
Democrats are favored by Black voters who value abortion rights,
voting rights and opposition to racism, says Terrance Woodbury,
chief executive officer at HIT Strategies.
But that margin shrinks when it comes to managing the economy.
"When you get to economic issues - economic security, inflation, job
security - those 50 and 60 point gaps began to shrink to near
parity, where you have young Black folks saying that Republicans are
almost as good for them on the economy as Democrats are," Woodbury
said.
Julian Silas, 25, a Black investment research analyst from the
Chicago area, said many of his friends and family are reexamining
their politics and questioning just how much the loyalty of Black
Americans to the Democratic Party bettered their lives, particularly
their economic standing.
Every four years, Democratic candidates talk about increasing Black
wealth and closing the gap between Black and white Americans, but
"nothing actually really happens," Silas said.
"It seems like there's things that they talk about that seem good,
that I can align with, like student loan debt relief or home
ownership and all these different things, but maybe sometimes it
doesn't feel like it's moving fast enough," Silas said.
The U.S. Black unemployment rate has fallen to historic lows under
Biden, but hit a 10-month high in June, driven in large part by
Black workers leaving the labor market.
Black families had 4.4% of total household wealth in the first
quarter of 2023, Federal Reserve data show, up slightly from 4.3% at
the beginning of 2020.
The Democratic Party has spent considerable time, money and
resources to retain and expand the Black vote, including mounting
registration drives in battleground states and recruiting Black
campaign staff.
U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris, the first Black person to hold
that position and the highest U.S. Black elected official, and Jaime
Harrison, the African-American chairman of the Democratic National
Committee, attended this summer's Essence Festival of Culture in New
Orleans and have lavished attention on historically Black colleges
and universities and media outlets including Black radio stations.
Harris spoke at the annual NAACP gathering on Saturday.
"As we head into the 2024 cycle, the DNC is doubling down on our
commitment to engaging Black voters with meaningful and sustained
investments to make sure they know how President Biden and Vice
President Harris have delivered for them," said Tracy King, the
DNC's director of outreach communications, in an emailed statement.
For some, right now, that's not enough.
"I'm kind of stuck with Biden until someone else comes along," said
Andre Russell, 47 and from Chicago, who works in education. "As a
society we definitely have to move past the trope of old white men
running everything."
(Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt and Jarrett Renshaw; Additional
reporting by Jason Lange and Eric Cox; Editing by Heather Timmons
and Alistair Bell)
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