Enthusiasm wanes among Black voters who powered Biden's 2020 Georgia win
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[March 11, 2024]
By Kat Stafford and Jayla Whitfield-Anderson
ATLANTA (Reuters) - Much has changed since Wanda Mosley helped galvanize
thousands of Black voters across the battleground state of Georgia to
help clinch the 2020 general election for U.S. President Joe Biden.
Excited to head to the polls then, some Black voters now feel
disillusioned by a surge in the cost of living and racial justice
priorities they feel Biden's Democrats have yet to deliver on as
promised, polls and interviews show.
"They want to understand that their issues are being heard, that their
humanity is being acknowledged," said Mosley, national director of Black
Voters Matter, a nonprofit group that works to increase turnout and
registration among Black voters.
Massive voter drives backed by former Georgia gubernatorial candidate
Stacey Abrams and other Black organizers delivered the state for Biden
in 2020, and the Senate for Democrats.
But four years later, Biden's strength among Black voters nationwide is
less certain, as they question Democrats' commitment to voting rights,
tackling white supremacy and other issues dear to them. A Pew Research
Center poll in January found Black Americans are divided over Biden's
performance in office - about 49% of Black adults disapproved of it,
while 48% approved.
Both Biden and his rival, Republican candidate Donald Trump, visited
Georgia on Saturday in an effort to sway voters ahead of Tuesday's
primaries. Results there could serve as an early bellwether of the tough
road ahead for Biden before November's general election to reach Black
voters, who historically are the most loyal voting bloc of the
Democratic Party. According to Pew, 92% of Black voters backed Biden in
2020.
Opinion polls show the Nov. 5 election shaping up to be a close match
between Biden and Trump, making turnout among Black Americans - who
comprise sizable populations in key battleground states like Georgia,
Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania - a crucial aspect of Biden's path
to victory.
But there are some early warning signs. Nearly a dozen voters, rights
advocates and civil rights leaders interviewed by Reuters said Biden’s
campaign has a messaging disconnect on the ground in Black communities
across the nation, including Georgia, where 33% of the population is
Black.
They say some voters feel enough hasn't been done for them, while others
are unaware of Biden's actions that directly benefited Black Americans
like expanding access to healthcare coverage, economic gains that led to
record low Black unemployment rates and the Child Tax Credit expansion,
which helped cut childhood poverty in half in 2021.
Biden appeared on civil rights leader Reverend Al Sharpton’s syndicated
radio show in January, touting several policies, including federal
contracting guidelines and lead pipe removal, aimed at improving access
to contracting opportunities for Black businesses and addressing decades
of low or reduced infrastructure investment in areas with large Black
populations.
After the call, Sharpton said his phone lines were flooded with callers
who said it was the first time they heard of those actions. Sharpton
said he has met with Biden’s team about two or three times since last
March and his message to them is simple - they need to deepen their ties
to Black communities.
"I'm trying to tell them this is the feedback I'm getting and you need
to fight aggressively on it,” Sharpton told Reuters. “This campaign is
gonna be won in between the West Coast and the East Coast. Those people,
the ones that I talk to on the radio every day, are not getting this
information.”
HEALTHCARE
Across Georgia, a myriad of issues are top of mind for Black voters.
Access to healthcare is high on the list: Georgia has some of the worst
health outcomes for Black Americans in the nation - it is among a
handful of states with the highest Black maternal and infant mortality
rates in the country.
Georgia voters are also frustrated by a lack of progress on eliminating
roadblocks for Black Americans to vote and blocking efforts to redraw
electoral maps that makes it harder for their vote to count, according
to voting rights campaigners.
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U.S. President Joe Biden speaks during a campaign event at Pullman
Yards in Atlanta, Georgia, U.S. March 9, 2024. REUTERS/Evelyn
Hockstein
Democrats' efforts on the issue - including a comprehensive voting
rights act to beef up legal protections against discriminatory
voting practices - have largely been blocked or limited by
Republicans in Congress during Biden's term.
"Folks are still frustrated by that," Mosley said. "They should have
done what was necessary ... whatever it would take to protect our
voting rights."
The Biden campaign said Black voters are a core constituency that
the president is focused on winning through an advertising campaign
and outreach programs to connect with voters. In Georgia, the
campaign is working with local Black leaders and highlighting the
president's actions directly to voters, said Jonae Wartel, senior
adviser for the Biden campaign in Georgia.
"At the heart of the work of engaging Black voters in this election
is making sure that they know what the president has done," Wartel
told Reuters by phone.
Strategists say it’s unlikely Republicans will receive a significant
share of votes from Black Americans. But the possibility that enough
voters could switch to the Republican side or stay home altogether
could influence the election's outcome. Republicans see the decline
in enthusiasm for Democrats as an opportunity to grow support among
Black voters.
“A lot of them are not quite sure that Biden is the answer,” said
Georgia Black Republican Council Chairman Camilla Moore. “What we're
seeing in the Black community is a little bit more of a willingness
in terms of Republicans being an option.”
Trump's history of inflammatory rhetoric and comments that have been
broadly denounced as racist - including reportedly calling
immigrants from Africa and Haiti as coming from "shithole" countries
- has alienated many Black voters over the years. Last month, he
said Black voters were more drawn to him after his multiple
indictments on criminal charges, drawing sharp rebukes from civil
rights advocates and others.
WHITE SUPREMACY
Polls show Black voters also remain deeply alarmed by a rise in
white supremacy and white nationalism over the past decade, a threat
highlighted by the 2022 mass shooting by a white supremacist who
killed 10 Black people at a Buffalo, New York, grocery store.
Another killed three Black shoppers at a Dollar General store in
Jacksonville, Florida, last year.
“People are still deeply unsettled by racism and the way that racism
continues to show up and be so present for them,” said Adrienne
Shropshire, executive director of BlackPAC, a left-leaning political
action committee focused on mobilizing Black voters.
To be sure, some campaigners on the ground say the situation is far
from dire for Biden. Nsé Ufot, former chief executive of the New
Georgia Project, a nonpartisan effort to register voters that was
instrumental in helping Democrats win the state in 2020, said that
while Biden's campaign has more work to do, robust outreach
targeting Black voters is working.
"From the Biden campaign’s perspective that there's already sort of
an early indication of how important this state is," Ufot said. "I
think they're doing fine.”
Longtime Georgia resident Karl Booker is among those who plan to
vote for Biden.
"I think the Black vote is going to be pretty powerful to move Biden
over the edge again,” said Booker, owner of the Off The Hook
Barbershop in Atlanta. "People always talk about voting for the
lesser of two evils. Right now, I feel like Biden is definitely the
person to move the country forward for another four years."
(Reporting by Kat Stafford in Detroit and Jayla Whitfield-Anderson
in Atlanta, Additional reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt, editing by
Deepa Babington)
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