SELECT LANGUAGE BELOW

Donald Trump On Pace To Win More Black Votes Than Any Republican In History

The Pro-Trump News homepage sees 60 new headlines every 24 hours. Click here to take a look.

Mainstream media slander is failing.

A new report from Newsweek discusses the possibility that Donald Trump will win more black votes than any Republican in history.

Newsweek magazine reported:

Donald Trump may win more black votes in the upcoming presidential election than any other Republican presidential candidate in history.

As the country enters an election year, the former president and Republican front-runner is winning between 14% and 30% of the black vote, according to national and battleground state polls reviewed by Bloomberg.

This far exceeds the 8% of black votes that Pew Research Center said Republicans won in the 2020 presidential election, and more than any previous Republican candidate.

According to Politico, the NAACP estimates that 5 million African Americans voted in the 1960 presidential election, when Richard Nixon won 32% of the black vote. Since then, the black population has increased from about 10.83 percent or 19,418,190 people to 13.6 percent or 46,936,733 people of the total population, according to an analysis of census data.

A poll conducted in December found that Joe Biden is losing support among black voters.

USA Today reported:

President Joe Biden won the support of 92% of Black voters in the 2020 presidential election, but a new survey suggests that support may shrink ahead of the 2024 White House election.

If the presidential election were held today, 17% of black voters said they would vote for former President Donald Trump, according to a survey released Tuesday by GenForward. Meanwhile, 20% of Black voters surveyed said they would vote for someone other than Trump or Biden, and 63% of voters said they would support Biden.

Black voters are also divided on whether Biden should run for president, with 50% saying he “definitely” or “probably” should seek re-election, and 49 saying he “definitely” or “probably” should seek re-election. He said he “probably” shouldn't run.

The survey was conducted among 3,448 voters from November 8th to 20th, and had a margin of error of ±3 percentage points. Politico was first to report.

advertisement

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Reddit
Telegram
WhatsApp

Related News