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Saturday November 23, 2024

Black voters grapple with US electoral power — and the temptation of Trump

By News Desk
October 30, 2024
Yoshunda Jones, a local activist who protested the elimination of Sunday voting, holds up a sign in Spalding County, Georgia, US, October 12, 2021. — Reuters
Yoshunda Jones, a local activist who protested the elimination of Sunday voting, holds up a sign in Spalding County, Georgia, US, October 12, 2021. — Reuters

ATLANTA, Georgia: At a barbershop in the suburbs of Georgia’s capital, a debate has sparked over a trim.Fifty-four-year-old owner Goody does not believe Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump can make meaningful inroads with Black voters like himself, in the final stretch before the United States’ presidential election on November 5, despite what recent polls may show.

His regular customer, 53-year-old Gardy Leandre, a private tax director who moved to the US from Haiti while in high school, disagrees.“I’m telling you as a taxman, I know he did great things by bringing the economy back,” he said of Trump’s time in office, which ended after he lost to President Joe Biden in 2020.

Goody pushed back, reminding his old customer of the many controversies surrounding Trump, both during his presidency and since.What about Trump’s comments on Haitian immigrants, falsely suggesting they eat pets? Leandre tells him Haiti would be better off under Trump, and that he wouldn’t actually get rid of immigrants who work.What about Trump’s response to the disastrous Hurricane Maria that hit Puerto Rico in 2017, when he threw paper towels at a crowd of people in need? Leandre pivots and talks about support for small business owners.

What about the January 6, 2021 riot at the US Capitol, when Trump supporters overran the building as politicians inside ratified Biden’s win?“I’m not going to give him a pass on that,” Leandre said. “But at the end of the day, if I want my 401(k) (retirement savings) to go up, if I want to put food on my table for my kids, I gotta go for Trump.”

Goody grows exasperated. What about Trump’s response to the Covid-19 pandemic? What about the Muslim ban?“I understand all the nastiness about Trump, trust me,” Leandre finally said. “But there’s an election Trump, and there’s President Trump.”

“Man, you were in New York for the Central Park Five,” he told Leandre, referring to Trump’s racist campaign against a group of young Black and Hispanic men wrongfully convicted of a brutal New York City rape in 1989.