海角大神

Biden鈥檚 urgent task: Reengaging Black voters

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Kevin Lamarque/Reuters
U.S. President Joe Biden listens to an anthem during a campaign event at the Mother Emanuel AME Church, the site of a 2015 mass shooting, in Charleston, South Carolina, Jan. 8, 2024.

It鈥檚 no exaggeration to say that Black voters put President Joe Biden in the White House.聽

After disappointing fourth- and fifth-place finishes in Iowa and New Hampshire, Mr. Biden鈥檚 2020 presidential bid was nearly moribund. But then a blowout win in South Carolina 鈥 where 聽of Democratic primary voters are Black 鈥 put him on a fast track to his party鈥檚 nomination. Nine months later, he won the general election against former President Donald Trump with聽聽of the Black vote.聽Elected alongside him was the United States鈥 first Black vice president, Kamala Harris.聽

鈥淚 stand here today as your president because of you,鈥 Mr. Biden said Monday, speaking at the historic Mother Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, where a white supremacist killed nine people in 2015. 鈥淎nd I鈥檝e done my best to honor your trust.鈥

Why We Wrote This

Black voters, like many Americans, show only tepid support for President Joe Biden. But for the Democratic Party, the concern runs deeper: What if a segment of voters it has long counted on is growing less attached to the party overall?

Lately, however, the relationship has been showing some cracks. In a November聽,聽fewer than two-thirds of Black voters said they planned to support Mr. Biden in this year鈥檚 presidential election, with 20% saying they planned to vote for someone other than him or former President Trump. That followed an October 聽of battleground states that showed Mr. Trump garnering 22% of the Black vote, a massive leap from the 8% he won three years ago 鈥 and, if those numbers wind up being even somewhat accurate, a potential political earthquake for Democrats.聽

Several factors may be driving this apparent shift. Polls show that many Democrats have concerns about Mr. Biden鈥檚 age and ability to serve another term. His candidacy has also been weighed down by the impact of inflation and various foreign conflagrations. The greater worry for Democrats, however, is that the problem may not be specific to Mr. Biden. It may reflect a growing disenchantment among Black voters with the party itself, fueled by a sense that years of partisan loyalty haven鈥檛 resulted in tangibly better outcomes.聽聽

Story Hinckley/海角大神
Stacey Mars, chair of the Greenville County Democratic Black Caucus, says local county parties could step up their messaging on President Biden's accomplishments for Black voters.

鈥淸For] Black voters who showed up in 2020, during the middle of a pandemic and the George Floyd protests, there was this feeling that all we had to do was show up and vote for Joe Biden,鈥 says Joel Payne, a Democratic strategist and former director of Hillary Clinton鈥檚 African American paid media in 2016. 鈥淵ou have all of these implied promises that people thought they were getting when they voted against Trump and for the Democrat. And in some parts of the Black voter coalition, they think they are not getting what was promised.鈥

Covering Campaign 2024

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What goes into writing about a handful of candidates鈥 monthslong presidential runs? Working tactically to gain the up-close access that brings insights into not only the nuances of the behavior and messaging, but also the public response. That鈥檚 the heart of the story. Guest host Gail Chaddock, a veteran of the game, chats with a Monitor rising star, politics writer Story Hinckley, just ahead of primary season 2024.

The president鈥檚 trip to South Carolina on Monday was his second major campaign speech of the new year, as he attempts to highlight what he sees as the high stakes of the upcoming presidential election. But it also underscored the political challenge he faces. Mr. Biden鈥檚 speech was interrupted at one point by protesters calling for a cease-fire in Gaza 鈥 an issue that has sharply divided the Democratic coalition.

A lack of excitement

Of course, Mr. Biden still retains the vast share of Black voters鈥 support. And 10 months out from Election Day, it鈥檚 hard for polling to accurately simulate the 鈥渇orced choice鈥 that voters will actually face, says Mr. Payne. In a Biden-Trump rematch, the Democratic strategist contends, there is 鈥渘o realistic scenario鈥 in which Mr. Trump would ever win 22% of Black voters.聽

Still, in a campaign expected to be tight, even a slight shift toward the GOP 鈥 or a decision by some Black voters to simply stay home 鈥 would matter. In 2016, Mrs. Clinton lost Michigan and Wisconsin, and subsequently the presidency, because turnout among Black voters there Mr. Trump鈥檚 surging support among the white working class.

That challenge would be compounded if Mr. Trump鈥檚 working-class support were now to include more voters of color. Indeed, as education polarization continues to accelerate, one result may be political parties that are less racially polarized, with more college-educated white voters backing Democrats, and Black voters who don鈥檛 hold college degrees increasingly finding themselves at home in the GOP.

In Greenville, South Carolina鈥檚 most-populated county, residents complain about the rising cost of everything from groceries to housing. Mr. Biden comes across as uninspiring and old, say workers at Mario鈥檚 Auto Detailing across the street from the city of Greenville鈥檚 Unity Park, but that鈥檚 not the most frustrating part. It just doesn鈥檛 feel like he鈥檚 made things any better, says one man shining a sedan鈥檚 rims who voted for Mr. Biden in 2020 but doesn鈥檛 plan to vote this year.聽

鈥淚s there a lot of excitement this time around to vote for Biden? The answer is no,鈥 says Pastor Curtis Johnson of Greenville鈥檚 Valley Brook Outreach Baptist Church.

Story Hinckley/海角大神
Pastor Curtis Johnson is one of half a dozen pastors from the Greenville, South Carolina, area who penned a letter in November endorsing a Republican candidate for City Council over the Democratic incumbent 鈥 a shock to many in their Black, deeply Democratic communities.

He predicts many of his parishioners will vote for Mr. Biden in 2024 if the election is a Biden-Trump rematch, but he says that doesn鈥檛 mean there aren鈥檛 serious frustrations with the Democratic Party. He lists some of the main concerns:聽鈥淲e need to create a living wage with the out-of-control cost-of-living expenses. Housing. The out-of-control immigration system is impacting a lot of the inner cities. It still feels like the Voting Rights Act isn鈥檛 permanent.

鈥淚t鈥檚 important that we hold whoever gets our vote accountable and articulate the concerns that are still there,鈥 he adds.

Frustration in Greenville

Last fall, this growing frustration with the Democratic Party led Mr. Johnson to try a new tack. He and five other Black pastors from the Greenville area penned a letter endorsing a Republican candidate for City Council over the Democratic incumbent.聽

鈥淭hose of us who have lived through the 1950s, 鈥60s, 鈥70s and 鈥80s recall a time when we had a potent, trustworthy and loyal ally in the Democratic Party and much was accomplished then, but things are different now,鈥 they wrote. 鈥淥ur young people, who do not see us gaining new ground and even losing the ground we had gained, see no true value in blind loyalty. ... They have recognized a truth that we should not ignore: That our community gains nothing from being a reliable tool of one political party.鈥澛

The letter caused an immediate stir, admits Mr. Johnson, and it soon took on 鈥渁 life of its own.鈥 National media outlets called, asking the men if they planned to vote for former President Trump. He tried to explain that they weren鈥檛 repudiating all Democrats, just a local incumbent (who went on to win reelection). But he understands why it generated such an intense reaction.聽

鈥淭he letter spoke to a more national concern,鈥 says Mr. Johnson. 鈥淭here are some frustrations across the country with the Democratic platform.鈥澛

To combat this, local Democratic parties need to 鈥渟tep up鈥 and educate voters about what the Biden administration has accomplished, says Stacey Mars, chair of the Greenville County Democratic Black Caucus. They need to remind older Black adults that the Biden administration聽 for seniors on Medicare at $35, and remind young Black voters about the administration鈥檚 efforts to block junk fees on sites like Ticketmaster.聽

Story Hinckley/海角大神
鈥淭here鈥檚 no policies that are geared to us,鈥 says Kwadjo Campbell, a teacher and political strategist in Greenville, saying Black voters are frustrated with the Democratic Party nationally as well as in South Carolina.

鈥淚t鈥檚 the messaging,鈥 agrees Kwadjo Campbell, a teacher and Democratic operative in Greenville. 鈥淧eople are wondering, 鈥榃hat has Biden done for me?鈥 Well, spend the money to tell them.鈥 Last month, Mr. Campbell was as the state executive committeeman for the Greenville Democratic Party after he served as a media contact for the Greenville pastors who endorsed the Republican. He says the party should take the entire episode as a wake-up call.聽

鈥淏iden is just an easy scapegoat,鈥 he says. 鈥淟ocally, statewide, and nationally, Democrats have a Black voter problem.鈥澛

Still, Mr. Biden has a history of pulling off improbable wins, note other Democrats. Just look at South Carolina in 2020, when his come-from-behind win made the seemingly impossible happen.聽

This year Mr. Biden has tapped South Carolina as the site for the Democrats鈥 first primary contest, in a bid to give nonwhite voters a greater say in the nominating process.

Black voters will ultimately 鈥渃ome home鈥 to Mr. Biden when faced with the choice between him and Mr. Trump or a third-party candidate, predicts Celinda Lake, a Democratic pollster who worked for the Biden campaign in 2020. The Biden campaign is employing the same Black voter turnout efforts, through social media and door-knocking, that it used in 2020, she says. But she acknowledges that she is 鈥渃oncerned鈥 by the polling.

鈥淲e need African American voters to be very enthusiastic and solidified,鈥 says Ms. Lake.聽

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