President Biden appears to be in serious trouble with black voters ahead of the 2024 election, and black lawmakers and organizers are starting to panic.
"What I'm hearing in my district is how 'Bidenomics' hasn't really hit them in the pocket," New York representative Jamaal Bowman told National Review earlier this week on the steps of the U.S. Capitol. "I need him in the barbershops. I need him on the basketball courts. I need him talking to the hip-hop community. I need him talking to the sports and athletics community to really get at what is troubling black men."
Polling suggests Bowman is right to be concerned. Just 50 percent of black adults said they approve of Biden in a national AP-NORC poll last month — a 36-point drop from July 2021. An October Siena College/ New York Times poll found that 22 percent of black voters surveyed in six competitive presidential battlegrounds say they will vote for Trump over Biden in 2024, a stunning polling shift from a reliably Democratic coalition that helped Biden win the White House in 2020. That same survey found Trump's numbers were even higher among black men.
In the 40 years he's spent in political activism, National Black Farmers Association president John Boyd Jr. says the Biden administration has done worse than any other administration in his lifetime in opening its doors to black voters. That lack of outreach, Boyd warns, may come back to bite him in November.
"I'm at the head of this movement here and there hasn't been a meeting, and I've been requesting a meeting for two years," said Boyd, whose organization has 130,000 members. "In fact, the last time I spoke to him, the president was the one who said we were going to meet to see what he can do. And then, crickets."
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