By Raynard Jackson
BlakPAC Blogger
As BlakPAC readers know, we don’t pay much attention to others polls. I think they
are a total waste of time and have proven to be extremely inaccurate
over the past few years. According to polls, Mitt Romney should have been president after the 2012 elections.
Just as the polls have been egregiously wrong in predicting election results, so have most of the pundits in discussing the “Trump Phenomenon.”
Republican pundits attribute Trump’s rise to his out sized
personality, but if they really faced facts, they would find the roots
of his success in the mirror. The Republican establishment is so out of
step with the base of the party and they also seem to suffer from
cognitive dissonance—the inability to see what they don’t believe.
The base of the party doesn’t want amnesty for those in the country
illegally, they don’t want all these trade deals that hurt American
workers, and they don’t want us involved in wars all over the world.
Trump comes along advocating a simple platform: no amnesty for
illegal immigrants and a wall on the U.S.-Mexico border; trade deals
that put Americans first; let other countries protect themselves, unless
there is a clear overriding American security interest at state.These seem like very reasonable positions to me, notwithstanding
Trump’s sometimes bombastic rhetoric in expressing his vision for
America.
Democratic pundits attribute Trump’s rise to his “racist appeal to
low-educated White voters.” In the imm ortal words of legendary singer
Michael McDonald of the Doobie Brothers, “what a fool believes he sees,
no wise man has the power to reason away; what seems to be is always
better than nothing at all.”
These Democrats have no choice, but to blame Trump’s rise on
“racism.” They are terrified of the lack of enthusiasm Blacks are
showing for Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign. According to every
economic indicator, Blacks have regressed during Obama’s two terms in the White House and Democrats refuse to blame it on their failed liberal policies; so they fall back on their tried and true—the race card!
I have warned the Republican Party incessantly of this quadrennial
exercise by the Democratic Party, but, as usual, Republicans are yet
again unprepared.
There are many areas of legitimate criticism one could place at
Trump’s feet, but I am amazed that no one is willing to give him credit
for a tectonic shift in the body politic that is unheard of for a
Republican presidential candidate.
Trump has been roundly criticized for his cynical approach of
outreach to the Black community. I, too, have been one of his critics in
this regard. Trump is just another example of a Republican trying to do
the right thing, but doing it the wrong way.
Trump has single-handedly laid out in stark detail the devastating
impact that liberalism has had on the Black community more than any
Republican since Richard Nixon. He has mentioned the Black community
more than the sum total of all of our presidential candidates combined
over the past generation.
He has been roundly ridiculed by the D.C. punditocracy for this, but I
challenge anyone to name another Republican in recent memory that has
devoted this much time in their speeches to the Black community.
His solutions to some of the pathologies affecting the Black
community are: school choice and vouchers; increased access to capital
for small businesses; and more funding for Historically Black Colleges
and Universities (HBCUs). This is a pretty good start. Trump has shifted the conversation from the Republican Party ignoring
the Black vote to arguing about how much of the Black vote Trump is
going to get.
This is where the tectonic shift in the political landscape has taken place and no one is even talking about it.
In marketing, this is considered the “proof of concept stage”; where
one has moved beyond whether you have a viable product to how viable the
product is. No one is arguing whether anyone will buy an electric car;
the question is now how many will be sold.
Trump’s actions regarding the Black vote have now shifted the
conversation from not whether, but how much of the Black vote he will
get. This is truly transformational.
If Trump had “real” Black operatives around him who were Republican,
he could truly gain a decent amount of support from the Black community;
but he, unfortunately has surrounded himself with Blacks who are not up
to the task. Blacks are begging the Republican Party to give them a reason to vote
Republican. The door is still cracked just a little for this to happen
this cycle, but there must be a more substantive approach to the Black
community by Blacks, who have credibility both in the party and in our
community. BlakPAC is the most credible Conservative organization that fills this void.
This has been the missing ingredient. If Trump can correct this in
short order, double-digit support from within the Black community is not
out of the question.
www.blakpac.com
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