The Atlantic

Why Black Voters Stick With Democrats

Trump has been making overtures to African Americans, but Republicans won’t win significant black support as long as current patterns of segregation persist.
Source: Evan Vucci / AP

Especially in the half century since Lyndon Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act, voting for Democrats has become a political norm among African Americans—a norm that individuals in black social spaces actively push one another to follow. But every so often, the Republican Party tries to break African Americans’ near-monolithic support for the opposite side. In the past two weeks, Donald Trump, whose approval rating among black voters is particularly low, has made a conspicuous push for their backing.

During the Super Bowl, the Trump campaign aired an featuring a 64-year-old black woman whose prison sentence the president commuted in 2018. In his State of the Union speech, he reminded viewers of his support for criminal-justice reforms and claimed low unemployment rates for black workers as one of his administration’s economic successes. His included African Americans from all walks of life—including

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