By Rich Lowry
Wednesday,
October 23, 2024
I
was in a coffee shop recently and accidentally overheard, as happens, some nice
older liberal ladies talking politics.
They
discussed who they think is going to win the presidential race, and even
dropped a reference to Project 2025. Then, one of them said something about black men not
supporting Kamala Harris, and another asked, “Do they really hate women that
much?”
I’m
guessing if you had told any of these white ladies not too long ago that they’d
be having a conversation disparaging black men in public that they would have
been very surprised. But such is the dynamic in an election where — if current
trends hold — a crucial contingent of black men could turn their back on
progressivism and become the subject of stinging postelection recriminations.
Back
in the George W. Bush years, the question raised by the Thomas Frank book What’s
the Matter with Kansas? was all the rage. If Donald Trump over-performs
with black guys and wins the election two weeks from now, the question is going
to be, “What’s the Matter with Black Males?”
As
a piece in the Nation put it, “More and more, anxious Democrats are prone to
speak and act as if Black men who do not support the Democratic party are
guilty of an act of racial betrayal.”
This
is the tack Barack Obama has adopted. Out on the campaign trail a couple of
weeks ago, he famously castigated black men. He observed that “we have not yet
seen the same kinds of energy and turnout in all quarters of our neighborhoods
and communities as we saw when I was running” and noted the shortfall “seems to
be more pronounced with the brothers.”
“Part
of it makes me think — and I’m speaking to men directly — part of it makes me
think that, well, you just aren’t feeling the idea of having a woman as
president, and you’re coming up with other alternatives and other reasons for
that,” Obama said.
Coming
up with
reasons for that? Maybe they simply have reasons.
An
opinion piece in the Philadelphia Inquirer by a black-radio host named Solomon Jones
intones, “Black men can’t afford to spend our limited time and meager resources
in an effort to hold back Black women. By doing so, we hold ourselves back, and
we weaken our entire community,” weakening “our ability to coalesce
politically” and increasing “Trump’s chances of winning the presidency.”
Jones
compares the effort to use Obama’s remarks against Harris to the Swift Boat
Veterans for Truth campaign against John Kerry in 2004.
“Twenty
years later,” he maintains, “it doesn’t take millions of dollars to get a group
to speak out against its own. All you need is a few true believers and a bevy
of fake accounts on social media.”
The
assertion that Harris should be considered “one of their own” by black men
disinclined to support her is the worst sort of racialism. These men may not be
college grads, may not be affluent, may not be woke, may not be the children of
immigrants, and may not be as enamored of Joe Biden and his record in office as
she professes to be.
Harris
probably reminds some of them of the scold who works in HR, knows all the
pronouns, and is a clear and present danger to fire them.
Why
should they feel obligated to show up for her?
In
a surprisingly more nuanced, if still left-wing, take, Charles Blow of the New York Times dissents in part from Obama’s simplistic
focus on outright sexism.
“There
is a feeling,” he writes, “that liberalism in general, and the Democratic Party
in particular, has moved away from the party of hard hats to the party of safe
spaces, that it has been feminized and that Trump’s bravado and rampant sexism,
no matter how toxic, are at least forms of masculinity.”
If
this is indeed the case, the fault is with the party, not the guys who are
disturbed by the changing nature of the party.
For
all the focus on culture, though, the economy looms large. In a New York Times/Siena poll, a clear plurality of
black men — 23 percent — say the economy is the most important issue to them.
(Black women say abortion is most important, followed by the economy.) About
three-quarters of black voters consider economic conditions only fair or poor,
and a quarter of black men expect Trump to help them more personally.
The
Thomas Frank argument in his book about Kansas was that Republicans had used
cultural issues to distract voters from their allegedly harmful economic
policies. If Harris underperforms among black men, the opposite will probably
be the case; they won’t have allowed a cultural appeal — basically to racial
solidarity and ancestral partisan loyalty — to trump their bread-and-butter
concerns.
Who
knows whether this will come to pass or not? Trump’s gains among Latinos seem
more solid, and the polling underestimated Democratic support among black
voters in both 2020 and 2022,
as Giancarlo Sopo has pointed out.
One
might think it would be a good thing if the electorate becomes a little more
divided along class lines and a little less along racial lines, and if, at a
time of unthinking partisanship, a group of voters traditionally taken for
granted by one of the parties shows some stubborn independence.
But
this won’t be the reaction of many Democrats, who will portray these voters as
easily misled tools of the patriarchy who have trampled on all that is good and
true.
The
nice white ladies at the coffee shop will be highly displeased.
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