Black men reacted to the Harris campaign struggling with Black men in the polls at a rally held at Huntington Place by former President Donald Trump in Detroit, Michigan.
Black men, who attended a rally for by former President Trump in Detroit, Michigan, shared why they think Vice President Kamala Harris is struggling in the polls.
“I feel like her message is disingenuous,” Bryan, a Westland, Michigan native told Fox News Digital. He added that she appeared to be “trying to pander to Black people.”
“She has a lot of issues underneath her administration. Just be honest about it. Black men aren’t a monolith. We vote based on policies, too. We don’t [vote] based on identity. And when she starts to realize that and not trying to play our identity up so much, she might do better,” he said.
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Bryan joined thousands of Michiganders at Huntington Place on Friday for a rally held by the Trump campaign where he featured guest speakers Rep. Byron Donalds, R-Fla., and senate hopeful Mike Rogers.
Ricky, a resident in Redford, Michigan, said that a lot of Harris’ “policies don’t make sense” and that Democrats assume that Black men are “all stupid.”
The automobile worker who wore a shirt with the United Auto Workers logo on it, said her polices “just don’t add up” along with their views on immigration not making sense.
While the Harris campaign struggles with Black men in the polls, Trump is making gains with the Democratic Party’s most reliable supporters.
According to a New York Times/Siena College poll released last week, Harris’ support among Black men has dropped even more significantly, according to the report: 70% said they would vote for Harris in November, down from Biden’s 85% in 2020.
Additionally, an NAACP survey found that one in four Black men under 50 said they would support Trump in 2024.
While Harris has made numerous attempts to earn the support from men and Black America, notable Black male media figures like radio host Charlamagne Tha God to comedic actor Eddie Griffin have warned that it may not work and that Trump himself has a unique appeal to Black men.
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Marcus, another employee in the automobile industry, pushed back on the narrative that Black men are turning away from Harris.
“I don’t think she’s struggling,” he said. “She’s not. That’s what they want you to think she is. It’s a whole lot of Black men voting for Kamala.”