Far-left media and Democratic Party officials were none too pleased that President-elect Donald Trump won an astonishing percentage of the black and Hispanic vote against Vice President Kamala Harris yesterday, especially the male vote. But now it's attacking those votes. This is the same group of hate speechers that was once limited to Trump and other white Republicans.
We are supposed to believe that men are racist and sexist because they didn't vote for Kamala Harris. Her defeat is a victory for deep-rooted racism and misogyny. Hispanics hate black people. Neither group wants a female leader.
Or so we should believe, listening to mourners on MSNBC and elsewhere.
So Trump, who appealed to economic and other interests and vowed to improve their fortunes by lowering the prices of consumer goods, could not have won.
The only explanation for his victory is negative influence.
Scarborough's rants and rave reviews
The number of black and Hispanic President Trumps is certainly noteworthy.
NBC News, which polled voters in 10 key states, said Trump's approval rating among black voters in Wisconsin was about 21 percent, compared to 77 percent for Harris. ” said Newsweek.
This is an increase from 2020, when Trump won just 8% of Black voters in the Badger State. …
Harris, in particular, has struggled to attract black male voters, a trend confirmed by NBC exit polls, with 78 percent of black men nationally reporting support for Harris. are. This marks a notable decline from 2020, when an estimated 90% of Black men voted for Joe Biden.
Alvin Tillery, founder of the Black Equality Alliance and co-founder of the 2040 Strategy Group, told Barron's that the fact that Harris is underperforming among black voters is not surprising. spoke.
When it comes to Hispanic voters, Harris, who today asked President Trump to concede the race, failed there as well. She received 53 percent support among the group. Biden won 59% in 2020.
Exit polls showed Trump's approval rating among Hispanics was 45%, up from 38% four years ago, Newsweek reported.
Harris's decline in vote share among Latinos was partly due to the influence of men, with 54% of Latino men supporting Trump in this election, up from 36% in 2020.
The truth puts Joe Scarborough on edge…not that he's ever been on the trip before.
The former Republican congressman who spoke with racist Democratic congressman Al Sharpton on Morning Joe attacked blacks and Hispanics who voted for Trump with both hands.
“Democrats need to mature, they need to be honest, and they need to say, 'Yes, misogyny exists, but it's not just misogyny from white men.'”
Rather, he continued:
It's the misogyny of Hispanic men. That's misogyny from black men…they don't want women in charge. It may be a racial issue with Hispanics. They don't want black women. …(I think) it's time for Democrats to say OK. …Many Hispanic voters have a problem with black candidates.
Sharpton nodded in agreement.
“And other Hispanic people,” he said. “Some people don't like each other. And some of the most misogynistic things I've heard on this voting tour have been from black men. I mean misogynistic things. You are absolutely right.”
The men agreed that Democrats need to have an “honest conversation” on the issue.
Williams: The “sibling strategy'' worked
Far-left analyst Juan Williams began ranting on Fox News about the largely peaceful protests that took place at the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021.
Williams can't understand how the American people voted Trump into the White House after he incited an “insurrection.”
“Half the country is now going to say, Juan, 'That doesn't concern me.' I care about my economy. I care about immigration,” he said on FOX. said talk show host Bret Baier.
“That's what makes us different,” Williams said. “I'm not sold on the idea that, 'Oh, it was the price of eggs.'” I fear that it was, “Oh, I'm not going to vote for this woman.” Otherwise, I won’t vote for this black woman,” he complained. “The fraternal strategy largely worked,” especially “along white male lines.”
But, he added, “the fraternity strategy also had some impact in getting Latinos and black men to participate and get a higher percentage.”
Black people think Harris and Biden are “prioritizing immigrants over us,” Williams winced.
“I think it's possible,” he said. “I don’t know that for a fact.”
And returned Trump's evil “bro strategy,” which is completely different from Harris' “cis strategy” to win women's votes.
“I think there are racial tensions, and people may feel that, too,” Williams said.
Obviously, these tensions can be exploited, or they can be exacerbated to the point of political gain. Do you think that's why he won?
No, I think the reason he won was because of…his “brother strategy” and the white male turnout and white discontent politics that he has had so much success with in this country.
Not so, says Republican consultant Karl Rove.
“I think black men have some kind of bias because they vote for white candidates who say, 'I want to make sure everyone has the opportunity to succeed in this great economy, and I want you to be more successful.' “I think it's very strange to suggest that you're wealthy, and I'll do things that will help you live a better life,” he replied.
It's an appeal to their best instincts. He didn't say vote for me because I'm not a woman. Don't vote for me because I'm white. And claiming that black men are somehow racist just because they supported white people is a step too far, Juan.
The far-left Harris Media and Information Department, with the help of former President Barack Hussein Obama and others, promoted the theory that only misogynists would not vote for Harris.
“I think in some quarters, you're just not sold on the idea of having a woman as president, and you're coming up with other alternatives, other reasons,” he said at a Harris event in October. ” he said. .
“Kamala Harris has a problem with men. Will misogyny hurt her election?” was the headline of an article in the far-left Guardian newspaper. “Sexism could tip the vote in favor of Donald Trump.”
Or, as Rove said, black and Hispanic men may simply have thought Trump was a better candidate.