A slow shift among Black voters is opening the door for Republicans
Source: Axios · Bias: Center Left
Summary
A generational and structural shift is decoupling Black identity from Democratic Party loyalty, transforming a once-reliable voting bloc into a cohort of "political free agents" that the GOP is uniquely positioned to exploit.Why it matters: Even modest GOP gains — combined with weakening party loyalty — could make a big difference in close elections in a post-Voting Rights Act world. President Trump is making gains with Black voters despite posting racist videos, using racist rhetoric and advancing policies critics say erase slavery history and weaken voting rights.An Axios review of recent data shows breaks in the strong Black support for Democrats going back to John F. Kennedy's 1960 presidential run and Barack Obama's historic 2008 win.Zoom in: Trump is benefiting less from persuasion and more from a changing electorate. It's younger, more diverse and less tied to traditional party loyalties, said Theodore Johnson, a senior adviser at New America."The numbers we're seeing now are higher than they were eight years ago — but Black voters were a different kind of voter coming out of the Obama presidency," Johnson tells Axios."When you detach partisan identity from racial identity, you get more Black voters willing to take a chance on a Republican," he said. "That's not a realignment. It's more political free agents."By the numbers: Republican identification among Black Americans climbed into the mid-to-high teens in recent Gallup data.Trump surged to an average near 20% approval among Black voters in the first quarter of 2025, nearly double his approval at the same point in his first term, according to Gallup.That was driven largely by Black men and those moving toward Republican affiliation.Zoom out: Trump's polling among Black voters has declined since early 2025. But that decline doesn't necessarily translate into gains for Democrats.The share of Black adults identifying as or leaning Democratic fell from 77% in 2020 to 66% in 2023 — roughly an 11-point drop.The change seems to be similar to that with white voters: a split among educated middle-class and working-class Black voters.Friction point: Democrats have long warned that Republican policies on voting and civil rights would roll back decades of progress.Last week, civil rights organizations denounced the Supreme Court's conservative-led ruling to weaken the Voting Rights Act as "bigotry."Yes, but: One in five Black Americans are first- or second-generation Americans, Johnson said.They don't share the same historical ties to Jim Crow-era politics, making Democratic warnings about "turning back the clock" less effective.Younger Americans are also now several generations removed from the Civil Rights Movement's defining moments, encountering its history less through classrooms or legacy media.White House spokesperson Allison Schuster tells Axios that Trump has provided long-term funding for Historically Black Colleges and Universities, expanded school choice and signed historic criminal justice reform."President Trump was proud to receive historic support from the black community in 2024, and he is working around the clock to deliver for them."The other side: Trump has "ripped away health care, and gutted the landmark Voting Rights Act that Dr. (Martin Luther) King Jr and John Lewis fought for during the Civil Rights Movement," DNC Vice Chair Malcolm Kenyatta tells Axios.DNC officials said the party has made investments in Virginia and New Jersey and another investment in polling Black voters to understand better how Black voters view the affordability crisis and what they want to see from candidates.The intrigue: Trump's gains with Black voters look different from his surge with Latino voters.Latino support for Trump hit record highs for a Republican in 2024, but polling suggests that support has been more volatile — particularly around immigration and the economy.The bottom line: If Black voters continue to behave less like a unified Democratic bloc, especially in midterms and down-ballot races, it could reshape coalition politics heading into 2026 and 2028.
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