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2024 Presidential Election: How Black Men Saved America

Then-President-elect Donald Trump (C) greeted Robert Johnson (R), the founder of Black Entertainment Television (BET), and his wife Lauren Wooden (L) as they arrived at Trump International Golf Club, Nov. 20, 2016 - in Bedminster Township, New Jersey. (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

Pure religion and undefiled before God and the Father is this, To visit the fatherless and widows in their affliction, and to keep himself unspotted from the world — James 1:27

(Newsmax) On Election Day, Nov. 5, Black men — embracing what some label “toxic masculinity” yet grounded in family, faith, and tradition — drew a line in the sand.

Across the country, we broke through the “blue wall” in unprecedented numbers, with Donald Trump’s support among Black men quadrupling in some areas.

Men, like myself, are rejecting policies that we feel ignore the values which have long been pillars in their lives and communities.

Black men across America made their voices heard and helped reshape the nation’s political landscape.

As examples, in states like Wisconsin, Trump more than doubled his support among Black voters, securing roughly 20% of their votes.

In Georgia, he claimed 25%, and in Pennsylvania and North Carolina, he achieved 23% and 20%, respectively.

These numbers represent not just a departure from traditional voting patterns but a declaration of independence from a party that has repeatedly failed to deliver on issues most important to most Black men.

In cities like Atlanta and Philadelphia, often Democratic strongholds with delayed election results, black men’s decisive turnout this time quickly tipped the scales, signaling a new determination to be heard.

At the heart of this shift lies a powerful rejection of the “soft liberalism” and divisiveness championed by many Democratic political figures like Barack and Michelle Obama, and Kamala Harris.

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