Stacey Abrams has a surprising problem with Black voters

Joe Money

Rising Star
Registered
Stacey Abrams has a surprising problem with Black voters


Atlanta — As Stacey Abrams took the stage at a recent campaign stop, one person at the crowded Atlanta event was at the top of her mind.
“Daddy, stand up,” Abrams said as her father, Robert Abrams, was showered with applause before an audience of several hundred people.

“I am not a Black man, but I’ve been raised by one,” she said, adding, “and I am always going to say that if Black men stand with me and vote for me and work with me, we can change the future of Georgia.”

That Abrams would need to hold an event designed to garner more support among Black Georgians in the final stretch of her campaign for governor is emblematic of one of the more surprising — and for Abrams, troubling — developments in the race.

In 2018, Abrams came within 55,000 votes of defeating Republican Brian Kemp thanks to a surge of votes from Black Georgians. She energized voters of color who often skipped midterms with a liberal platform and a history-making appeal to become the first Black governor in state history.

In 2022, however, the Democrat is struggling to solidify her support with African American voters she must mobilize to win the rematch.

A recent Atlanta Journal-Constitution poll underscored her difficulties, showing she has 79% of support from Black voters. While that might appear to be a lofty number, Democrats typically poll at least 10 percentage points higher with Black voters. Among Black men, Abrams’ support dips to 75%, with an additional one-fifth backing Kemp and 6% undecided.

It’s no anomaly. Other recent polls have indicated Abrams has lagging support among voters of color, and Kemp is notching double-digit backing from Black Georgians in a string of surveys released this week.

Compounding Democratic concerns, the AJC poll showed about 30% of Black voters give Kemp a positive approval rating.

“If something isn’t broken, we don’t need to try to fix it. I agree with Kemp’s policies and I like where the state is going,” said John Francois, an accountant from Upson County who is among the Black men supporting Kemp. “It’s not really about Stacey Abrams — it’s more about the governor’s agenda.”

Nor is the dynamic unique to Abrams. U.S. Sen. Raphael Warnock, the state’s first Black senator, faces similar difficulties with a November matchup against Herschel Walker, a former football star who also is Black. His campaign has followed a different strategy and hasn’t tailored events geared toward making up lost ground with voters of color.

While Abrams’ supporters can take solace that the same poll showed 10% of Black voters remain undecided — giving her an opening to expand her edge — her campaign isn’t taking this trend lightly.

“We’re coming at this in a moment of time when Black voters feel taken for granted in the Democratic Party. They worked hard to get rid of Donald Trump, and they want to know people are fighting for them,” said Lauren Groh-Wargo, Abrams’ campaign manager.

“Black voters we talk to say Stacey Abrams is different and she’s fighting for them,” Groh-Wargo said. “And we know when we talk to them, we’ll win those voters overwhelmingly. But we have to reach them.”

Abrams put it more bluntly at an August stop in Cobb County.

“If Black men vote for me,” she said, “I’ll win Georgia.”

‘Problems’
The governor’s campaign has eagerly pointed out Abrams’ difficulties with Black voters — while also noting that the recent polls show her garnering about one-quarter of white support, another troubling sign for the Democrat.

“What you’re seeing is they’re having problems winning over the white Democrats that usually support them, but then they’re also having problems with Black voters that have not come home completely,” Kemp spokesman Cody Hall said Wednesday on Georgia Public Broadcasting’s “Political Rewind.”

Kemp chalked up his support to conservative fiscal policies and aggressive approach to reopening the economy during the first months of the coronavirus pandemic. He often invokes a history of diverse appointments and an overhaul of the state’s citizen’s arrest law rooted in racist history.

“It’s our record. I told people from day one what I was going to do when I ran in 2018. A lot of people didn’t really know who I was then. I got defined by a candidate who had twice as much money as I did,” the governor said at a tailgate in Athens.

“I never could really fight through that,” Kemp said. “It’s a different story now because I have a great record that I think resonates with all Georgians.”

Abrams doesn’t plan to roll out policies to specifically appeal to Black voters, but instead demonstrate how she views her calls to expand Medicaid, boost teacher pay and finance need-based college scholarships by legalizing gambling can help all Georgians.

“We know that Black men can sometimes be more conservative, and it’s natural, we’re not a monolithic race — people can vote for who they want. But we should vote for what we need,” she said prior to a panel discussion alongside radio host Charlamagne tha God, rapper 21 Savage and civil rights attorney Francys Johnson.

“That is a message I think resonates with everyone, especially Black men, because when it comes down to it, this is a vital part of our electorate,” Abrams said. “And I’m not going to leave any community untouched.”

‘Early warning bell’
Abrams’ approach makes sense to Howard Franklin, a Democratic strategist who said recent polling among Black men is “not a death sentence — it’s just an early warning bell.”

Franklin said there’s always “hand-wringing” as November nears about whether left-leaning voters have closed ranks around a nominee.

“But I think this is probably more a question about how quickly Black men, in particular, start paying attention to this race and come to understand the stakes that are at play for November,” he said.

Emory University political scientist Andra Gillespie said the key question won’t be whether Black voters decisively back her campaign, but whether turnout among Black voters and other left-leaning demographic blocs exceeds projections.

“Democrats are approaching parity in numbers, but they have to have an exceptional turnout strategy in order to best Republicans,” Gillespie said. “They’re still the underdogs here, which means they’re going to have to work harder to win.”

‘She understands me’
At the Abrams event earlier this month, a “swag truck” emblazoned with an image of two Black children embracing the candidate dispensed campaign goodies to supporters as rap music blared in the background. Among them was a T-shirt stating: “Black men for Abrams.”

During the hourlong event, she repeatedly addressed her policy stances and criticized a wide swath of Kemp’s policies while promising to hold herself accountable in office.

For Dwight James, a 24-year-old who moved to Georgia last year, coming to this event meant building a “personal connection” with Abrams.
It’s an experience James said solidified his vote for her in November.

“Sometimes as Black men, when we see women in power, it can either be welcoming or it can be threatening, so it’s nice to know that she’s willing to be like, ‘Hey, look, I’m building this space for you all,’ ” James said. “It makes it feel like she understands me.”


@Soul On Ice @Supersav @gene cisco @Amajorfucup @xfactor
 
Last edited:
BLACK MEN’S AGENDA


Black men deserve leadership that sees them, serves them, and believes in them. I am committed to investing in Black men, their families, and their businesses by providing opportunities for small businesses and apprenticeships, expanding access to safe and affordable education, and focusing resources on violent crime prevention and law enforcement accountability.

Toggle
Economic Security
  • Provide capital and contract opportunities for Black small businesses
    • Establish a $10 million Small Business Investment Fund
    • Eliminate fees and red-tape to start your own business
    • Increase purchasing from black-owned businesses by state entities
    • Allow multiple small companies to jointly bid on state contracts as prime contractor
    • Close the gap between minority and non-minority business revenues in 6-8 years (at current pace, will take 100 years)
    • Create a $5 million Family Farms Initiative to aid small and micro-farms with financing
  • Put money back in your pockets
    • Tax rebates for everyone making less than $250,000
    • End wage theft and misclassification (treating employees as independent contractors)
    • Enforce unemployment regulations in cooperation with the Labor Commissioner (53% of Georgians denied unemployment during the pandemic were Black)
Toggle
Healthcare and Housing
  • Expand Medicaid
    • Adults making $9/hr or less would be eligible for health insurance, including non-crisis mental health and substance abuse treatment
    • Will create 64,000 good-paying jobs across the state
  • Make housing more affordable for everyone.
    • Support first-time homeowners and provide financial education
    • Create a permanent fund to finance property tax deferments for working class households facing rapidly rising property taxes caused by out-of-state buyers or gentrification.
Toggle
Education and Job Training
  • Increase funding to public schools and decrease over-disciplining of black children
  • Create 20,000 apprenticeships, including construction, entertainment and advanced energy
  • Restore free technical college
  • Expand access to HOPE and fund need-based aid for higher education, particularly at HBCUs
Toggle
Criminal Justice and Public Safety
  • Focus law enforcement resources on serious violent crime
    • Support legislation to decriminalize marijuana and end poverty-based criminal penalties
    • Repeal extreme gun laws including criminal carry and close loopholes
    • Restore diversion programs and re-entry programs to support housing, healthcare and employment
  • Hold law enforcement accountable
    • Require accountability for law enforcement and correctional officers
    • Track officers with records of bad behavior and prevent them from getting new jobs
    • Create state guidelines that address use of force, de-escalation and crisis intervention
 
We been trying to tell em for the past decade bro.

Hard head finna make a soft ass.


shut-yo-ass-up-shut-up.gif
 
Okay. Have fun voting for The obviously racist Republicans.

Have fun voting for people who vote against women's rights.

Have fun voting for people who support Trump and his stop the Steal.

Have fun voting for people who support people who attacked the capital
Bruh, people are soooo dumb. I ain’t voting Repugantcan EVER. Lot of clowns talking about what she gon for us, as if she can openly run on that shit and win.
:hithead: Yoo-toobers got ninjas gassed.
 

Dr. No knothing trying to piggyback on some common sense with this bullshit. Does he mean Non-BM Americans like Clarence Thomas, Larry elder, Armstrong Williams, Hershel Walker, etc. How you gonna fix your face and say that it is foreign blacks responsible? These demented treacherous ninjas specialize in divide & conquer tactics.

A Record Number Of Black Republicans Could Be Headed to Congress

I wonder about the state of self-esteem, of self-conception of Men who turn on their mothers, sisters, wives, daughters and on other black men who look like them. Y'all remind me of the rapist slavemaster's black son in Sankofa. Just mentally fucked up...Kill yourselves.

MV5BNmYxYTgzOTUtZTJkZC00YTFmLWE0ZmQtODgwODhjMDhiZDlkXkEyXkFqcGdeQXVyNzMzMjU5NDY@._V1_.jpg
 
Lived in Georgia for 10 years. Love them niggas, they down for the cause. Stacy should win handedly. If she don't coon heads should roll. Expect no mercy.



Then you should know how this works. Krackas don't say shit and then show up two to a mule and vote. Stacy ain't carrying South Georgia / Northern Georgia. That's Kemp country I work in and out of those towns...would it nice if she did, sure but I doubt she will.
 
Lived in Georgia for 10 years. Love them niggas, they down for the cause. Stacy should win handedly. If she don't coon heads should roll. Expect no mercy.



Alot of them not "niggas", but you'll see in Novemeber and you'll see your surprise.

Many brothers just want a job, woman and a beer and they good, life doesn't need to be fancy.
Democrats moreso have a class issue that they still refuse to address.

 
If Warnock can’t beat Walker that’s on Warnock. The fact that it is even close tells me Warnock isn’t getting shit done.

Dude, Thanos could run in the south and maintain his position over life and there will be a lot of people who would vote for him by rationalizing that the people he would get rid of would be Democrats.
 
She's a progressive...the DNC will be stabbing that big wide back of hers real soon. Hot pieces like this will flow from from so called democratic sources like shit thru a goose..:popcorn:

Bernie fans still with that DNC stole the elections talk??

:lol:
 
Okay. Have fun voting for The obviously racist Republicans.

Have fun voting for people who vote against women's rights.

Have fun voting for people who support Trump and his stop the Steal.

Have fun voting for people who support people who attacked the capital
How dare those racists attack massa building? Who gives a fuck about the capital and white people rage...wait you do
 
How dare those racists attack massa building? Who gives a fuck about the capital and white people rage...wait you do



You think I give a fuck about the capital or this entire motherfucking country? Absolutely mother fucking not. These hypocritical CACs can destroy every building from sea to shining sea

I REALLY don't trust Republican politicians, while I kinda don't trust Democrat politicians.

So, miss me with that massa shit

Unless you were joking, then I kinda take it back...kinda. But you probably weren't joking so...

 
Back
Top