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Is the DNC panicking? Trump gaining unprecedented minority support.

The Battle Between Trump ‍and Desperate Democrats: A Shift in Minority Support

The‌ battle between former President Trump and the cabal of desperate Democrats trying everything in their power to hurt him politically, only to have it have the opposite result, conjures up the image of ⁣pasty liberals⁤ sitting in the dark beside a cauldron of witches brew exclaiming, “Curses… foiled again!”

According to an analysis in The Washington‌ Post, Trump is smashing the ‍numbers of any former Republican when it comes to his approval ratings with the black and Hispanic community.

Five polls in​ recent weeks show Trump averaging 20 percent approval among black⁢ voters and 42 percent approval⁤ among Hispanic voters, according to the Post.

Results like that should have the Democratic National Committee — as well as its ​media⁣ allies — in full panic mode.

“Both numbers — ⁢and especially that for Black voters​ — could set modern-day records for a Republican in a presidential election,” the Post’s Aaron⁣ Blake wrote. “Trump in 2020 took just 8 percent of Black voters and 36 percent of ‍Hispanic ‍voters, according to ​the Pew Research⁢ Center’s validated voter survey. Exit polls pegged those figures at 12 percent of‍ Black voters and 32 percent of Hispanic voters.”

A recent New York Times/Siena College poll national poll indicates that President Joe Biden is severely underperforming among nonwhite ⁢voters, especially compared to his support in the 2020⁢ election.

On average, Biden ⁢leads Donald Trump ‍by 53 percent to 28 percent among registered nonwhite voters in polls from 2022 and 2023. Biden was supported ​by 70 percent support​ of nonwhite voters in 2020,⁤ according to the⁢ Times.

Nate Cohn, the Times’s chief political analyst, pointed out an interesting trend in The Tilt, a Times newsletter:

“Democrats have lost ground among nonwhite voters in⁣ almost every election over ⁣the⁢ last decade, even as⁣ racially charged fights over everything from‍ a border wall to kneeling ⁤during the national anthem ‌might have been expected to produce the exact opposite ​result,” Cohn wrote.

Cohn’s statement demonstrates the cognitive dissonance ⁣experienced by those on the left as ⁢policies and ⁣agendas they believed would decrease minority support for Trump and the Republican⁣ party are, in fact, having the opposite effect.

Cohn also highlighted a striking generational divide among ‍ black voters. While‌ “overwhelming support” still ‍persists among black ​registered voters over 45, ​who‍ back Biden by 83 percent‍ to 8 percent, that lead drops to 59⁤ percent to 14 percent among black respondents under 45.

According to‍ the Post, in the past 50 years, no Republican presidential candidate has come ​close ​to getting 20 percent of the black vote. The average share ‌among black voters⁤ for Republicans during this time has been just 9 ​percent, a far cry from Trump’s current polling numbers.

Regarding Hispanic voters, although there’s been a ​trend of increased GOP support in recent elections, the highest historical percentages ⁢for Republicans in the last 50 years were 37 percent in 1984 and an estimated 40 to 44 percent in 2004, according to the Post.

Trump hasn’t‍ even secured the GOP⁣ nomination yet, but the data provided by the Post and the Times suggests a shifting tide among the younger generation of minority voters — a shift that is causing ‌intellectual elites to grapple with the⁤ real impact of decades of fear-mongering, race-baiting, and ⁣empty promises.

Just a few weeks⁣ earlier, Post columnist Philip Bump dedicated‌ an entire piece to mocking ⁣Fox News’ Jesse Watters for saying that Trump’s Georgia mug shot “unintentionally created a bond between Donald Trump and black​ Americans.”

Yet now, even the establishment media have to admit the polls are telling a compelling ⁢story.

Whether or not it was the mug shot, something is happening.

Younger voters in minority communities⁤ are beginning to see what politicians who pander and incite without ‍any solutions to better their lot have gotten them.

And they want someone ⁤better.

For ‌Democrats, the chickens may be coming home to roost.

The ‌post DNC in​ Panic Mode? Trump Seeing Levels of Minority Support No Republican in 50​ Years Has Reached appeared first on The Western Journal.

How has President Joe Biden’s support⁤ among nonwhite voters compared to President Trump’s recent increase​ in ⁤approval ratings⁣ among ⁢black and Hispanic voters?

⁢The battle between former President Trump and ‌desperate Democrats has taken an interesting turn ‍with a shift ​in minority support. According to an analysis in The​ Washington Post, Trump⁤ is garnering higher approval⁢ ratings among the black and Hispanic community than any former Republican. This should have the Democratic National Committee and its media allies in a full⁣ panic mode.

Recent polls show Trump ‍averaging​ 20 percent approval among black voters and 42⁣ percent approval among Hispanic voters. This is a significant increase compared‍ to his support ‌in the 2020 election.⁢ In contrast, President Joe Biden is severely underperforming among nonwhite voters, with‌ an average lead of 53 percent to​ 28 percent in recent polls.

This trend of ⁣decreasing ‌support ​for Democrats among nonwhite voters has been observed over the last decade. ​Despite‍ racially charged‍ fights‍ over various issues, ‍policies, and agendas that were expected to decrease minority support for Trump and the Republican party, the opposite effect is occurring. Democrats‌ are ‌losing ground among⁢ nonwhite voters, highlighting the ⁣cognitive dissonance experienced by the left.

There is‌ also a striking generational divide among black voters. While​ overwhelming support ⁣still exists among black registered voters over ⁤45, the lead drops significantly among black respondents under ⁤45. This indicates a​ shifting⁤ tide among the younger generation of minority voters.

Historical data shows that



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