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| Trump and Biden debate |
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Donald Trump warned during his debate with Joe Biden and again at a Friday rally that migrants were taking "Black jobs" and "Hispanic jobs" from Americans, angering critics who called it a racist and insulting attempt to expand his appeal beyond his white conservative base.
While President
Joe Biden's halting debate performance on Thursday night stirred widespread
concerns among fellow Democrats about his readiness, Trump also repeatedly made
false claims and repeated conspiracy theories that he's long promoted during
his campaign.
Trump suggested
without evidence that Democrats want migrants to displace Americans as voters,
and he described the state of the nation under Biden as worse than during the
deadly 2017 neo-Nazi march in Charlottesville, Virginia. Trump has often
downplayed the racist overtones of the march, once saying there were "fine
people on both sides."
Trump's
depiction of a country on the brink, under siege from unfettered migration and
beset by racial strife and economic chaos echoed his longstanding rhetoric
about the state of the U.S. It's a pessimistic vision that has long appealed to
the GOP's largely white, hard-right base but has also alienated other
Americans, especially voters of color.
"The fact
is that his big kill on the Black people is the millions of people that he's
allowed to come in through the border. They're taking Black jobs now,"
Trump said during the debate on CNN. "They're taking Black jobs and
they're taking Hispanic jobs. And you haven't seen it yet, but you're going to
see something that's going to be the worst in our history," he warned
without specifying the danger.
Yet Trump and
his allies believe that such rhetoric may hold greater appeal with Black and
Hispanic communities this year dissatisfied with Biden's performance in office.
Trump repeated the comments during a rally Friday in Virginia.
The phrase
"Black jobs" was widely condemned by Democrats and Black leaders as
vague and insulting.
"I'm still
wondering, what is a 'Black job,'" Jaime Harrison, chair of the Democratic
National Committee, quipped on Friday during a news conference with former
Georgia Democratic gubernatorial nominee Stacey Abrams in Atlanta. Other
prominent Biden allies including Rep. Jasmine Crockett, D-Tx., Rep. Bennie Thompson,
D-Miss., and Raphael Warnock, D-Ga., also condemned Trump's words following the
debate.
"There is
no such thing as a Black job. That misinformed characterization is a denial of
the ubiquity of Black talent. We are doctors, lawyers, school teachers, police
officers and firefighters. The list goes on," said Derrick Johnson,
president and CEO of the NAACP. "A 'Black job' is an American job. It's
concerning that a presidential candidate would seek to make a nonexistent
distinction. But the divisive nature of this comment is not surprising for
Donald Trump."
Trump's allies
pushed back on the critiques as missing the president's broader message.
"He meant
the jobs of Black people. And we've been using that term for a while,"
said Diante Johnson, president of the Black Conservative Federation. "It's
any job. Instead of Black people having unlimited accessibility to all types of
jobs, illegal immigrants are taking their jobs from them."
Much economic
research shows that immigration has helped to increase employment, with a 2024
paper by the economists Alessandro Caiumi and Giovanni Peri finding that
immigration between 2000 and 2019 had a positive effect on the wages of less
educated workers born in the United States. Still, separate research have
suggested that greater immigration may have hurt the wages of less educated
Black men, though it was one of several factors.
Asked to clarify
what Trump meant in describing a "Black job" during an interview with
NBC News, Republican Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina, who is Black and is
under consideration to be Trump's vice presidential nominee, sidestepped the
question, instead discussing homeless veterans.
Some Black
adults do think there's a possibility that immigration will affect employment
opportunities for workers who are already here. About 4 in 10 Black adults say
it's a "major risk" that the number of jobs available to American
workers will be reduced when immigrants come to the U.S. -- whether they arrive
legally or illegally -- according to an AP-NORC poll from March. But the poll
also found that about 3 in 10 Black adults think it's a major benefit that
immigrants will take jobs that Americans don't want.
In some
communities like Chicago, an increased number of migrants has generated greater
economic anxiety and concern that government resources are not allocated
fairly. Yet Black and Hispanic Americans are on average more supportive of
immigration than other demographics, and in cities like Chicago, Denver and New
York, racial justice groups have been at the forefront of mitigating potential
strife between communities of color and undocumented people on issues like
jobs.
For some Black
activists, the comments changed little about the state of the presidential
race.
Michael Blake,
founder and CEO of the Kairos Democracy Project, said "It's hard for
someone to believe that (Trump) means they're taking quality jobs."
"It is the
responsibility for us to then tell the story of the benefits of diversity,
rather than the fears of it. And the notion that those people are taking from
you is a fear-only message as opposed to asking: How do we all win?,"
Blake added. "When you embrace all races, we all win. We should not allow
fear of the past to supersede the prosperity of the future, because we all can
win."

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