WASHINGTON ā Black registered voters have an overwhelmingly positiveāÆview of Vice President Kamala Harris, but theyāre less sure that she would change the country for the better, according to a recent poll from the āÆ AP-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.
The poll, which was conducted in mid-September, foundāÆabout 7 in 10 Black voters have aāÆsomewhat or very favorableāÆview of Harris, withāÆfew differences between Black men and women voters on how they view the Democratic candidate. Younger and older Black voters also hadāÆsimilar views of the vice president.
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Black votersā opinions of former President Donald Trump, by contrast, were overwhelmingly negative, underscoring the challenges that the Republican candidate faces as he seeks to erode Harrisā support among Black men. Black voters are an important Democratic constituency, and few are aligned with the Republican Party. According to the survey, two-thirds of Black voters identify as Democrats, about 2 in 10 identify as independents andāÆabout 1 in 10 identify as Republicans.
But the poll also found that despite this dramatic gap in views of the candidates, Black voters are less certain of whether Harris would set the country on a better trajectory, or make a substantial difference in their own lives. OnlyāÆabout half of Black voters say āwould change the country for the betterā describes Harris very or extremely well, while about 3 in 10 say it describes her āsomewhat wellā and about 2 in 10 say it describes her ānot very wellā or ānot well at all.ā And onlyāÆabout halfāÆbelieve the outcome of this presidential election will have āa great dealā or āquite a bitā of impact on them personally, an assessment thatās in line with Americans overall.
āThe Democratic Party is not strong enough for me,ā said Raina Johnson, 53, a safety case manager in Chicago. Johnson predicted that Harris would ātry to do something for the peopleā but she felt that Harris would be limited as it was "with (Barack) Obama, because the Republican Party shut him down.ā
While Johnson felt that the stakes of the election were extremely high, she did not think it would have a large personal impact on her.
āBecause Iāll still live my life. Iāll just have to roll with the punches,ā she said.
Most Black voters think Harris is better on the issues
When asked which candidate would do a better job handling their top issues, including theāÆeconomy, health care andāÆcrime, Black voters had the same answer:āÆHarris.
Like voters overall,āÆabout 8 in 10 Black voters said the economy isāÆone of the most important issuesāÆto their vote. ButāÆabout three-quartersāÆof Black voters said health care was one of their most important issues, compared toāÆslightly more than halfāÆof registered voters, and they were alsoāÆmore likely than the electorate as a whole to sayāÆgun policyāÆandāÆcrimeāÆwere top issues.
In all of those areas, as well as on other topics like abortion and climate change, Harris held a commanding advantage over Trump among Black voters. But the size of that edge was bigger on some issues than others. About 6 in 10 Black voters said Harris was better positioned to handle the economy, whileāÆabout 2 in 10 said this about Trump, giving HarrisāÆabout a 40-point advantage. On abortion policy, she had around a 60-point advantageāÆover Trump.
The Trump campaign has stepped up with some outreach to Black communities this year. The former presidentās campaign believes that hisāÆmessage on the economy, immigration and traditional values can make notable inroads into the Democratsā traditional base of support among Black voters, especially younger Black men.
Rod Wettlin, a retired Air Force veteran in Surprise, Arizona, who wants greater action on issues like health care and immigration, said he was deeply opposed to Trump and was concerned about the implications of the election for American democracy.
āWhatās going on now is the culmination of a lot of stuff thatās been in our face for years,ā said Wettlin. āHopefully after the election it is civil, but these cats out here are already calling for bedlam. And thatās their right, I fought for them to have that right. But donāt infringe on mine.ā
There are signs that some groups of Black voters see Harris as a stronger figure, though. Black women voters and older Black voters were especially likely to describe Harris as someone who would āfight for people like you,ā compared to Black men and younger Black voters.
Black voters view Trump negatively, and some are skeptical about Biden
Relatively few Black voters have a positive view of Trump, or see him as a candidate who has important qualities for the presidency. The poll found thatāÆaboutāÆ8 in 10 Black votersāÆhave aāÆsomewhat or veryāÆunfavorable view of Trump, whileāÆjust 15% have aāÆsomewhat or very favorable view. About 1 in 10 said āwould change the country for the betterā or āwould fight for people like youā describes TrumpāÆat least very well, and a similarly low shareāÆof Black voters said that Trump would make a good president.
āI think weāre headed in the right direction if Kamala Harris gets it,ā saidāÆRoslyn Coble, 63, andāÆa resident ofāÆOakboro, North Carolina. āBut if Donald Trump gets it,āÆitās going to be bad. He already told us what heās going to do. Heās going to be a dictator.ā
About 7 in 10 Black voters say the phrase āwill say anything to win the electionā describes Trump at least very well.
In a sign of how former President Joe Bidenās decision to withdraw as the Democratic candidate in July may have altered the race, onlyāÆ55% of Black men voters have a favorable view of Biden, compared toāÆ7 in 10 Black women voters.
āHe did his best,ā said Wettlin. He said that Biden should have bowed out of the presidential race far sooner and was skeptical of some of his achievements.
Black voter engagement organizationsāÆsay theyāÆhave also seen a burst of energy from voters and advocates since Harrisā entrance into the race, and both the Harris and Trump campaigns are continuing to focus on this group.
The Trump campaign has been conducting listening sessions and community events in Black neighborhoods in cities like Philadelphia, Detroit and Milwaukee. The campaign has also coordinated a āBlack Voices for Trumpā bus tour across cities in September. Meanwhile, the Harris campaign has held a number of events geared toward Black voters, especially Black men, and has deployed a number of high-profile surrogates, including lawmakers, celebrities and civil rights leaders, to Black communities in recent weeks.
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The poll of 1,771 registered voters was conducted Sept. 12-16, 2024, using a sample drawn from NORCās probability-based AmeriSpeak Panel, which is designed to be representative of the U.S. population. The margin of sampling error for registered voters is plus or minus 3.4 percentage points.