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Monday, November 18, 2024

Joe Biden’s Support Among Young Black Americans May be Slipping as Gaffes Pile Up

'You're taking cocaine or not? ... Are you a junkie?...'

(Headline USA) Former Vice President Joe Biden‘s controversial remarks about race this week risk alienating young black voters.

When pressed by Errol Barnett of CBS News on whether he’d taken a cognitive test, Biden responded that the question was akin to asking the black reporter if he would take a drug test to see if “you’re taking cocaine or not? … Are you a junkie?”

In a later interview with National Public Radio’s Lulu Garcia-Navarro, Biden seemed to draw distinctions between black and Hispanic populations in the U.S.

“Unlike the African American community, with notable exceptions, the Latino community is an incredibly diverse community with incredibly different attitudes about different things,” he told the Latina reporter.

He later walked back the comment.

Black voters as a whole delivered the Democratic nomination to Biden, powering his commanding win in the South Carolina primary, which rescued his floundering campaign.

But that success was heavily dependent on older black voters. In a general election where Democrats say no vote can be taken for granted, young black activists and elected officials say this week’s missteps could make it harder to get their vote.

“Trump is terrible, and he’s a racist, and we have to get racists out of the White House. But then Biden keeps saying racist things,” said Mariah Parker, a 28-year-old county commissioner in Athens, Georgia.

“It doesn’t make me feel much better that we actually will have an improvement for the black community with one president over the other.”

AP VoteCast data illustrates the generational divide Biden is confronting.

Across 17 states where AP VoteCast surveyed Democratic voters during the primary, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders won 60% of voters under 30 overall, to Biden’s 19%. And while Biden was strongly supported by African American voters overall, black voters under age 30 were slightly more likely to support Sanders than Biden, 44% to 38%.

A Washington Post-Ipsos poll conducted in June suggested that while Biden had majority support among black voters aged 18-39, there was skepticism about Biden himself.

Among black Americans under age 40 that were polled, 32% said they didn’t feel he was sympathetic to the problems of black people. And 24% of respondents under 40 said they felt Biden is “biased” against black people, in contrast to much lower percentages for middle-aged and senior respondents.

Adapted from reporting by the Associated Press.

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