Republican
presidential
nominee
and
former
U.S.
President
Donald
Trump
speaks
on a
panel of
the
National
Association
of Black
Journalists
(NABJ)
convention
in
Chicago,
Illinois,
U.S.
July 31,
2024.
REUTERS/Vincent
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Trump
says
Harris
‘became
a Black
person’
as NABJ
event
turns
hostile,
chaotic
By
Brianna
Tucker,
and
Hannah
Knowles
7–9
minutes
CHICAGO
— Donald
Trump on
Wednesday
berated
a Black
reporter
who
pressed
him
about
past
offensive
comments
and
accused
his
opponent,
Vice
President
Harris,
of
downplaying
Black
heritage
she
routinely
highlights
as a
sit-down
meant to
showcase
Trump’s
outreach
to
voters
of color
immediately
turned
hostile.
ABC
News’
Rachel
Scott
began
the Q&A
session
at the
National
Association
of Black
Journalists
convention
in
Chicago
by
noting —
among
other
comments
—
Trump’s
insults
toward
Black
prosecutors,
his
repeated
false
claims
that
America’s
first
Black
president
was born
in
Africa
and his
comments
that
four
congresswomen
who are
racial
minorities
should
“go
back” to
the
places
they
came
from.
“Why
should
Black
voters
trust
you
after
you have
used
language
like
that?”
Scott
said.
“Well
first of
all, I
don’t
think
I’ve
ever
been
asked a
question
in such
a
horrible
manner,”
Trump
said,
calling
the
interview
“disgraceful”
and
criticizing
a “rude
introduction.”
He
alleged
he was
invited
under a
“false
pretense”
because
he had
expected
his
opponent
to be
there as
well and
criticized
the
organizers
for
starting
late.
“I love
the
Black
population
of this
country,
I’ve
done so
much for
the
Black
population
of this
country,”
he said.
Asked if
it was
acceptable
for some
of his
supporters
to
derisively
call
Harris —
a Black,
Indian
American
woman —
a “DEI
hire,”
Trump
pressed
the
moderators
to
define
the
term,
which
stands
for
diversity,
equity
and
inclusion.
The talk
grew
even
more
combative.
Trump
claimed
Harris
used to
only
promote
her
Indian
heritage
— even
though,
as a
moderator
pointed
out, she
was part
of a
historically
Black
sorority
and
embraced
her
Black
identity
in many
ways.
“I
didn’t
know she
was
Black
until a
number
of years
ago when
she
happened
to turn
Black,
and now
she
wants to
be known
as
Black.
So I
don’t
know, is
she
Indian
or is
she
Black?”
Later he
said
“she was
Indian
all the
way” but
then
“became
a Black
person.'
“I think
somebody
should
look
into
that
too,” he
said,
speaking
over his
questioner.
He
continued
his
frequent
mispronunciations
of
Harris’s
first
name,
which
many
have
called
disrespectful.
The
remarkable
scene
came as
Trump
and
Harris
were
both set
to court
Black
voters
on
Wednesday.
Democrats
hope
their
new
candidate
can
re-energize
their
most
reliable
constituency
and
prevent
the GOP
from
making
gains.
Republicans
have
been
keen to
improve
their
performance
with
Black
voters
and
especially
Black
men,
encouraged
by polls
that
showed
softening
support
for
President
Biden.
But they
could
face a
stiffer
challenge
now that
Biden
has
bowed
out of
the 2024
race,
paving
the way
for
Harris —
who is
Black
and
Indian
American
— to
lead the
Democratic
ticket.
Trump’s
itinerary
on
Wednesday
reflects
his
continued
hopes to
chip
away at
Democrats’
traditional
dominance
with
Black
Americans.
But it
also
underscored
the
resistance
he is
facing —
largely
due to
his own
public
comments.
His
plans
for a
Q&A at
the
National
Association
of Black
Journalists
convention
immediately
drew
backlash
from
some
members
and that
one
former
White
House
correspondent
called a
“slap in
the
face.”
“False.
False.
False!”
one
attendee
yelled
out, as
Trump
falsely
asserted
that
undocumented
immigrants
arriving
to the
U.S. are
“taking
votes
away
from all
of the
people
in this
room.”
“You
just
lie!”
one
audience
member
said.
Trump is
also
holding
a rally
Wednesday
night in
Harrisburg,
Pa.
Harris,
meanwhile,
is
expected
to speak
in
Houston
on
Wednesday
evening
to a
gathering
of the
sorority
Sigma
Gamma
Rho —
the
latest
in her
extensive
outreach
to
members
of
historically
Black
sororities
and
fraternities
that
make up
the
“Divine
Nine.”
Harris
spoke to
her own
sorority,
Alpha
Kappa
Alpha,
in July
and
addressed
another
group,
Zeta Phi
Beta,
last
week.
Democratic
operatives
say
Harris’s
candidacy
already
shows
signs of
motivating
Black
voters —
whose
flagging
enthusiasm
for
Biden
had left
a hole
in the
Democratic
base.
One CNN
survey
found
that
Black
voters
who
previously
split 70
percent
for
Biden
and 23
percent
for
Trump
backed
Harris
by a
wider
margin
of 78
percent
to
Trump’s
15
percent.
Other
polling
shows
less of
a shift.
Republicans
are
betting
that a
so-called
“Harris
Honeymoon”
will
fade and
are
pumping
tens of
millions
into ads
attacking
Harris.
Trump’s
campaign
had said
that in
Chicago
he would
discuss
“the
most
pressing
issues
facing
the
Black
community”
in a
conversation
moderated
by
Harris
Faulkner
from Fox
News,
Kadia
Goba
from
Semafor
and
Scott
from ABC
News.
The
former
president
has
angered
Black
Americans
in
recent
years
with
some
racist
and
inflammatory
comments
and his
promotion
of false
attacks.
“What
the hell
do you
have to
lose?”
he said
when he
ran in
2016,
portraying
Black
communities
as
riddled
with
crime
and
poverty.
Trump
has also
promoted
a false
conspiracy
theory
questioning
the
citizenship
of
Harris.
Trump
raised
his
political
profile
falsely
claiming
Obama
was born
in
Africa;
lamented
immigration
from
“shithole
counties”;
and in
2019
told
four
congresswomen
who are
racial
minorities
to “go
back” to
the
places
they
came
from.
Three of
the
lawmakers
were
born in
the
United
States.
“Black
voters
see
Donald
Trump’s
lies and
empty
pandering
for what
they are
– and
they
will
hold him
accountable
at the
polls
this
November,”
Harris
campaign
Black
Media
Director
Jasmine
Harris
said in
a
statement
Wednesday.
National
Association
of Black
Journalists
President
Ken
Lemon
defended
the
group’s
decision
to
invite
Trump as
standard.
The
organization
asks
major-party
presidential
candidates
to speak
each
election
year.
“While
we
acknowledge
the
concerns
expressed
by our
members,
we
believe
it is
important
for us
to
provide
our
members
with the
opportunity
to hear
directly
from
candidates
and hold
them
accountable,”
Lemon
said in
a
statement.
NABJ
said
Wednesday
that it
is
talking
with
Harris’s
team
about
scheduling
a
virtual
or
in-person
Q&A with
Harris
in
September.
Trump
repeatedly
taunted
Harris
on
social
media
for not
attending
the
convention
this
week,
suggesting
it was
disrespectful.
Trump’s
team has
made a
point to
hold
Black
outreach
events,
even as
his
rally
crowds
skew
heavily
White.
In
recent
months
Trump
has
campaigned
at a
Black
church
in
Detroit
and
rallied
in the
South
Bronx,
where he
touted
his
economic
record
and said
his
policies
would
protect
voters
of color
from
crime. A
pro-Trump
super
PAC,
MAGA
Inc.,
has run
some ads
targeted
to Black
voters
that hit
the
Biden
administration
on high
inflation,
undocumented
immigration
and
transgender
athletes’
participation
in
women’s
sports.
Trump
has also
suggested
that
Black
voters
like him
more
because
of his
criminal
cases.
“I’m
being
indicted
for you,
the
Black
population,”
Trump
said
this
February
at a
gala for
the
Black
Conservative
Federation.
Democrats,
meanwhile,
have
promoted
record-low
Black
unemployment
during
the
Biden
administration
— and
tried to
communicate
how
their
policies
are
helping
Black
voters
who have
often
expressed
cynicism
about
both
parties.
They
have
also
accused
Republicans
of
broadly
trying
to take
the
country
backward.
“Across
our
nation,
we are
witnessing
a
full-on
assault
on
hard-fought,
hard-won
freedoms
and
rights,”
Harris
told
members
of Zeta
Phi Beta
last
week.
She
listed —
among
other
concerns
— “the
freedom
to live
without
fear of
bigotry
and
hate”
and “the
freedom
to learn
and
acknowledge
our true
and full
history.”
Scott
Clement
contributed
to this
report.
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