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Black Republicans have gained national attention in recent months, their visibility coming at a time when the party appears to be shifting more to the right.
While Black elected officials are rare in today’s Republican party, during Reconstruction, the Black men who were elected to public office were almost universally Republicans.
It's just the latest example that Republicans don't actually want us in their party. Contrary to their recent rhetoric, the GOP base isn't a broad coalition; it's predominately white, male, and older.
The Republican Party now holds a 15-point advantage among White registered voters and a 6-point edge for voters without a college degree.
The Republican Party of Minnesota tossed its support behind Royce White, a former NBA player and Black Lives Matter protest leader turned GOP Senate candidate, in his bid to oust Democrat Sen. Amy ...
First-term House Rep. Wesley Hunt, R-Texas, is part of a growing group of young, Black conservative lawmakers who are steadily changing the face of the Republican Party – and he believes that ...
The percentage of black men voting Democrat has slipped in every national election since 2012, even as the opposition party embraces the racism of Donald Trump ...
The trend toward the Republican Party among white voters without a college degree has continued, and Democrats have lost ground among Hispanic voters, too.
Black Democratic politicians who flip parties after they are elected and join the MAGA Republicans are betraying their voters in a cynical, power-hungry and hazardous game of bait-and-switch.
CBC denounces Republicans and white supremacy as ‘Black people are under attack’ “We’ve been fighting extremist Republicans in the judiciary who would rather erase us,” said U.S. Rep ...
Tim Scott is the only Black Republican presidential candidate who's campaigning aggressively these days in early-voting Iowa.
Orlando Owens, a rare Republican activist in a majority-Black district of Milwaukee, had hoped this election season would be different.