TurkeysGhost
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Apr 2, 2018
- Messages
- 35,043
I still don't understand why that is.
Like most things, it's probably a confluence of many factors.
Pete is competing with Biden for the centrist lane of the party and Biden has tremendous advantages that make him more supported among the black populace. Sanders is second in support, but notably mostly with young black voters and not the older population. Perhaps if Biden were not a factor, Pete might gain more traction. Hard to say.
There is some speculation that black voters don't like Pete because the black population is generally more homophobic than the rest of the party. No idea if that's true or significant.
I would find it ironic if that were the case. Pete's candidacy is that of a conservative Democrat, and black democrats are the stronghold of conservative Democratic politics. If being homophobic were part of the baggage associated with that conservatism, that makes Pete largely ineligible among what should be his core support for the centrist lane.
The fact of the matter is that the monolithic black voting block for Democratic politics is the result of history, not because of some deep appreciation for liberal politics. Especially in the South. Looking at the South, you see that blacks there are similarly religious and socially conservative as their white neighbors. Plenty of black folks would probably be more at home in the Republican party if it weren't for the fact that the party is absolutely infested with racism, which is automatically disqualifying.
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