Derec
Contributor
Some of it may be that they are sexists who would not vote for a woman. But it could also be that they were turned off by an administration, and by a party, that is seen as hostile toward men. The Obama era "Dear Colleague" debacle from 2011 is an example (and Biden played a big role in that sexist policy), as is not even considering men for important appointments like running mate, SCOTUS justice, or Senator from California.Why did so many black and Latino men vote for trump?
I agree. Trump is much worse, but Dems lost the election because they were too beholden to the activists. Relevant to this thread - activists on race matters. Biden administration was totally supportive of "affirmative action" policies even as it was clear that it is an issue so unpopular among the electorate that it even failed in a California referendum in 2020.You don’t have to love a candidate or a party to figure out that one candidate is much worse than the other one.
She did come close in 2018, but she screwed up when she became a sore loser and claimed that the election was stolen.I have never really loved any candidate I ever supported, with the exception of Stacy Abrams, who almost beat Kemp the first time she ran for governor. Stacy had the support of all kinds of people.
I also think she should have ran for Senate in 2020 instead of the preacher man. Instead, she ran again for governor in 2022 and came nowhere near her 2018 near miss.
Now she is pretty much nowhere. She has no position from which to stage a political comeback in 2026 or 2028.
 
	 
 
		 I think you’re putting a little too much weight on the “sexism/activist” angle here. Sure, some voters probably don’t like the idea of a woman in power, but that doesn’t explain the whole shift among Black and Latino men. A lot of men I talk to are way more focused on bread-and-butter stuff, like cost of living, jobs, crime, small business regulations, and they felt like Dems weren’t on that front.
  I think you’re putting a little too much weight on the “sexism/activist” angle here. Sure, some voters probably don’t like the idea of a woman in power, but that doesn’t explain the whole shift among Black and Latino men. A lot of men I talk to are way more focused on bread-and-butter stuff, like cost of living, jobs, crime, small business regulations, and they felt like Dems weren’t on that front. It just showed that the Dem brand doesn’t always line up neatly with what working-class voters want. And on Abrams, she definitely hurt herself after 2018, no argument there. But her situation is more about Georgia politics than it is a blueprint for why national Black/Latino men lean one way or the other. At the end of the day, Trump’s style (machismo, anti-establishment, “fighter” persona) clicked with some of these voters in a way Biden never could. That’s a big part of the story too, not just identity politics.
It just showed that the Dem brand doesn’t always line up neatly with what working-class voters want. And on Abrams, she definitely hurt herself after 2018, no argument there. But her situation is more about Georgia politics than it is a blueprint for why national Black/Latino men lean one way or the other. At the end of the day, Trump’s style (machismo, anti-establishment, “fighter” persona) clicked with some of these voters in a way Biden never could. That’s a big part of the story too, not just identity politics. That’s what actually bothers people.
 That’s what actually bothers people.
		 
 
		
 
 
		