Republican presidential candidate Donald
Trump promised African Americans prosperity and jobs Saturday in a
gently delivered speech to a black congregation in a US city famous as a
symbol of economic and urban decline.
Setting aside his usual stridency, Trump
adopted a humble tone, telling his audience at the Good Faith
Ministries International church that he came to listen, expressing
sympathy for the out-of-work young men he had seen on boarded-up Detroit
streets.
“Nothing is more sad than when we
sideline young black men with unfulfilled potential, tremendous
potential,” Trump said, speaking from notes.
“Our whole country loses out without the
energy of these folks. We’re one nation. And when anyone hurts, we all
hurt together,” he said.
Trump was received courteously and
rewarded with occasional bursts of applause as he set about trying to
allay the deep skepticism of African Americans who have swung
overwhelmingly behind his rival, Hillary Clinton.
Blacks account for 12 percent of the US
electorate, and Trump, who trails in the polls, recently has sought
gingerly to widen his base.
– ‘Devil’s in the pulpit’ –
Before the speech, protesters chanting
“Dump Trump” and “We’re going to church” tried to push through police
barriers to gain entrance.
“The devil’s in the pulpit,” shouted
Wyoman Mitchell, one of about 150 protesters who were pushed back by
police on foot and on horseback in the tense encounter.
Church pastor Bishop Wayne Jackson had invited the New York billionaire to attend the fellowship service, and make some remarks.
Trump also sat for an interview with
Jackson that will be aired at a later date. The New York Times reported
that Jackson submitted questions in advance, but it was not known
whether the two men went off script.
“I didn’t really know what I was getting
myself in to. I didn’t know. Was this going to be nice? Was this going
to be wild?” Trump said of the interview, in remarks to the
congregation.
“He’s a great gentleman and a very smart guy. I just hope you don’t lose him to Hollywood.”
– ‘Nation too divided’ –
The church appearance contrasted sharply with Trump’s previous crude appeals for black support.
“What do you have to lose?” he said
nearly two weeks ago, rhetorically addressing African Americans in a
speech before a white audience in Ohio.
“They don’t care about you. They just
like you once every four years — get your vote and then they say: ‘Bye,
bye!'” he said of the Democrats.
Trump has been faulted for largely
ignoring the black community during his campaign, and bypassing
appearances before black churches and organizations in favor of rowdy,
largely white rallies.
But in Detroit, he extolled African
Americans’ contributions to America and the moralizing force of the
country’s black churches.
“I am here today to listen to your
message and I hope my presence here will also help your voice to reach
new audiences in our country,” he said.
“Our nation is too divided. We talk past
each other, not to each other and those who seek office do not do
enough to step into the community and learn what is going on,” he said.
“I’m here today to learn so we can
together remedy injustice in any form and so that we can also remedy
economics so that the African-American community can benefit
economically through jobs and income and so many other different ways.
“Our political system has failed the
people and works only to enrich itself. I want to reform that system so
that it works for you, everybody in this room,” he said.
– Detroit –
The African-American electorate traditionally leans heavily Democratic.
In 2012, about 93 percent of black
voters backed Obama — an overwhelming enthusiasm that Clinton appears to
have kept alive, taking 90 percent of the black vote in her primary
contest against Bernie Sanders.
Detroit has the highest percentage of black residents — more than 80 percent — of any large American city.
Many neighborhoods have been hollowed
out by decades of “white flight,” in which Caucasian families left
downtown and midtown for more affluent suburbs.
“I fully understand that the
African-American community has suffered from discrimination and that
there are many wrongs that must still be made right. They will be made
right. I want to make this city the economic envy of the world,” Trump
said.
Punch
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