Donald Trump's Win Wasn't About Racism
Katrina Trinko / @KatrinaTrinko / November 09, 2016 /
http://tinyurl.com/zquvqox
Already,
liberals are trying to
push the narrative that Donald Trump's win was
propelled by racist Americans.
"This is a candidate who ran on a clearly racist message, attracting people with clearly racist views. And he won," wrote Vox's German Lopez.
"This was a white-lash against a changing country," said CNN's Van Jones. "It was white-lash against a black president in part."
New York Times contributor Roxane Gay wrote about being "stunned" by the results: "I was confident, not only because of who Mrs. Clinton is. I was confident because I thought there were more Americans who believe in progress and equality than there were Americans who were racist, xenophobic, misogynistic, and homophobic."
But the facts show otherwise.
"Trump performed stronger among black and Hispanic voters than Mitt Romney did as the Republican nominee in 2012, according to NBC exit polls," NBC News reported.
"On average,
the counties that voted for Obama twice and then flipped to support Trump were 81 percent white," reported The Washington Post, making it almost certain some of Trump's white voters were people who had voted for President Barack Obama—not exactly the hallmark trait of a racist.
As a New York Magazine headline put it:
"Trump Won a Lot of White Working-Class Voters Who Backed Obama."...
...Looking at the exit polls posted by CNN, there are many
policy reasons why
59 million Americans voted for Trump, including:
56 percent of voters who saw the Supreme Court nominations as "the most important factor" supported Trump.
64 percent of voters who thought immigration was the "most important issue" voted for Trump, as did
86 percent of those who want a wall built on the U.S.-Mexico border.
83 percent of voters who felt Obamacare "went too far" supported Trump.
57 percent of those who viewed terrorism as the top issue backed Trump, as did
85 percent of those who thought the fight against ISIS was going "very badly."
73 percent of voters who felt the "government [is] doing too much" went for Trump.
...