Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Black members of Congress say reparations can’t wait in Trump’s ‘anti-Black’ America

    Viola Davis says Juilliard tried to mold her into a ‘perfect white actress’

    Trump’s $4.9 trillion tax plan targets Medicaid to offset costs

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • Black members of Congress say reparations can’t wait in Trump’s ‘anti-Black’ America
    • Trump’s $4.9 trillion tax plan targets Medicaid to offset costs
    • Viola Davis says Juilliard tried to mold her into a ‘perfect white actress’
    • Cassie’s first day on the witness stand sheds more light on ‘freak-offs’ 
    • Jordan Chiles’ first Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue cover is about self-expression
    • Menendez brothers resentenced to 50 years to life, eligible for parole
    • 5/13: CBS Evening News
    • 5/13: The Daily Report
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    BLK ALERTS
    • Home
      • About BLK ALERTS
        • Ethics and Corrections
        • Verification and Fact Checking
      • Anchors & Reporters
      • Archives
    • Community
      • Missing Persons
    • News
      • Submit a Tip
      • Black Media RSS
    • Politics
    • Opinion
      • Alex Haynes
      • Tiffanie Lanelle
      • The Unmuted Report
    • Sports
    • Entertainment
    • Donate!
    BLK ALERTS
    You are at:Home»Black Media Network»The Grio»Black LGBTQ+ voters could make the difference for Biden in 2024 election
    The Grio

    Black LGBTQ+ voters could make the difference for Biden in 2024 election

    thegrio.comBy thegrio.comApril 19, 2024No Comments8 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr Email Reddit
    Black LGBTQ+ voters could make the difference for Biden in 2024 election
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp Email

    “The Black and LGBTQ communities are both critical parts of the Biden-Harris coalition that played an important role in the president’s victory in 2020 and will be pivotal to victory this November,” said Florida state Sen. Shevrin Jones.

    Election poll data and turnout trends of Black voters and voters who identify as LGBTQ+ signal the significant sway the two groups could play in the outcome of the 2024 presidential contest.

    Black LGBTQ+ voters, who stand at the intersection of these two influential voting blocs, could be critical for President Joe Biden’s reelection.

    “The Black and LGBTQ communities are both critical parts of the Biden-Harris coalition that played an important role in the president’s victory in 2020 and will be pivotal to victory this November,” said Florida state Sen. Shevrin Jones, a member of the Biden-Harris 2024 national advisory board, and Florida’s first openly gay Black lawmaker.

    In addition to more Black Americans voting in 2020 than in any other presidential election since President Barack Obama’s reelection in 2012, voters who identified as LGBTQ+ in 2020, an increasingly growing population (at least 20 million), surged to its highest level (7% of the electorate) in U.S. history. President Biden won 92% of Black voters and 73% of LGBTQ+ voters in 2020.

    “That is not an insignificant number when the election was decided by tens of thousands of votes in just a handful of states,” Pennsylvania state Rep. Malcolm Kenyatta, who also sits on the Biden-Harris campaign’s national board of advisers, told theGrio.

    Understanding the crucial impact Black and LGBTQ+ voters could make in this year’s election, the Biden-Harris 2024 campaign got an early start by investing millions of dollars in ads targeting Black voters. Recently, the campaign launched OUT for Biden, a national organizing and engagement program to mobilize LGBTQ+ voters.

    Sen. Kamala Harris greets the crowd at the annual Pride Parade at Civic Center on Sunday, June 30, 2019, in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Gabrielle Lurie/The San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images)

    To date, several LGBTQ+ organizations have endorsed President Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris for a second term, including those led by Black LGBTQ+ leaders like Kelley Robinson, president of Human Rights Campaign, the nation’s largest LGBTQ+ civil rights organization. 

    “We get that when they come after reproductive rights, when they come after DEI, when they come after LGBTQ+ issues, it is an attempt to undermine the progress that we have made in this country,” Robinson told theGrio. “Not only over the last 10 years or 20 years but over the last 400 years.”

    Pointing to battleground states like Texas, Georgia, and Florida which are comprised of some of the nation’s largest Black populations and the highest surge in LGBTQ+ voters, the social justice advocate added, “Black LGBTQ+ voters get that better than any other community. We are a huge voting bloc.” 

    The TIME’s Most Influential People of 2024 honoree said HRC’s PAC endorsed Biden and Harris because the “contrast is clear” between them and the presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump.

    “The Biden-Harris administration has been the most pro-equality administration in U.S. history,” said Robinson, who noted President Biden’s signing of the Respect for Marriage Act – which enshrined same-sex marriage in federal statute for the first time in U.S. history – and the administration’s expansion of discrimination protections. 

    By contrast, she said, Trump has “led some of the most anti-LGBTQ+ efforts in American history,” including enforcing a military trans ban. Robinson also expressed dismay at Trump’s campaign promise to “back the hateful ban on trans people getting health care access, [and] promising to defund hospitals and criminalize doctors for providing medical care.”

    Kelley Robinson, President of the Human Rights Campaign, speaks during the Human Rights Campaign National Dinner at the Washington Convention Center on Oct. 14, 2023, in Washington, D.C. (Photo by ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS/AFP via Getty Images)

    According to polling, Black and LGBTQ+ voters overwhelmingly favor Biden over Trump. A March 2024 poll conducted by GLAAD found that 68% of lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans and queer voters prefer Biden compared to 15% who prefer Trump. Similarly, a New York Times/Sienna poll conducted in April showed that 69% of Black voters support Biden compared to 16% who support Trump. An additional 15% remained undecided. 

    Though support for the president and vice president among Black and LGBTQ voters eclipses those in support of Trump, the Biden-Harris reelection campaign is working to widen that gap through its mobilization efforts like OUT for Biden and its ad blitz directly speaking to Black voters.  

    Robinson said the rest of the work in mobilizing Black and LGBTQ+ voters rests on organizations like HRC. 

    “We have a responsibility to be out there bridging the gap for both letting them know that we see the things that matter to them most in their communities,” she said. “And sharing how this Biden-Harris administration is … pushing forward laws and policies that are going to make a difference.”

    Earl Fowlkes, president and CEO of the Center For Black Equity, a Black LGBTQ+ social justice organization that also endorsed the Biden-Harris campaign, said he personally speaks to voters, including his own younger nieces and nephews who are of voting age who have “come to [him] with some concerns.” 

    “I’ve been able to speak to them about … how important that when you compare it to the opposition, there is no comparison,” Fowlkes told theGrio. “Unfortunately, people are not getting the detailed information. They’re getting snippets of stuff through social media … they’ve drawn the conclusion based on a lack of evidence.” 

    The longtime political organizer said it is his “job” to “provide the evidence” to voters about the Biden-Harris record, including canceling $147 billion in student loans, a record low Black unemployment, and the rebuilding of America’s infrastructure, including bridges, highways, and roads.

    “[Biden] is not getting credit for those things. So we have to remind people of how bad things were during the last administration,” said Fowlkes. “If we don’t reelect the president and the vice president, we’re going to be fighting battles that we thought we had already fought and won.”

    President Joe Biden delivers the 2023 State of the Union address with Vice President Kamala Harris behind him. (Photo by Jacquelyn Martin-Pool/Getty Images)

    Kenyatta, who is Pennsylvania’s first openly gay lawmaker of color, said seeing “precedents 50 years old overturned” like Roe v. Wade has “certainly” not left him and others “feeling secure” about other precedents like Obergefell v. Hodges, the landmark U.S. Supreme Court that made same-sex marriage a constitutional right.

    The 33-year-old state lawmaker, who chairs President Biden’s advisory commission on advancing educational equity and economic opportunity for Black Americans, said Black and LGBTQ+ people have “been on the receiving end of bullying” by leaders like Trump. 

    “In lieu of being able to solve real problems for real people, Donald Trump has demonized folks,” said Kenyatta. “Joe Biden, on the other hand, has been an outspoken, unapologetic supporter of all Americans, irrespective of their sexual orientation.” 

    He also noted key Black LGBTQ+ appointments within the Biden-Harris administration and presidential campaign, including him, Sen. Jones and White House Press Secretary Karine-Jean-Pierre.

    The elected and grassroots leaders told theGrio that every day until Election Day will be critical to ensuring that Americans, particularly Black and LGBTQ+ voters, understand the stakes in this year’s election on Nov. 5.

    “It will take all hands on deck,” said Jones. “The contrast could not be more stark between President Biden, who has worked to bring down costs, create good, family-sustaining jobs, and keep our families safe — and Donald Trump who’s dead set on ripping away Americans’ freedoms, gutting Social Security and Medicare, and undoing the progress made in the last four years.”

    Fowlkes, who argued that get-out-the-vote campaigns and urging voters to vote early are going to “make the difference,” said, “The Black LGBTQ population once again is gonna step up to the plate and knock it out.”

    Recommended Stories

    • Black LGBTQ+ voters could make the difference for Biden in 2024 election
    • Members of Congress put pressure on Biden to grant protections for Haitians fleeing to the U.S.
    • Rep. Summer Lee’s primary could test progressive Democrats critical of Israel’s strikes in Gaza
    • US Rep. Meeks thinks Black voters will still support Biden amid Israel-Hamas conflict
    • Scene of Black students and Trump at Chick-fil-A may be more than meets the eye
    • Rev. Al Sharpton’s annual civil rights conference features address from Biden
    • Cornel West taps BLM organizer Melina Abdullah as VP pick for historic all-Black ticket
    • Critics warn Black voters about Trump’s ‘anti-white racism’ agenda if elected back into office

    The post Black LGBTQ+ voters could make the difference for Biden in 2024 election appeared first on TheGrio.

    2024 Elections Black Voters Elections featured lgbtq newswirelink Politics president joe biden
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Telegram Email
    Previous ArticleMembers of Congress put pressure on Biden to grant protections for Haitians fleeing to the U.S.
    Next Article Watch: Fitness for stay-at-home moms | Life Hacks
    thegrio.com

    Related Posts

    Black members of Congress say reparations can’t wait in Trump’s ‘anti-Black’ America

    May 14, 2025

    Trump’s $4.9 trillion tax plan targets Medicaid to offset costs

    May 14, 2025

    Viola Davis says Juilliard tried to mold her into a ‘perfect white actress’

    May 14, 2025
    Top Posts

    Breaking Down The Stereotype: Black People And Smoke Detectors

    July 12, 2024

    Black Men Build Launches ‘New Men Tour,’ A Safe Space For Black Men To Build Community

    June 25, 2024

    Angel Reese Makes History Becoming 1st Rookie To Achieve Seven Consecutive Double-Doubles

    June 24, 2024

    Trump’s New AG Nominee Pam Bondi Is An Election Denier Who Defended Kyle Rittenhouse. Surprised?

    November 22, 2024
    Don't Miss
    Headlines May 14, 2025By thegrio.com

    Black members of Congress say reparations can’t wait in Trump’s ‘anti-Black’ America

    WASHINGTON, DC – FEBRUARY 05: Sen. Cory Booker (D-NJ) speaks to supporters and employees of…

    Viola Davis says Juilliard tried to mold her into a ‘perfect white actress’

    Trump’s $4.9 trillion tax plan targets Medicaid to offset costs

    Cassie’s first day on the witness stand sheds more light on ‘freak-offs’ 

    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest BLKALERTS and a summary of our daily news.

    About Us
    About Us

    BLKALERTS reports breaking news, live coverage and community reporting for Black America. Our reporters are identified with BA identifiers. BLKALERTS publishes / aggregates additional news content from Black News providers.

    We're accepting new partnerships right now.

    Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube WhatsApp
    © 2025 BLKALERTS. Powered by UNMUTEDCO.
    • Home
    • Privacy Policy
    • Ethics and Corrections
    • Advertise

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    Ad Blocker Enabled!
    Ad Blocker Enabled!
    Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors. Please support us by disabling your Ad Blocker.