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Weird. A journalist talks to some people who *didn’t* vote for Trump.

Weird. A journalist talks to some people who didn’t vote for Trump.

by digby

Naturally, it’s a Canadian journalist, Daniel Dale, who writes for the Toronto Star:

A struggling post-industrial town. A Christian factory worker praying “constantly” for Donald Trump. Ernarda Davis, 65, is the kind of person Trump vowed to help, living in the kind of place Trump vowed to heal, and she wants badly for her president to succeed.

You’ve heard this kind of story before. Except people who look like Davis don’t usually qualify for 2017 articles about how voters are feeling about Trump.

She is black.

And when she was asked in Petersburg, Va., last weekend how Trump is doing so far, she curved her fingers into a rigid circle.

Zero.

“He needs to get hate out of his heart and open his eyes. And that might help,” she said. “Get hate out of his heart, open his eyes, and see what’s going on.”

The U.S. media narrative of the past year has been dominated by accounts of white Trump voters standing by their man no matter what they hear on the news. Their unyielding loyalty is important. But also noteworthy is Trump’s inability to earn even the fleeting honeymoon support of just about anyone who didn’t vote for him.

No group is so fiercely opposed to Trump as African Americans, a group he had promised to make a top priority.

I know it’s shocking to hear from average Americans who didn’t vote for Trump. If you watch the mainstream news you hear plenty of elite disdain but you never hear from the people. All you see on television are older white people who tell the reporters that while they wish he wouldn’t tweet so much there is nothing that he has done or could ever do to change their minds about him. They have always been a minority of the public and that minority is getting smaller all the time. It’s nice to hear from some of that huge majority for a change.

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