Sen. Tim Scott (R-SC) has been hard at work trying to get former President Donald Trump to choose him as his Vice Presidential pick. The South Carolina Senator spent the last several months showering Trump with praise and making a case that Black voters should side with the Republican presidential nominee.
While on Fox News on Thursday night, Scott reiterated one of his bolder claims: That Black Americans and other minority groups were βbetter off under Trump.β
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βWhy are African Americans, Hispanics, Asians, Republicans, Men women all looking at Donald trump with new eyes? It is simple,β said Scott. βWe were better off under Trump. Economically, the lowest unemployment rates for all racial demographics.β
Unfortunately for Scott, opinion polls and unemployment numbers are readily available on the internet.
As The Root pointed out when allies of the President started circulating fake A.I. photos of Trump with all of his Black friends, the President remains unpopular with Black voters. Support for Biden has decreased somewhat among Black voters, but thereβs no evidence that thereβs a mass exodus to Trump land underway.
A January USA Today/Suffolk found that about 83 percentΒ of Black voters thought the legal actions against Trump were βappropriate. And only 12 percent of Black voters supported Trump, which was the exact percentage of Black support that exit polls showed in 2020. So the idea that βallβ African Americans are looking at Trump βwith new eyesβ isnβt exactly accurate.
Unemployment numbers are where things veer into the straight-up falsehood territory.
In fact, Black unemployment hit an all-time high under the Trump presidency, peaking at around 16.8 percent in May 2020. Black unemployment hit an all-time low of under 5 percent last year under the Biden administration.
While Trump canβt be entirely blamed for the economic turmoil caused by a global pandemic, his campaign also canβt claim credit for fictitious unemployment numbers.
If we want to be generous and assume that Scott was referring to the overall unemployment rate, he would still be wrong. According to the U.S. Department of Commerce, the overall unemployment rate hit 3.4 percent last year β the lowest itβs been in over 5o years.
Thereβs certainly more to get into with this interview, but the Trump campaign and his surrogatesβ efforts to paint him as the patron saint of Black people is falling a bit flat.
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