Trump’s Support Among Black Men Nearly Double Since November
Charlie Kirk Staff
02/14/2025

In what is a catastrophe for Democrats as they look to rebuild their crumbling party a new poll shows that President Donald Trump is still growing his support among black male voters.
The most recent National Voter Trend (NVT) survey showed that 42 percent of black male voters approve of the job the president is doing which is close to double the support among that demographic that he had in the 2024 presidential election.
Cygnal President Brent Buchanan said that the numbers show that President Trump is attracting working class voters of all backgrounds.
“Throughout the election, we highlighted just how far out of touch Democrats had become with the American public, and now after Trump’s victory and rapid action on his campaign promises, it’s clear they haven’t learned much,” he said.
“Take the ticked-off, young, diverse, working-class voters that propelled Trump to the White House for example. They were a key constituency that gave Trump an edge over Harris as white voters stayed flat in their margin for Trump,” he said.
Democrats are bleeding support among groups that are key to the Party’ success as the poll showed only 40 percent of black males support Congressional Democrats while 54 percent have an unfavorable opinion.
But Congressional Republicans are almost even with 47 percent favorability among the demographic versus 48 percent have an unfavorable opinion.
“Swing voters are plus seven percent in support of Trump’s efforts, led by Elon Musk, to right-size the federal government, and swing voters are plus 29 percent in support of the Trump administration’s actions on illegal immigration,” John Rogers, Cygnal’s Director of Client Strategy, said. “In comparison, Congressional Democrats are rudderless and unpopular, with a net image of negative 14 (40% favorable/54% unfavorable) among all voters.”
The poll also found that inflation is the top concern for 32 percent of voters and that voters prefer merit-based hiring to Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, including 55 percent of Hispanics and 41 percent of Democrats.