Trump Makes Republican Convention Whiter Than Usual, Some Say By Tatyana Hopkins

July 22, 2016

Trump Makes Republican Convention Whiter Than Usual, Some Say
By Tatyana Hopkins

colin powell
Former Secretary of State Colin Powell told the New York Times that he wasn't going to the Republican National Convention and wasn't even watching it on TV.

Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from the Howard University News Service

CLEVELAND (TriceEdneyWire.com) - Republican National Conventions are routinely mostly White.  This year’s, however, was remarkably so, particularly according to the African-American Republicans, some who complained to the media and their party.

If anything, this year, the party bash was most notable for prominent Black Republicans who aren’t here.

Missing is a long list of Black Republican stalwarts – former Secretary of State Colin Powell; former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice; South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott; Utah Congresswoman Mia Love; former Oklahoma Congressman J.C. Watts; former Education Secretary Rod Paige; former Secretary of Housing and Urban Affairs Alphonso Jackson; and a long list of Black state and municipal office holders.

Many were turned off by Trump and statements he has made about Mexicans, Muslims and others that even members of his party called racist.

Love told one newspaper she didn’t come because she didn’t see a benefit to her state. Powell told the New York Times he wasn’t even watching the convention on television.

One bit of news that has caused the convention some embarrassment is the lack of Black delegates to the convention.

Telly Lovelace, the Republican Party’s national director for African-American Initiatives and Media, sent an email to reporters outlining the diversity of delegates at the party’s convention. The total number of African-American delegates was 18 out of 2,472 delegates. That figure represents less than 1 percent of total delegates.

In 2004, by comparison, the number of Black delegates at the convention was 7 percent, according to the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies, a Washington, D.C.-based public policy organization that produces research on Black electoral politics.

In an interview here at the convention, Lovelace said that unofficially those numbers have changed, but he didn’t have any new figures.

“We’ll be releasing the official numbers soon,” said Lovelace, who noted that he is the only African-American at the RNC headquarters.

Despite the statistics that show Black voters are turned off by Trump and the absence of so many prominent Black Republicans, Lovelace said the party’s Black engagement is better than it was in 2014.

“We need to build a relationship with the [Black] community,” he said, which he was hired to do.

Lovelace was previously the managing director of IR Media LLC, an African-American owned Washington-based communications firm founded by Jarvis Stewart, former chief of staff to former Rep. Harold Ford (D-Tenn).

His job is to make the Republican Party seem like a viable option to African-American voters. His hiring followed an exodus of Black staffers. The entire Black outreach staff at the RNC left their positions between October and April.

Lovelace said the well-publicized friction between the Republican Party and the Trump campaign is improving.

“We’re beginning to have that merge between the RNC and the Trump campaign,” said Lovelace.

The RNC will continue to hire black staffers, implement a program that will allow the RNC and state Republican chapters to engage with historically Black colleges and universities and will reach out to the Black community using a wide range of media on issues important to them, he said.

He concluded, “We’re taking a step in the right direction.”