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Trump’s terrible, horrible, no good, very bad day with Black journalists

In a spectacle that could only be described as a train wreck in slow motion, Republican presidential hopeful Donald Trump found himself in hot water at the National Association of Black Journalists convention in Chicago. What was meant to be a charm offensive turned into an offensive charm, as Trump stumbled from one faux pas to another, leaving jaws dropped and eyebrows raised.

The fireworks began when Trump, in a move that can only be described as putting both feet firmly in his mouth, suggested that his Democratic rival Kamala Harris had been playing hide-and-seek with her racial identity. “She was always of Indian heritage,” Trump declared, apparently oblivious to the concept of mixed-race identities. “And then all of a sudden she made a turn, and she went – she became a Black person.”

As if questioning the Vice President’s racial identity wasn’t enough of a misstep, Trump then proceeded to stumble headlong into another controversy. In a moment that had the audience groaning and facepalming, he trotted out his claim that migrants were coming to steal “Black jobs.” When pressed on what exactly constituted a “Black job,” Trump’s response was as illuminating as a burned-out light bulb: “A Black job is anybody with a job.” One could almost hear the collective eye-roll from the crowd.

The cringe-fest didn’t stop there. Trump, apparently determined to dig himself into a hole deep enough to reach China, boasted that he had been “the best president for the Black population since Abraham Lincoln.” This grandiose claim was met with a chorus of groans that could have been mistaken for a fog horn convention.

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As if sensing that things weren’t going his way, Trump’s campaign abruptly cut the interview short, citing time constraints. It was a hasty retreat that left many wondering if the real constraint was Trump’s ability to keep his foot out of his mouth.

In the aftermath of this PR disaster, Republican strategist Whit Ayres summed up the general sentiment with the understatement of the year: “Not a wise move.” Indeed, as Trump continues his quest to court Black voters, this engagement seems to have backfired spectacularly, leaving his campaign with some serious damage control to do.

As the dust settles on this debacle, one thing is clear: Trump’s attempt to woo Black journalists ended up being less of a charm offensive and more of an offensive charm. It’s a day that will likely live in infamy in the annals of political missteps, leaving many to wonder: in the race for the presidency, has Trump just shot himself in the foot?

By The African Mirror

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