By now, no one should be surprised that Kanye West is a fan of President Donald Trump. Itโs been months since he first posted a selfie wearing a โMake America Great Againโ cap, so the surprise should be gone.
And yet, there we were again Monday morning, talking about West and his red baseball cap after his appearance on โSaturday Night Liveโ and his most recent remarks about repealing the 13th Amendment.
But for many African Americans, the deeper question for West โ or for anyone with melanin in their skin โ is why.
Why do you support Trump, given his offensive remarks, his silence on white nationalism, his rollbacks of Obama-era policies? What makes an African American put on a MAGA hat?
What in the world are these black folk thinking?
When I found out Trump would be at the Landers Center campaigning for Mississippi Senate hopeful Cindy Hyde-Smith, I decided to go find some African American Trump supporters and ask.
And thatโs how, in an election season punctuated by a bitter Senate battle for the Supreme Court, I found myself strolling into a โMake America Great Againโ rally on Tuesday afternoon.
Hereโs what I learned.
Get that money
No surprise, traffic was a mess on Church Road, with traffic backed up as early as 3 p.m. if not earlier. It was while I was stuck in traffic that I first saw some black folk sporting Trump gear.
They were selling it also.
I saw at least three tents at that intersection, all staffed by African Americans displaying popular Trump-themed shirts. โDrain The Swamp!โ and โLock Her Up!โ shirts were among the sure sellers.
I was focused on parking and getting checked in, so I didnโt stop to talk to them. Plus, they looked busy. Iโll never know where they stand on Trump or his polices, but I couldnโt help believing that these vendors would be selling shirts regardless of the event.
Whether itโs Trump 2020 or MLK50, the process is the same: put the design on the shirt, make the shirt, sell the shirt. Repeat. Itโs just business.
At the end of this sweaty October day, it was obvious that Trump represented a business opportunity for these entrepreneurs โ and the hustle donโt stop for nobody. On this day at least, Donald Trump is simply good for business.
Trumpsโs Southaven MAGA Rally
Sights and sounds
Hereโs what you should understand about Donald Trump and his popularity in Red State America: Remember how America (or the world, for that matter) was captivated by Trumpโs predecessor, President Barack Obama? Remember Rev. Jesse Jackson crying when Obama was elected and how you felt Obama was going to get America back on the right track after eight years of George W. Bush?
Well, thatโs how Trump supporters feel about him. And it was palpable from the moment I walked into the Landers Center.
I didnโt feel threatened though โ not as an African American or as a member of the โfake news media.โ
But it was hard to conduct interviews, what with the 80โs-heavy playlist that was blasting through the arena.. The playlist included plenty of Lionel Richie, a couple of songs by Michael Jackson, and Rihannaโs โPlease Donโt Stop the Music.โ They even played the long album-version of Princeโs Purple Rain โ minus the violins. It wasnโt as heavy on country music as one would expect.
If youโre carrying around an image of angry Trump voters, well there was no anger in the building. They were too happy to welcome their conquering hero.
โA vote for Republicans is a vote for lower taxes, less regulation and more products made right here in the USA. Itโs a vote to reduce crime. Respect law enforcement and restore the rule of law. Itโs a vote for strong border safe communities and thriving families which you are.โ
โ President Trump in Southaven.
โItโs OK to make a profitโ
By 3:30 or so, after Iโd gotten checked in and cleared by the Secret Service, I made my way to the media area. It wasnโt until then that I learned that news media were confined to a very small area on the floor of the Landers Center. Despite me spotting a few specks of color in the then-sparse crowd, I was prohibited from leaving the media zone to go get interviews. That meant I had to wave people down and ask them to come chat with me.
One of those people was Colin Richmond, a Memphis native and staunch Republican since 2000.

โIโm here to let the president know that we love him. We support him. Weโre praying for him,โ said Richmond, 49. โAnd that he is delivering on the promises he made during the campaign. And we just want to let them know weโre here for him.โ
Like many Republicans, Richmond likes Trumpโs pro-business policies.
โI think a rising tide lifts all boats,โ Richmond said. โAnd the President is for-all Americans โfor African Americans, Hispanic Americans, Latino Americans, heโs for all Americans.
โIโm a business developer and employees, when they look at their paychecks, theyโre looking at more money on the bottom lines,โ he continued, referring to Trumpโs tax cuts. โAnd I donโt care who you are, that has to that has to resonate with you.โ
Richmondโs positions have put him at odds with his parentโs generation. โI have a have an uncle whoโs a radical civil rights activist. I love him dearly. Heโs my motherโs brother. But he is sincerely wrong,โ he said, without going into detail.
โI never considered myself a minority but yeah, I was born to a single mother,โ he added. โBut at the same time, I learned that if I buy a widget for 50 cents and sell it for a dollar, I make a profit. Itโs okay to make a profit. And I think a common misperception is that โprofitโ is a dirty word.
โPresident Trump is for unleashing the economic capabilities of this country.โ
โFor years you watched as your leaders apologized for America. Now you have a president who is standing up for America. We are standing up for your values.โ
โ Trump
Values voters
For Michael Stewart, the choice to register as a Republican was pretty simple โ and pretty straightforward.

โDemocrats werenโt representing my values the way I wanted them to,โ said Michael Stewart of Memphis. โTheyโre for gay marriage, open border immigration, taking away gun rights . . . and I donโt support none of that. So Republicans lined up with my values a little bit more.โ
A few minutes later, I spoke with Rev. Manuel Donis, a pastor who lives in Olive Branch. He joined the GOP in 2016 to support Ben Carson, but when Carsonโs bid ended, he switched. As a preacher in the Bible Belt, Donis checks off the same boxes many other evangelical voters do.
โI believe in supporting Israel,โ Donis said, wearing a MAGA hat and Trump T-shirt. โI also believe in Biblical marriage. And Iโm pro-life.โ
So what is it about Trump that he thinks most black folk are missing?
โThey need to come, pay attention and have an open mind,โ Donis said. โWeโve been close-minded. We believe one way and we just stay that way. I began to do research and broaden my mind to see the things that have been holding the black community back for years.
โItโs time for a change,โ Donis said. โWeโve been in this place for so long, itโs time to move on and do something different.โ
Donis thinks Trump is doing an โexcellent job,โ and believes that Americaโs booming economy will mean opportunity in the African American community โ especially people with felony convictions.
โThatโs one of the things Iโm concerned about is trying to help these men when they get back into society, is that they have a fair chance,โ said Donis, a prison chaplain. โSo I believe President Trump and his cabinet are going to make things happen to help men and women who are re-entering society to get a fair shake.โ
โA vote for โฆ Mike Espy is a vote for Chuck Schumer. Nancy Pelosi. And the legendary low IQ person Maxine Waters.โ
โ Trump
No offense, butโฆ
Nobody I spoke with denied that Trump says (and tweets) some outlandish things. But it wasnโt enough to drive them away.

โWhat drew me to Trump was his logical standpoint on politics and not getting caught up in being politically correct. He says it like it is, being blunt,โ said Kidron Taylor, a 21-year-old from Batesville, Miss. โYes, he says some rude, mean stuff sometimes, but when it comes down to the politics and his actions, it aligns more with what I believe in.โ
Taylor, who revealed he is biracial, is a strong supporter of Second Amendment rights and Trumpโs immigration policy.
โAt the end of the day, I prefer someone who says stuff I donโt like sometimes and just say whatโs on their mind than say, someone like Hillary (Clinton), whoโll say anything to make you feel good,โ he said. โThatโs someone I can trust more.โ
Stewart said that often African Americans are too sensitive, allowing emotions to override logic.
โBlacks are more emotionally driven than by logic,โ Stewart said. โDemocrats pull on your emotional strings. Iโm more driven by common sense. If it makes sense to me, then my logic is always going to overrule my emotions.โ
Which isnโt to say that thereโs blind allegiance.
โI donโt agree with everything he says,โ Donis stressed. โBut I like what he stands for. Iโm a pastor, so those Biblical issues are very important to me. I canโt stand up in front of my congregation and say, โWe need to be this wayโ and then do something else. Iโm not being truthful.โ
Where the ladies at?
If youโre wondering whether there were any African American women there, the answer is yes. But remember, I was confined and couldnโt just walk up to the handful of sisters I saw in the crowd.
I did flag down two University of Memphis students โ one African American, one white โ and neither were Trump supporters. At just 19, both said it was their first time coming โto anything politicalโ and for them, it was more of an academic exercise.
โIโm trying to be moderate and understand the way the right thinks and the way they interpret the things heโs going to say tonight,โ said Tia Marshall, an African American sociology major.
โI just wanted to see how different people interact with different beliefs and see where I stand on the political spectrum,โ added Tristan Scarborough, an anthropology major. โ
And like the college students they are, they took notes. One of Marshallโs notes said โHoly Trump Water.โ
โThere was one man outside who was selling โHoly Trump Water,โโ she said. โHe was saying that Trump had โblessedโ the water. I thought that was very interesting.โ
Both Marshall and Scarborough were too young to vote in 2016, but theyโre all in for the 2018 midterms.
โThis is the future of our country,โ Scarborough said. โThis is us. We need to not rely on our parentsโ views and start making our own.โ
โThis is so important for our age group,โ added Marshall. โThis is going to be our country pretty soon and we need to make sure we have a voice in how our country is run.โ











