With more than half of Latino men and white women voting to elect Donald Trump, polls show the repercussions for African Americans were ignored. 

While many white women, surrendering their reproductive rights, and Latino men, sealing the fate of many of their brethren who will be ostracized, deported, voted for Trump, experts note and history has revealed citizens face the brunt of that decision. 

With racist threats and promises already made by the president-elect, potential resurgence of sundown towns, unchecked racist policing, and policies that threaten to let Americaโ€™s ugliest prejudices flourish once more.

Trumpโ€™s proposed and devastating agenda includes dismantling the Department of Justiceโ€™s (DOJ) civil rights division and ending federal oversight that has long been essential for marginalized communities. 

Further, Trump has pledged to grant police complete immunity in cases involving unarmed citizens, signaling a return to a climate where officers can act without accountability. 

For many, this agenda is not only a step backward โ€” it is a revival of an era when Black Americans had to tread carefully in towns across America to avoid violence or worse.

Sundown Towns: A Legacy Closer Than Expected

Historically, โ€œsundown townsโ€ were communities where Black Americans were told to leave by sunset or face violent consequences. 

Though often associated with the Jim Crow South, these towns spanned the entire country, from coast to coast, leaving their mark in states not far from Washington, D.C. 

In Levittown, Pennsylvania, for instance, Black families were explicitly barred from purchasing homes when a town was developed in the 1950s โ€” a policy reflective of racial exclusion in other nearby communities.ย 

Similarly, Elkton, Maryland, located less than two hours from D.C., held an unspoken โ€œno-goโ€ rule for Black travelers after dark, a reminder of the racial divide near the nationโ€™s capital.

Further examples dot the region. Vienna, Virginia, although not historically labeled a sundown town, had neighborhoods with restrictive covenants excluding Black residents, and Greenwood, Delaware, similarly held an exclusionary legacy through much of the 20th century. Such towns, both near and far, stand as reminders that racial hostility is not confined to distant history or faraway places.

In Ohio, Parrysville and New Lebanon carry lingering reputations for exclusion, while Martinsville, Indiana, a required pass-through town for students heading to Indiana University, is marked by Confederate flags and reminders of a time when Black residents were warned to stay away. 

In Kentucky, research indicates that at least 60 towns continue to be identified as sundown towns, with Corbin and Salisbury, North Carolina retaining incredibly hostile attitudes toward Black residents and travelers. 

In Vidor, Texas โ€” another notorious sundown town โ€” Confederate flags and racially exclusive policies create an environment where Black visitors know they are unwelcome.

Driving While Black: An Ongoing Risk

The legacy of sundown towns is alive in the experiences of Black Americans today, especially while traveling. 

The experience of Sheila Lettsome and her husband in 2019 serves as evidence that “driving while Black” is still a dangerous reality. Driving through a quiet Ohio town, police stopped the couple without reason. Despite having an updated registration, police officers asked where they were going and if they were โ€œlost.โ€ Sensing a silent threat, they quickly took the officerโ€™s โ€œsuggested routeโ€ out of town. Only later did they learn theyโ€™d crossed into a known sundown town โ€” a reminder that, in some places, Black travelers are still unsafe on the road.

Such incidents highlight the dangers Black Americans continue to face in areas with sundown legacies. 

Trumpโ€™s plan to grant police full immunity โ€” especially in cases involving unarmed citizens โ€” amplifies this threat. The proposed protections for police, combined with a dismantling of the DOJโ€™s civil rights division, effectively tell Black Americans that abuses could go unchecked and unpunished, making โ€œdriving while Blackโ€ an even greater risk.

Trump’s Campaign Rallies: A Signal to ‘Sundown America

Trumpโ€™s campaign rallies themselves sent alarms across Black communities. Choosing to hold events in towns known for racial exclusion and Ku Klux Klan activity, such as Howell, Michigan, and Cullman, Alabama, many civil rights advocates argue these stops are intentional dog whistles. 

Cullman, a town where for decades Black visitors were warned to โ€œnot let the sun set on their heads,โ€ hosted a Trump rally โ€” a move some called a loud signal to his far-right base.

In Howell, which has a history of KKK activity, videos from the rally showed Black attendees facing verbal and physical harassment, reinforcing the racial tensions that sundown towns once weaponized to intimidate. 

At the time, Vice President Kamala Harrisโ€™ campaign described these venues as a โ€œdeliberate choice,โ€ intended to rally extremist supporters and rekindle painful reminders of Americaโ€™s past racial hostilities.

A Future Without Civil Rights Protections

The Trump agenda is not limited to rhetoric or rally locations; his proposal to eliminate the DOJโ€™s civil rights division would strip away vital protections for Black communities. 

The DOJ has long served as a backstop for holding law enforcement accountable and defending against housing, employment, and voting discrimination. Without it, Black Americans are left without crucial federal support, leaving them exposed to abuses and discrimination that could escalate under Trumpโ€™s immunity plan for police.

Granting complete immunity to police who shoot unarmed citizens creates an environment in which law enforcement could operate without consequences, giving Black communities fewer options to contest misconduct or violence. 

This vision threatens to turn back the clock to an era where sundown towns enforced racial exclusion with impunity. Trumpโ€™s campaign promises, coupled with his choice of rally venues, suggest that his second term could usher in a โ€œsundown Americaโ€ โ€” a country where Black citizens must once again live with constant vigilance, mindful of the dangers of traveling, living, or simply existing freely.

An Ominous Roadmap for Black America

For Black Americans, Trumpโ€™s campaign rallies, rhetoric, and policies form a chilling roadmap toward a society that looks disturbingly like the days of Jim Crow. 

As historian James Loewen, author of โ€œSundown Towns: A Hidden Dimension of American Racism,โ€ warned, the greatest mistake is to assume sundown towns are relics of the past. โ€œDriving while Blackโ€ in these communities often means navigating unspoken rules, risking dangerous encounters, and carrying a constant awareness of hostile environments.

โ€œSometimes the dog whistle actually works, loudly spoken,โ€ remarked Professor Joyce Alene Vance. 

For Black Americans, the threat of sundown towns and Trumpโ€™s proposed rollback of civil rights protections cast a dark shadow. 

“Without the DOJโ€™s oversight and with broad police immunity, Black Americans could face a landscape where, once again, some towns remain dangerous to enter, let alone call home,” Sandra Allison, a defense lawyer in Alabama, stated.

Stacy M. Brown is a senior writer for The Washington Informer and the senior national correspondent for the Black Press of America. Stacy has more than 25 years of journalism experience and has authored...

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4 Comments

    1. Who is US….. Looks to me like this was his plan all along. Watch “Bad Faith”….. People better understand that Black people are NOT their ancestors……LOL

  1. Thanks for your article, Stacy. The handwriting is on the wall again: “Mene Mene Tekel Upharsin.” Meanwhile, we have been commanded “not to fear anything.” God will handle oppression, which He hates. We have seen the example of how we must behave in the face of injustice in our Lord’s behavior. At this point, and under the current circumstances, it would be unwise for oppressed groups to bite the bullets that are being tossed before them, even if all of the sparse gains toward equality are lost. We must keep silent, and nurture our faith for focus, balance, and strength. We have been commanded to “be sober and watch.” That is our charge now.

    The political sentiment feels as though many in our midst have no knowledge of how Native Americans, Black Americans, and Mexicans have endured genocide, slavery, and unimaginable cruelty. The sad truth is that we are naive, if we expect the proud progeny of past perpetrators in history to behave differently? Their values have been passed on to them, just as the values that each of us holds. Instead, of atoning for their ancestors, they might do their best to out-do their ancestors’ cruelty.

    Therefore, we must trust God’s omniscience, omnipresence, and sovereignty to exact His justice. If we are obedient to God’s commands, and remember that there are far more than ten commands, He will supply what we need to get us through these last days.

    Sit back and watch the spectacle. In fact, we see in scripture that “God laughs at the wicked, because he knows what is to come.” All oppressed people must learn to stare evil straight in the eye, without fear, and laugh, too. We must wait patiently for God to impose His justice. Happy New Year!

  2. It’s stories like this that put nothing but hate out there. This stuff has been happening forever. Stop blaming it on Trump. The states need to come down on their communities doing this. Its apauling ANYONE Be subjected to this kind of behavior. I am 109% behind anyone that puts an end to this. As well as 100% behind the ones willing to stand up against any and all media outlets that push hate and promote fear. Trying to devide us further and further. If we all focus on the truth, which is if they keep us devided and focusing on each other…we wont come together and put them in their place. That they work for ALL of us, and need to start working, not making up crap that doesnt help the Americans they work for.
    Remember….they work for us, not the other way around.

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