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African American businessman: ‘Donald Trump is not a racist, guys’
Washing Post ^ | 4/16/16 | Vanessa Williams

Posted on 04/17/2016 12:17:57 AM PDT by Rufus Shinra

The National Diversity Coalition for Trump is not very large, but it is indeed diverse.

The group’s Web page features a technicolor photo gallery of men and women from many backgrounds: Vietnamese, Arab, Muslim, Indian, Turkish Cuban and Mexican American — even a Sikh man wearing a turban printed with Donald Trump’s signature slogan, “Make America Great Again.”

If such a group’s existence seems improbable given the ­Republican presidential front-runner’s attacks on undocumented immigrants and Muslims — and his deep unpopularity among women and minorities — Georgia businessman Bruce LeVell believes that is because people don’t really know the man.

LeVell is a black man on a mission to change what he thinks is an unfounded and unfair perception that Trump is racist. He dismisses accusations that Trump has exploited racial tensions. He is even trying to persuade other people of color to support Trump’s campaign for president. He sincerely believes, he said, that “Donald Trump is a really, really good guy.”

And on Monday, he and other members of the group he co-founded will hold a coming-out party at Trump headquarters in New York — with the candidate.

Simone Perry, a strategic partnership manager for Tea Party Patriots and a Ted Cruz supporter, says she believes Donald Trump’s rise is crippling the party’s efforts to attract more people of color. (Kevin D. Liles/For the Washington Post) Of those who view Trump unfavorably, LeVell said: “I swear, I don’t know where that’s coming from. This man is no more racist than Mickey Mouse is on the moon!”

LeVell, 52, faces a huge challenge, given that Trump’s favorability ratings among women and minorities are not only underwater — they’re on the ocean floor. According to a recent Washington Post-ABC News poll, 91 percent of African Americans and 81 percent of Hispanics have an unfavorable view of Trump. Among women, the figure is 75 percent.

[67 percent of Americans have an unfavorable opinion of Donald Trump]

Despite those numbers — as well as images of African American protesters being beaten and tossed out of his rallies — the New York billionaire has throughout his campaign boasted an eclectic collection of supporters who defend him on cable news and speak at his rallies.

And LeVell, who owns a custom jewelry company in suburban Atlanta, has amassed his own eclectic group of Trump boosters — 34, to be exact, according to the website.

The coalition includes such familiar names as Omarosa Manigault, perhaps the most famous graduate of Trump’s reality television show, “The Apprentice.” The group also includes Pastor Darrell Scott, a Cleveland minister whose plan to announce the endorsements of more than 100 black clergy members for Trump imploded following outrage from other black religious leaders.

Dahlys Hamilton is listed as the chairman of Hispanic Patriots for Trump. Recently she announced on her Facebook page, in all capital letters, “I’m getting off ‘Lyin’ Ted’s’ Cruz ship and boarding the Trump train!”

The coalition also includes individuals who claim to represent Asian Americans, Turkish Americans, American Indians, Sikh Americans and Muslim Americans.

“And I’m not being paid!” LeVell declared, a point he likes to make after a recent appearance on an urban radio station during which callers asked how much money he was getting to talk up Trump. “I make my own money. I have a five-star-rated business.”

LeVell said the group is not a political committee and will raise no money for Trump. Trump spokesman Hope Hicks confirmed that the group was created independently from the campaign. “They are not affiliated with the campaign,” she said, adding, “Mr. Trump is incredibly grateful for their support.”

LeVell was among those invited by Scott to the ill-fated endorsement event last fall in New York. During his visit to Trump Tower, LeVell said he saw he saw people of many races and ethnicities working in the billionaire’s headquarters, including several women in senior management positions. The imagery stuck with him.

“You can’t have all these folks in your campaign and your firm who are culturally diverse and say he’s a racist,” he said. “If you say he’s brash and rough around the edges, I agree with you totally. But I will stand in front of a freight train and defend that this man is nowhere near racist.”

He will do it in front of a crowd, too. After the New York trip, LeVell flew back to Georgia with Trump on the candidate’s private jet. At a rally that night in Macon, Trump called LeVell, a former Republican county chairman in Gwinnett County in suburban Atlanta, onto the stage. “Donald Trump is not a racist, guys,” LeVell assured the mostly white crowd.

In the past two election cycles, minority support for the Republican nominees dropped to near-record lows; 19 percent of voters of color cast ballots for Mitt Romney in 2012. Some GOP strategists predict that support will fall further if Trump is the nominee this year.

Simone Perry, a black tea party activist, says Trump’s rise is crippling the party’s efforts to attract more people of color.

“We can no longer claim to be the party of freedom when we nominate a fascist, and we can’t be the party of opportunity if we decide a racist can represent our values,” said Perry, strategic partnership manager for the Tea Party Patriots in Georgia.

Joseph Hunter, a black conservative blogger in Chicago, said he will not vote for Trump because of his rhetoric about Hispanic immigrants. Also, Trump isn’t a conservative, he said. “He’s a liberal!”

Baltimore-area businessman Chandhok Jasdip Singh is a member of LeVell’s coalition and the head of Sikh Americans for Trump. His friend Sajid Tarar started Muslim Americans for Trump. They say that Trump’s comments on immigrants and Muslims have been distorted to make him appear xenophobic; Trump just wants to keep the country safe, a goal they share.

Singh, 47, voted for the Republican nominees in 2008 and 2012. He said he chose to come to the United States from India 30 years ago to study for a business degree because he thought it was the greatest country in the world. But he fears it has lost its swagger on the world stage. “Make America Great Again” resonated with him so much so that he wears a turban bearing those words.

Last month, Singh and Tarar went to a Trump rally in Cleveland. It was two days after a rally in Chicago had been canceled and violent clashes with protesters had dominated the news. Singh said he was alarmed by the images and wanted to see for himself what it was like at a Trump rally.

“I was a little nervous,” he admitted. “I was the only person wearing a turban. There were 10,000 people there, and you wouldn’t believe the kind of support and love we got from his supporters. Not a single person asked us what the hell were we doing there. There was nothing racial going on there.”

Tarar said selling Trump to other Muslims has been a challenge.

“In the beginning it was completely no. People looked at me like I’ve done something wrong, like I’m a traitor against Islam and Muslims,” he said. Then, “I try to explain it to them. He has never mentioned American Muslims. So they say they will think about it.”

Singh explained it this way: “It’s like if you go to a wedding and they announce that the buffet is open, and everybody waits for somebody to go first and then they follow. Nobody wants to be the first one to pick up a plate. People waited for me and my business partner to come out in support of Trump, and now a lot of people are following.”


TOPICS: Government; Politics/Elections; US: New York
KEYWORDS: 2016election; 2016elections; brucelevell; diversity; election2016; newyork; trump; trumpracist
This must throw the pundents for a loop who are still calling Trump a racists. I'm sure they are just telling themselves that people aren't "real" minorities. But I found it interesting that even a Sikh man was pushing for Trump. He said he went to a Trump rally, after the Chicago one was shut down, to see if there really was any racism or violence at the rallies. He said that even though he was the only man wearing a turbin, no one said anything about it and were all just glad he was there.

I've watched dozens of Trump rallies this year, and I've never seen so much energy, hope and love in a single room for any political candidate in my life. They aren't just there for Trump, they are there because they love our country and want to see it survive.

1 posted on 04/17/2016 12:17:57 AM PDT by Rufus Shinra
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To: Rufus Shinra

I agree 100%.

Trump has that something, which has been missing from every candidate to emerge from the GOP in the last generation.

Everyone gets it, who actually listens to him. He is pro-American, he is pro-American jobs, and he wants to return America to the greatness which it had before.

Trump is the ONLY PERSON anywhere, who gets it. Everyone else is saying things to please their donors.

Trump is saying things, because they are RIGHT.

Trump is the only person, who gets it at the moment. Everyone is ganging up on him, but he is 100% right.

Go Donald.


2 posted on 04/17/2016 12:40:17 AM PDT by cba123 (http://www.census.gov/foreign-trade/balance/c5700.html)
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To: cba123; exit82; Trumpinator; onyx; Lazamataz

Starting a thread where we can list what we did that day to help trump win would be great.

ONE knock on a door. TWO phone calls. Changed a friend or family member’s mind.

Donald has so many people volunteering that after THREE emails, a few phone calls, help from an insider, I STILL haven’t been contacted.

So I actually LEFT the house and knocked on 4 doors.

Neighbors I know well. A few I don’t know at all.

one REALLY didn’t like Trump. oh well.

2 said they would get out to vote for him Tuesday.

One said he had reservations but always liked me so he would vote for Trump :)

That was John, the mayor of the block lol

None of us want to be laying in our beds, after the convention and ESPECIALLY after the generals, wondering if there was one more thing we could have done to help him win.

I know I don’t.

I just wish I could get a pitch outline from the Trump people on what best to say at the door or on the phone.


3 posted on 04/17/2016 1:01:06 AM PDT by dp0622 (The only thing an upper crust conservative hates more than a liberal is a middle class conservative)
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To: dp0622; Rufus Shinra

Just including you in this ping list, as well.

:D


4 posted on 04/17/2016 1:07:16 AM PDT by cba123 (http://www.census.gov/foreign-trade/balance/c5700.html)
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To: cba123

Yes, he does have thay special “something” and it attracts voters from every wall of life.

For me it was him being the first person running for this office speaking so honestly and at a common man level, that I immediately started listening.

Then, the things he was saying we’re just common sense...yet we never hear anything like this from politicians.

I’ve been in sales a long time and can tell when a man is delivering a rehearsed speech or speaking truthfully. And Donald Trump is speaking 100% from his heart, and his own beliefs, and is doing so from a desire to help our country and it’s people.


5 posted on 04/17/2016 1:08:30 AM PDT by Rufus Shinra (Voting in my first primary in PA on April 26th!)
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To: Rufus Shinra
I'm personally sick and tired of reading about how unpopular Trump is, according to the latest poll. This man has been attacked unmercifully, not only from a biased media (which attacks anyone who isn't a flaming liberal) but from members of his own party! They savage him daily for months on end and are suddenly complaining that his negatives are high? Instead of standing with him and defending him, they crawl to the back like the cowards they are and lob bombs at him.

My son is only 15, but he's already astute enough to recognize that our country is going to hell in a hand-basket. He would never consider serving our country under Obama, but he was willing to fight for President Trump (he's in NY on a trip right now and posted pictures he took of Trump Towers). My son already told me that if Hillary or Bernie win, he will leave our country at 18 years old and go to Israel. He has no compunction about serving in their military, if needed.

Honestly, I don't blame him.

6 posted on 04/17/2016 1:50:42 AM PDT by TheWriterTX (Trust not in earthly princes....)
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To: Rufus Shinra
Donald Trump has been a known commodity for over 30 years, maybe close to 40 years now.

At no point in that time has DT been called a racist that I know of. Now all of a sudden, he is a racist. Come on now.

7 posted on 04/17/2016 1:55:05 AM PDT by PallMal
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To: dp0622

All I can say, is that I am very proud of the Freeper you have turned out to be, dp0622.

Well done.


8 posted on 04/17/2016 3:18:21 AM PDT by exit82 ("The Taliban is on the inside of the building" E. Nordstrom 10-10-12)
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To: Rufus Shinra; Jim Robinson; AnAmericanMother; Apple Pan Dowdy; bfh333; Blueflag; Broker; clee1; ...

I know Bruce LeVell personally. I’ve been to his jewelry store, bought presents for my wife and talked politics with him there, and at other events.

Yesterday at the Georgia 6th Congressional District Republican convention, one of the nominating committee’s candidates was rejected and Bruce elected a delegate to the national Republican convention in Cleveland.

Some history - many of you will remember a highly publicized Trump meeting with 100 Black Pastors for last Fall. Bruce was the guy who introduced Trump to the room. I’ve seen Bruce’s pictures on his phone from that event and the related trip, on Trump’s plane, at Trump HQ in NYC, etc. Bruce is also a former chairman of the Gwinnett County GOP, Gwinnett being the second most populous of county in the state.

Pinging the big guy because I think he might find this interesting, as well as the GA ping list.

FWIW


9 posted on 04/17/2016 3:25:16 AM PDT by FreedomPoster (Islam delenda est)
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To: exit82

Like I always say, praise from one of the beginning FReeers is always high praise!!


10 posted on 04/17/2016 3:44:07 AM PDT by dp0622 (The only thing an upper crust conservative hates more than a liberal is a middle class conservative)
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To: dp0622

Thanks for your efforts!


11 posted on 04/17/2016 5:07:14 AM PDT by nclaurel
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To: nclaurel
It's not purely selfless. I want a great country for my nephews and nieces too!! :)

I appreciate it though.

five more doors today. I get nauseous walking up the steps lol

12 posted on 04/17/2016 5:12:23 AM PDT by dp0622 (The only thing an upper crust conservative hates more than a liberal is a middle class conservative)
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To: Rufus Shinra
If such a group’s existence seems improbable given the ­Republican presidential front-runner’s attacks on undocumented immigrants and Muslims

non sequitur.

13 posted on 04/17/2016 5:29:06 AM PDT by Jim Noble (Ryan never could have outfought Trump. I never knew, until this day, that it was Romney all along.)
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