Credit: Courtesy of NNPA

For many African Americans, Trumpโ€™s victory felt like an isolating moment, a reaffirmation of what theyโ€™ve long suspected: their allies were never permanent.

Texas Democratic Rep. Jasmine Crockettโ€™s words mirrored Shirley Chisholmโ€™s groundbreaking observation decades ago: โ€œOf the two handicaps, being Black is much less of a handicap than being a female.โ€ Crockettโ€™s reflection on Donald Trumpโ€™s resounding victory over Vice President Kamala Harris pointed to what many saw as a dissonance between the candidate and the countryโ€™s decision. Crockett highlighted Harrisโ€™s qualifications, intelligence, and kindness compared to Trump, yet acknowledged the publicโ€™s apparent preference for fear over progress. โ€œAs I said many times on the trail, this election was more about us and what it is that we wanted for our futureโ€ฆ and well PROJECT 2025 is loading,โ€ she warned, referencing the former presidentโ€™s sweeping agenda.

For many African Americans, Trumpโ€™s victory felt like an isolating moment, a reaffirmation of what theyโ€™ve long suspected: their allies were never permanent. Bishop Talbert Swan put it bluntly on social media: โ€œThere is no Black/brown coalitionโ€ฆLatinos voted on the side of white supremacy. Weโ€™re in this by ourselves.โ€ Swanโ€™s words echo the sentiments of many Black voters who watched as Latino support for Trump surged, even as his platform targeted marginalized communities. Meanwhile, Black voters were again held to their high standard of loyalty to the Democratic Party, only to feel abandoned as alliances dissolved and communities prioritized their own survival.

โ€œBlack people are tired,โ€ shared journalist Kathia Woods on Let It Be Known, the Black Press of Americaโ€™s daily news broadcast. This sentiment of exhaustion has been echoed across social media, as Washington Informer journalist Anthony Tilghman tweeted an arresting graphic illustrating Black Americansโ€™ sense of isolation: โ€œThis presidential race highlights the significant influence of race on the election outcome,โ€ Tilghman wrote. โ€œA majority of white women and men expressed reluctance towards having another Black president in office, regardless of the individualโ€™s qualifications.โ€

Public figures sounded their own alarms on the social media landscape. Cardi B took to Instagram, bluntly posting: โ€œI hate yaโ€™ll bad,โ€ in a pointed message to Trump voters. Justice correspondent Elie Mystal offered a sobering perspective: โ€œBlack people are relatively well prepared for whatโ€™s about to happen because itโ€™s happened to us before. America has done this to us before.โ€

The stakes stretch further than any one individualโ€™s leadership, with significant consequences predicted for American institutions. Actor Wendell Pierce, reflecting on Trumpโ€™s influence on the Supreme Court, tweeted, โ€œThe Supreme Court will be changed for a generationโ€ฆ Iโ€™ll never see a moderate court again in my lifetime.โ€ For others, Yvette Nicole Brown captured the sentiment that the rest of the country may now begin to feel what Black communities have long endured. โ€œThe rest of you are about to be shocked by how America treats you when it doesnโ€™t care about youโ€ฆ The find out phase has begun,โ€ she posted.

Across demographics, voting trends highlighted a widening rift as each non-Black group increased their support for Trump. โ€œWhen we say Black people have no permanent alliesโ€ฆ we mean Black people have no permanent allies,โ€ noted one commenter, underscoring a stark double standard: the willingness to elect a convicted felon, with seemingly little regard for qualifications or integrity.

The sense of betrayal was palpable in many reflections. Elie Mystal captured this frustration, stating, โ€œWatching Latinos chase model minority status has never sat well with Black people, but this is a wound the Black community wonโ€™t soon forget.โ€ The solidarity once hoped for among marginalized groups seems distant, fractured along lines of race, ideology, and self-interest.

Meanwhile, University of South Carolina Professor Sueanna Smith weighed in on the structural underpinnings of this political moment, explaining, โ€œThere is a reason why educated people vote blue. What weโ€™re seeing is the uneducated population of America holding the rest of the country hostage. This is why thereโ€™s such a push to weaken education, ban books, and outlaw the teaching of Black history by the Republican Party.โ€

As Mystal aptly put it, โ€œOne thing I do worry about, is that the โ€˜solidarityโ€™ between โ€˜people of colorโ€™ has been significantly damaged. Black people have learned that all we have is each other.โ€

Stacy M. Brown is the NNPA Newswire senior national correspondent. I'm the co-author of Blind Faith: The Miraculous Journey of Lula Hardaway and her son, Stevie Wonder (Simon & Schuster) and Michael...