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GOP Policies Continue to Attract Black Democrats

Anyone who doubts that the Republican Party can attract black voters need only looks south to Louisiana.

At a conference held in Baton Rouge at the end of May, called @Large and aimed to attract black conservatives, a black Democrat member of the Louisiana state legislature, Elbert Guillary, announced that he was switching party and becoming a Republican.

Less than two weeks later, just up the road in Central City, Louisiana, black Democrat city councilman Ralph Washington – who attended this same @Large conference, made the same announcement – he's becoming a Republican.

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It's really not such a mystery. The mystery is why this is not happening more often.

I'm asked all the time why, when it is so clear that blacks are damaged by the left wing political agenda, why black voters so uniformly and consistently support candidates – Democrats – who advance this agenda.

My answer is that Republicans need to start acting more like the businesspeople they claim to be.

Any businessman that is convinced that his product is the best does not blame customers if they are not buying it. They double down on their efforts to understand these potential customers better and how to sell to them.

There needs to be more appreciation of the differences in the black population.

A Gallup poll done in 2011 showed that whereas 39 percent of whites say they are "very religious," 53 percent of blacks give the same response. A large percentage of "very religious" blacks are conservative and very different from blacks on the left who identify with the NAACP.

The @Large conference, where I was a speaker, was hosted by pastor C.L. Bryant, who tells his own story about leaving the left-wing black establishment in his new film Runaway Slave.

Bryant was president of the NAACP chapter in Garland, Texas. But his relationship with the NAACP soured when he refused to speak at a Planned Parenthood pro-abortion event.

His eyes began to open and see that his traditional Christian values – protecting the unborn, promoting traditional family, individual freedom and dignity – were out of whack with the political agenda blacks were automatically signing onto.

Elbert Guillary is now the first black Republican in the Louisiana state legislature since reconstruction.

Listen to him to understand why a conservative black leaves the Democrat Party.

He called the Democrats "the party of disappointment" and expressed disillusionment with Democrat policies on abortion, gun control, education, and immigration.

Democrats "have moved away from the traditional values of most Americans," he said. "Their policies have encouraged high teen birth rates, high school drop-out rates, high incarceration rates, and very high unemployment rates."

Or listen to now-Republican councilman Washington:

"…the value system I was raised up with, it really doesn't side with the Democrats….Some of the things I see happening today, with the entitlement programs, we have to change. We can't continue doing the things we are doing and survive."

Everyone understands that black American history is unique and complicated. But wallowing in the past is never an answer to anyone's personal challenges.

The challenge is clarifying right from wrong and acting accordingly going forward.

It has always seemed pretty clear to me that traditional values and personal freedom and responsibility must be the agenda moving forward for every American of every background.

Black Americans, like every American, need less taxes taken out of their paycheck, need to be able to choose where to send their child to school, need to be able to pick freely a health care plan that suits their needs, and need to save for retirement instead of paying payroll taxes.

You can't sum it up any better than what Elbert Guillary and Ralph Washington have said. There are many, many Guillarys and Washingtons out there in black America.

We need more efforts like the @Large conference to reach them.

Star Parker is an author and president of CURE, Center for Urban Renewal and Education. Contact her at www.urbancure.org

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