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Trump’s Affordability Crisis Hits Working Class Blacks Hard 

February 25, 2026

The article discusses rising unemployment rates among Black Americans, particularly Black women, during the Trump administration, with Black unemployment at 7. 5% compared to the 4. 4% national average.

Who is affected

  • Black Americans (experiencing 7.5% unemployment rate)
  • Black men and Black women workers (facing rising unemployment)
  • Black women specifically (unemployment rose from 5.4% to 7.3%)
  • Approximately 300,000 displaced Black women
  • Black families losing economic stability
  • Small businesses in Black communities
  • Working-class voters
  • The U.S. economy overall

What action is being taken

  • Democrats are actively debating whether wealthy donor influence has resulted in watered-down economic platforms that inadequately address working-class needs.

Why it matters

  • This matters because Black unemployment represents more than statistics—it reflects families losing economic stability, reduced family-supporting jobs, decreased consumer spending, and increased pressure on Black community businesses. With Black Americans' buying power expected to exceed $2 trillion this year, elevated Black unemployment significantly impacts the broader U.S. economy. The widening unemployment gap demonstrates that structural policy choices, rather than inevitable economic forces, are leaving Black communities behind, perpetuating the historical pattern where Black workers are first fired during downturns and last rehired during recoveries.

What's next

  • No explicit next steps stated in the article

Read full article from source: The San Diego Voice & Viewpoint

Trump’s Affordability Crisis Hits Working Class Blacks Hard