close
close

Black Atlanta hair salon owner says he’s lost business since Trump event

The owner of a Black Atlanta hair salon said Friday he lost customers after being misled into hosting a campaign event for former President Donald Trump.

On Wednesday, a day before Trump debated President Joe Biden on the CNN stage in Atlanta, the former president’s representatives hosted an event, the Black American Business Leader Barbershop Roundtable, at Rocky’s Barbershop, which included a call surprise phone call from Trump himself.

According to local media outlet 11 Alive, the number of customers visiting Rocky’s Barbershop has decreased since the campaign event.

Store owner Rocky Jones told the outlet in an article published Friday: “We received calls on Thursday. We’ve definitely gotten calls, negative reactions, angry people who don’t know me and I have to deal with that. »

Jones said he had “no involvement in politics” and added that he believed the event was meant to be a forum for black-owned small businesses.

“I thought it would be something really private,” he said. “I think about black businesses in Atlanta, small black businesses in Atlanta. And I was like, “Okay, so when are we going to start talking about this?” »

When Trump called into the event, Jones was shocked. “I wondered why the ex-president is calling someone into my hair salon? This has nothing to do with small black businesses,” he said.

Meanwhile, Jones told another local media outlet, Atlanta News First, that he felt “betrayed” by the way the event unfolded. He also claimed that no one mentioned that it would be a political event during the coordination and that he never spoke to a representative of the Trump campaign.

News week reached out to Trump campaign spokesman Steven Cheung by email for comment.

Donald Trump
Former President Donald Trump speaks at a rally at Greenbrier Farms in Chesapeake, Virginia, on Friday. An Atlanta Black hair salon owner said Friday he lost business after being misled into hosting a…


Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

Trump is working to turn out the Black and Hispanic vote for his 2024 campaign.

A New York Times/A Siena College poll of 1,226 registered voters, conducted between June 20 and 25, found that 30% of Black respondents would vote for Trump and 59% for Biden. The poll has a margin of error of plus or minus 3 percentage points.

This poll indicates an improvement for Trump among black voters. In a previous Washington Post/An Ipsos poll of 1,331 non-Hispanic black adults conducted between April 9 and 16 found that 66% said they would probably or definitely vote for Biden, while just 14% said they would support Trump in a hypothetical race that included third-party candidates. The poll’s margin of error was plus or minus 3.2 percentage points.

According to CNN senior reporter Harry Enten, support for Biden among young black voters has declined significantly.

On a show earlier this month, Enten showed polling data showing Biden’s lead among black voters under 50 has shrunk over the past four years, from 80 points in 2020 to 37 points in 2024.

Meanwhile, Trump recently sparked backlash after he said migrants, many of whom entered illegally in large numbers across the U.S.-Mexico border, were taking “black jobs” and “Hispanic jobs.” to the Americans during the debate on Thursday evening.

“The fact is, Biden’s biggest attack on black people is the millions of people he’s allowed to come across the border. They’re now taking jobs away from black people,” Trump said. “They’re taking jobs away from black people and Hispanics. And you haven’t seen it yet, but you’re going to see something that’s going to be the worst in our history.”

There is no evidence to suggest that hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants are filling jobs that would otherwise be held by U.S. citizens.

Former Republican National Committee (RNC) Chairman Michael Steele rebuked Trump’s remarks Saturday on the MSNBC broadcast. The weekendwhich he co-hosts: “So what specifically, what would these black and Hispanic jobs be, I wonder?”

He also criticized Trump’s call to Jones’ barbershop on Wednesday, saying: “You want to go to black people, you can’t even show up at a (black) barbershop…You call a salon hairdressing and you are going to talk to us about jobs for blacks? Shut up. Why do we even accept this madness from this idiot? »

Meanwhile, Derrick Johnson, president and CEO of the NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People), said of Trump’s remarks on “black jobs”: “There is no such thing as a black job. This misinformed characterization is a denial of the omnipresence of black talent. We are doctors, lawyers, teachers, police officers and firefighters, the list goes on,” according to the Associated Press.

He continued: “A ‘black job’ is an American job. It is disturbing that a presidential candidate would seek to make a distinction that does not exist. But the divisive nature of this comment is not surprising to Donald Trump. »

Trump allies like Black Conservative Federation President Diante Johnson defended the former president’s message: “He was talking about Black jobs. And we’ve been using that term for a while. It’s about any job. Instead of Black people having unlimited access to all types of jobs, illegal immigrants are taking their jobs,” the AP reported.