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The Republican Party’s Blackout

OpinionEdmond W. Davis  |  May 8, 2026

History has a strange way of repeating itself, especially when America refuses to learn from it. In 2026, the Republican Party is facing a political mirror it can no longer avoid. Every Black Republican currently serving in the U.S. House of Representatives is leaving. Every single one. Wesley Hunt, Burgess Owens, John James and Byron Donalds — the four Black Republican faces most often used as evidence that the GOP was somehow diverse, inclusive and post-racial — are all walking away.

That is not symbolism. That is an indictment, and yes, the United States Supreme Court’s six-to-three voting decision, six Republican-selected justices against three Democrat-selected justices, all women by the way, just solidified reality. America isn’t an experiment anymore. She’s only been a democracy since 1965, and she’s 250 years old. Let that marinate. If we are so high, righteous and mighty, why then do we still do this?

Edmond W. Davis

Former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy once admitted what many already knew: “When you look at the Democrats, they actually look like America. When I look at my party, we look like the most restrictive country club in America.”

His words were not accidental; they were confessional. Republicans understood they had a race problem, so they attempted cosmetic surgery instead of moral transformation. They recruited Black candidates not to reform policy, but to provide political cover. They needed visible Black Republicans so they could deny invisible racism. Now the mask is slipping.

According to reporting highlighted by the Philadelphia Tribune, McCarthy’s 2018 push to diversify the House GOP helped elect four Black Republicans by 2022, adding to the visibility Republicans desperately needed. But that progress is now being erased.

Hunt pursued a Senate run. Donalds and James are chasing gubernatorial ambitions in Florida and Michigan. Owens is stepping away after Republican-led redistricting in Utah made reelection nearly impossible.

“They needed visible Black Republicans so they could deny invisible racism. Now the mask is slipping.”

Let that sink in. The same party that lectures America about “merit,” attacks diversity initiatives as if DEI were a criminal enterprise and calls Black history “woke indoctrination,” may soon have no Black representation in Congress at all. That is not coincidence. That is consequence.

For years, these four men served as the Republican Party’s racial insurance policy. When Donald Trump’s movement was accused of racial hostility, Republicans pointed to them. When voting rights were restricted, they pointed to them. When attacks on affirmative action intensified, they pointed to them. When Haitian immigrants were targeted with reckless and racist rhetoric, they pointed to them. When phrases like “colored people” reappeared on the House floor like ghosts from Jim Crow’s attic, Republicans still pointed to them.

That was the strategy: Token visibility, systemic invisibility.

But there is another silence far more disturbing than political strategy — the silence from many so-called Christian spaces.

This “exodus” is exposing a moral failure far beyond party politics. On Sundays, many white Christian nationalist churches will not mourn the loss of these African American Republican figures because their concern never was true racial justice. Their concern was proximity to power. Many of the same churches that loudly condemned DEI — although DEI historically benefited white women more than anyone else — will say nothing as Black Republican representation disappears from the GOP landscape.

Why? Because for too many, Christianity has been replaced by partisanship. Jesus has been replaced by the GOP.

The real story is not simply that Black Republicans are leaving. The real story is the silence of those who claim Christ but defend systems that consistently marginalize Black people. A Jesus-led Christian should be disturbed by injustice, not comforted by it. A disciple of Christ should grieve exclusion, not protect it. But too often, political loyalty has become a false religion.

Not many white Christian nationalist churches will publicly lament this loss because these Black Republicans never truly were viewed as equal partners in moral justice — only useful symbols in political warfare. Their existence served as DEI camouflage for a party attacking DEI itself. Their Blackness was welcomed only when it defended white grievance. But Black face on white grievance is still white grievance.

“Black Republicans never truly were viewed as equal partners in moral justice — only useful symbols in political warfare.”

The GOP today is increasingly showing the old Southern Democratic Party face — the Dixiecrat spirit dressed in modern branding. The same politics of white grievance, voter suppression, cultural fear and racial hierarchy have simply changed uniforms. Yesterday’s segregationist slogans have become today’s anti-DEI campaigns. Yesterday’s literacy tests have become today’s voter suppression laws. Yesterday’s “states’ rights” speeches have become today’s coded attacks on “urban voters” and “woke agendas.”

U.S. Department of Labor social media post October 21, 2025, with the caption, “Project Firewall is our commitment to ensure American Workers have a fair shot at the American Dream.
It’s not going to be easy — but the American Dream is worth fighting for..”

The slogan “Make America Great Again” too often translates, in practice, to a memory of when America was “great” for white males only. It is nostalgia dressed as patriotism and exclusion disguised as order.

Galatians 6:7 warns us clearly: “Be not deceived; God is not mocked: for whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap.” The Republican Party sowed division, racial resentment and selective patriotism. It weaponized fear and sold nostalgia for an America that was only “great” for a narrow few — primarily wealthy white men. Now it is reaping isolation.

And Proverbs 29:2 reminds us: “When the righteous are in authority, the people rejoice: but when the wicked beareth rule, the people mourn.” Many Americans — Black, brown, poor white, immigrant and working-class — have been mourning under policies that preach freedom while practicing exclusion.

This moment should force African American Republicans into deep reflection. Political loyalty never should become spiritual bondage. There comes a time when leaving is not betrayal — it is reparations. Sometimes liberation looks like resignation. Sometimes dignity looks like departure. Sometimes the most revolutionary act is refusing to be used as decoration in a house built against your own people.

The Republican Party has long benefited from the symbolic presence of Black conservatives while often advancing policies that disproportionately harm Black communities — whether in education, health care, criminal justice, labor or voting access. Representation without liberation is performance. Presence without power is theater.

This is not about party worship. Democrats have their own failures. But history demands honesty. When a political structure repeatedly uses your face while undermining your future, leaving is not disloyalty — it is self-respect. Political reparations begin with political truth.

The GOP wanted Black Republicans as proof of innocence, not as agents of transformation. But now even that shield is disappearing. The “restrictive country club” McCarthy described may soon have exactly what it has always been accused of being: a club with no room for Black membership except at the front door for photographs.

America should pay attention. Because when the Black Republicans leave the building, they are not just exiting Congress. They are exposing the house.

 

Edmond W. Davis is an American social historian, international speaker and Amazon No. 1 bestselling author. He is a global authority on the Tuskegee Airmen and serves as the founder of the National HBCU Black Wall Street Career Fest. A native of Philadelphia and current resident of Little Rock, Davis is committed to cultural empowerment and educational equity through storytelling and civic engagement.

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OPINION: Views expressed in Baptist News Global columns and commentaries are solely those of the authors.
Tags:Edmond DavisByron DonaldsWesley HuntBurgess OwensJohn JamesPhiladelphia TribuneracismRepublicansKevin McCarthyDEI
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