The mug shot of former President Donald Trump was destined to be an iconic image since news first broke that he would surrender in Fulton County, Georgia, following his fourth criminal indictment this year. While it is a landmark moment for the principle of holding power accountable, several figures in right-wing media are also claiming that — thanks to the mug shot — “the hood is now going all-in for Trump.”
Relying largely on a handful of viral videos, including various TikToks and clips of Black people watching Trump’s motorcade en route to the Fulton County Jail, right-wing media are attempting to counter the obvious potential impact of the mug shot by declaring that it “turned Trump into a sympathetic character in Black America.”
These conservative media figures theorize that not only does the photo render Trump “an outsider with swagger,” like rapper Tupac Shakur, but that when they look at it, Black voters will see themselves or “their cousin who was selling weed on the corner,” and be inspired to support him. And if “nationally, 1 or 2% of the Black votes swing to the Republicans, that's the election right there.”
Despite these commentators failing to explain why they are so quick to associate Black people with crime, and despite Trump’s own infamously long and nasty record of racism, right-wing media are convinced (or perhaps just hopeful) that the mug shot could give Trump a decisive edge in “the streets,” leading him to defeat President Joe Biden in the 2024 election.
On Fox News’ talk show The Five, co-host Jesse Watters claimed that “the Democrats, you can tell, are nervous” because the mug shot is turning out to be “a huge political gift, which will last until eternity.”
“Black Americans online, some of them are saying I'm voting for Trump now,” Watters said, “because they too have sometimes felt they've been unfairly targeted by the criminal justice system.”
Later, on his own show, Watters repeated that “the mug shot’s turned Trump into a sympathetic character in Black America” — “a martyr” who “represents someone persecuted by the man.”
“The streets are talking about him in a way they’ve never talked about him before,” he added.