NAACP won’t invite Trump to national convention, breaking 116-year tradition


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Summary

Tradition broken

President Donald Trump will not be invited to the NAACP’s National Convention, marking a 116-year break from tradition.

Reasoning

The NAACP cited Trump’s executive orders that harm Black communities and accused the president of using the military against communities of color.

Bipartisan history

The move is a break from tradition, as the NAACP has historically invited the sitting president regardless of party or political disagreements.


Full story

In a historic break from tradition, the NAACP announced Monday, June 16, it will not invite President Donald Trump to speak at its upcoming national convention. This marks the first time in 116 years that the organization has declined to extend the invitation to a sitting U.S. president. 

NAACP President and CEO Derrick Johnson explained the decision in a press release, citing what he described as a direct threat from the president to civil rights and democracy

The NAACP’s statement

“For 116 years, the NAACP has invited the sitting president of the United States to address the NAACP National Convention — regardless of their party.

“But right now, it’s clear — Donald Trump is attacking our democracy and our civil rights. He believes more in the fascist playbook than in the U.S. Constitution. This playbook is radical and un-American. The president has signed unconstitutional executive orders to oppress voters and undo civil rights protections; he has illegally turned the military on our communities; and he continually undermines every pillar of our democracy to make himself more powerful and to personally benefit from the U.S. government,” the statement read.

The organization went on to say an invitation would be “a waste of our time and energy to give a platform to fascism, which would be unacceptable.”

The announcement comes as the organization continues legal battles with the Trump administration. In April, the NAACP filed a lawsuit aiming to block the Department of Education from slashing federal funding to schools that kept diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives — a move the organization says unlawfully strips away protections for Black students. 

At a press conference Monday, Johnson reiterated that the decision is about principles, not politics. 

“This has nothing to do with political party,” he said. “Our mission is to advance civil rights, and the current president has made it clear that his mission is to eliminate civil rights.”

History of presidential invitations

The NAACP has long invited presidents to speak at its national convention, even those it has publicly criticized. That includes George W. Bush, who faced backlash over the federal response to Hurricane Katrina, and Ronald Reagan, following controversial remarks about “welfare queens” that many civil rights advocates saw as a veiled racial insult aimed at Black women. 

Trump’s 2024 gains among Black voters 

The group’s decision also comes after Trump’s notable gains among Black and Latino voters in the 2024 election. Exit polls show Trump won 16% of Black voters, which represented the largest share a GOP candidate has received since Gerald Ford in 1976. 

Trump, who is now back in Washington after abruptly ending his trip to the G7 summit, has yet to respond to the NAACP’s decision.

The 2024 NAACP National Convention will be held July 12-16 in Charlotte, North Carolina.

Jason Morrell (Morning Managing Editor), Shianne DeLeon (Video Editor), and Devin Pavlou (Digital Producer) contributed to this report.
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Why this story matters

The NAACP's decision to not invite President Donald Trump to its national convention for the first time in 116 years highlights heightened tensions over civil rights and the organization's stance on perceived threats to democracy.

Civil rights and democracy

The NAACP attributes its decision to concerns that President Trump poses a 'direct threat' to civil rights and democratic principles, as stated in their press release.

Tradition and precedent

This marks a historical break from the NAACP's longstanding tradition of inviting sitting U.S. presidents to address its convention regardless of party affiliation.

Political and legal tensions

The story occurs within the context of ongoing legal disputes between the NAACP and the Trump administration, illustrating broader conflicts over policies impacting diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives.

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Context corner

The NAACP has historically invited sitting U.S. presidents to its annual convention, even when they held policy disagreements. Notably, both Democratic and Republican presidents participated in past conventions. The organization’s mission since its founding is to advance civil rights, with a tradition of bipartisan engagement aimed at encouraging political leaders to address Black Americans’ concerns.

Policy impact

The decision reflects broader disputes over civil rights policies and diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) initiatives. The NAACP has filed legal challenges against Trump administration policies, particularly concerning federal funding for schools and DEI programs, arguing these measures undermine efforts to ensure equal opportunity for Black students and communities.

Solution spotlight

The NAACP is seeking to make its annual convention a focused space for multiracial advocacy and civil rights strategy. By excluding the president, they aim to safeguard their platform’s mission and redirect energy toward legal and policy strategies that address civil rights threats as perceived by their organization and supporters.

Bias comparison

  • Media outlets on the left frame the NAACP’s unprecedented exclusion of Trump as a principled stand against a leader accused of adhering to a “fascist playbook” and attempting to “eliminate civil rights,” employing emotionally charged language like “waste of time and energy” to emphasize existential threats to democracy.
  • Media outlets in the center offer broader context — emphasizing the convention’s theme “The Fierce Urgency of Now” and bipartisan past invitations — balancing the left’s urgent moral framing with the right’s procedural focus.
  • Media outlets on the right de-emphasize ideological critiques, instead highlighting the break with tradition as potentially unfair political singling out, focusing on the “historic” nature of Trump’s exclusion and framing it as a partisan rebuke without invoking terms like “fascism.”

Media landscape

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Key points from the Left

  • The NAACP will not invite President Donald Trump to its national convention, marking the first exclusion of a sitting president in 116 years, as announced by NAACP President Derrick Johnson at a press conference.
  • Johnson accused Trump of undermining the NAACP's mission, stating that he is working against the organization's mission of advancing civil rights.
  • The NAACP has filed multiple lawsuits against Trump, including one to stop the Department of Education from withholding federal funding for schools.
  • The organization has historically invited presidents it disagreed with, including George W. Bush in 2006, after criticisms about Hurricane Katrina's impact on Black residents.

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Key points from the Center

  • On Monday, the NAACP revealed it will exclude President Donald Trump from its national convention scheduled for July 12 to 16, in Charlotte, North Carolina, marking the first time the organization has barred a sitting president from attending.
  • This decision breaks a 116-year tradition of inviting sitting presidents, which the NAACP said stems from Trump's actions opposing the organization's mission to advance civil rights.
  • NAACP President Derrick Johnson accused Trump of attacking democracy, following a theme of fighting for rights at the upcoming convention titled "The Fierce Urgency of Now."
  • Johnson emphasized the responsibility to uphold and safeguard democratic principles, noting that President Trump's actions, including unconstitutional executive orders and the erosion of civil rights, contradict this mission.
  • The NAACP's move reflects escalating legal challenges against the Trump administration and signals a shift in its engagement with political leadership to protect civil rights.

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Key points from the Right

  • The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People announced it will not invite President Donald Trump to its annual convention next month due to his civil rights approach.
  • This decision marks the first time in 116 years that a sitting president is excluded from the NAACP convention.
  • NAACP President Derrick Johnson stated that the exclusion is not politically motivated but rather because the president is working against the organization's mission.
  • The NAACP has filed multiple lawsuits against the Trump administration over its response to diversity, equity, and inclusion policies.
  • The NAACP convention is scheduled to take place from July 12-16 in Charlotte, North Carolina.

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