NAACP Breaks 116 Year Old Tradition By Not Inviting Trump to It’s Annual Convention

The NAACP is refusing to invite President Trump and Vice President JD Vance to its national convention, ending a long tradition of including sitting presidents. The group cited Trump’s executive orders and political agenda as reasons, accusing his administration of promoting “fascism” and attacking civil rights.

Key Facts:

  • The NAACP will not invite President Trump or Vice President JD Vance to its annual convention for the first time in 116 years.
  • The group accused Trump of pushing a “fascist playbook” and attacking multiracial democracy.
  • Past presidents from both parties, including Obama and Reagan, have attended the NAACP convention.
  • Trump recently signed executive orders eliminating DEI programs and promoting merit-based systems in federal hiring.
  • The White House responded, accusing the NAACP of promoting “hate and division” while Trump focuses on unity and results.

The Rest of The Story:

The NAACP announced Monday that it will not invite President Trump or Vice President JD Vance to its annual convention.

This decision breaks a 116-year tradition of inviting sitting presidents, regardless of political party.

In its statement, the NAACP cited “fascism” and “radical” actions by the Trump administration as justification.

The group specifically pointed to Trump’s executive orders targeting DEI programs.

In January, Trump signed an order labeling DEI “illegal” and “immoral,” followed by another order promoting merit-based hiring practices across federal agencies.

Trump wrote that current DEI policies “diminish the importance of individual merit, aptitude, hard work, and determination.”

White House spokesperson Harrison Fields fired back, saying the NAACP “isn’t advancing anything but hate and division,” while Trump is working to unite the country and improve the economy.

He added that Black voters supported Trump in record numbers during his reelection.

Commentary:

The NAACP’s decision reveals just how far the organization has drifted from its original mission.

Once a respected voice for civil rights, it now acts as a political arm of the left.

The choice to snub a sitting president—especially one who received historic support from Black voters—sends a clear message: if you don’t follow the progressive script, you’re not welcome.

The NAACP is clinging to a DEI ideology that’s increasingly out of step with everyday Americans, including many Black families.

By rejecting Trump’s merit-based approach, the group is signaling it prefers ideology over results—ideology that divides people by race and identity rather than uniting them around opportunity and achievement.

Trump’s executive orders didn’t “undo civil rights.”

They re-centered government policy on fairness, accountability, and individual excellence—values that built this nation.

The NAACP should be applauding efforts to root out identity-based hiring that endangers lives in fields like aviation and law enforcement.

Instead, they’re pushing a dangerous narrative that anything not aligned with their politics is fascism.

That’s not just wrong—it’s reckless.

It makes open discussion impossible and labels millions of Americans as enemies just for wanting a level playing field.

The irony is that more Black voters are walking away from the very organizations that claim to represent them.

That’s not because they’ve turned their backs on civil rights—it’s because groups like the NAACP have turned their backs on them.

Economic freedom, school choice, job creation, border security—these are the issues real people care about.

And President Trump has taken action on them.

That’s why he’s gaining support in communities the media said he could never reach.

When legacy organizations alienate their base to cling to power and politics, it’s no surprise they’re losing relevance.

The Bottom Line:

The NAACP’s rejection of Trump and Vance is a political stunt, not a principled stand.

It shows the group values partisan alignment over dialogue and progress.

By dismissing merit-based reforms and labeling them “fascism,” the NAACP has exposed its own unwillingness to adapt—or represent the real concerns of Black Americans today.

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