Now playing
01:23
Donald Trump speaks to black voters at Detroit church
steve cortes ctn 08062018
CNN
steve cortes ctn 08062018
Now playing
02:29
Panelist: Trump is the Mayweather of politics
US President Donald Trump applauds during a rally for Sen. Luther Strange (R-AL) at the Von Braun Civic Center September 22, 2017 in Huntsville, Alabama. (BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP/Getty Images)
BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP/Getty Images
US President Donald Trump applauds during a rally for Sen. Luther Strange (R-AL) at the Von Braun Civic Center September 22, 2017 in Huntsville, Alabama. (BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP/Getty Images)
Now playing
02:11
Trump has unusual ways of talking about race
WASHINGTON, DC - DECEMBER 15:  U.S. President Donald Trump listens to a question as he speaks to members of the White House Press Corps prior to his Marine One departure from the South Lawn of the White House December 15, 2017 in Washington, DC. (Alex Wong/Getty Images)
Alex Wong/Getty Images
WASHINGTON, DC - DECEMBER 15: U.S. President Donald Trump listens to a question as he speaks to members of the White House Press Corps prior to his Marine One departure from the South Lawn of the White House December 15, 2017 in Washington, DC. (Alex Wong/Getty Images)
Now playing
01:20
Trump often says he's 'the least racist person'
Michael Eric Dyson on New Day 07/05
CNN
Michael Eric Dyson on New Day 07/05
Now playing
02:46
Author: Trump talks like a racist, thinks like a racist
ac360 01112018
CNN
ac360 01112018
Now playing
01:48
Cooper: Don't dance around it, this is racist
Guest: Jack O'Donnell from Chicago, IL Anderson in Flash 52 / Control 41 (channel 64) Time: 515 to 530p   Please record CTL 4100 Fonted Switched Please record CTL 4103 Clean Switched Please record CTL 4138 AC ISO Please record CTL 4139 Splits Please record CTL 4140 Big Smalls Please record INC 905 O'Donnell ISO
CNN
Guest: Jack O'Donnell from Chicago, IL Anderson in Flash 52 / Control 41 (channel 64) Time: 515 to 530p Please record CTL 4100 Fonted Switched Please record CTL 4103 Clean Switched Please record CTL 4138 AC ISO Please record CTL 4139 Splits Please record CTL 4140 Big Smalls Please record INC 905 O'Donnell ISO
Now playing
02:28
O'Donnell: I believe Trump is racist
Now playing
02:31
Trump honors MLK Jr amid controversial comments
CNN
Now playing
02:44
Lemon: Trump's MLK remarks painfully ironic
awkward racial amnesia orig_00011206.jpg
awkward racial amnesia orig_00011206.jpg
Now playing
03:52
How racial amnesia helped Trump win
Pool
Now playing
01:02
Trump responds after a day of NFL protests
nfl protests trump zw js orig_00001313.jpg
nfl protests trump zw js orig_00001313.jpg
Now playing
02:26
#TakeAKnee heats up on and off the field
SANTA CLARA, CA - SEPTEMBER 12:  Colin Kaepernick #7 and Eric Reid #35 of the San Francisco 49ers kneel in protest during the national anthem prior to playing the Los Angeles Rams in their NFL game at Levi's Stadium on September 12, 2016 in Santa Clara, California.  (Photo by Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images)
Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images North America/Getty Images
SANTA CLARA, CA - SEPTEMBER 12: Colin Kaepernick #7 and Eric Reid #35 of the San Francisco 49ers kneel in protest during the national anthem prior to playing the Los Angeles Rams in their NFL game at Levi's Stadium on September 12, 2016 in Santa Clara, California. (Photo by Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images)
Now playing
00:57
NFL star continues national anthem protest
Now playing
01:41
Panelist: Trump's NFL remark shows privilege
donald trump jefferson washington slaves sot_00004524.jpg
donald trump jefferson washington slaves sot_00004524.jpg
Now playing
01:02
Trump: Are Washington, Jefferson statues next?
David Duke Trump Charlottesville protest nr_00000000.jpg
David Duke Trump Charlottesville protest nr_00000000.jpg
Now playing
00:47
Former KKK leader invokes Trump's name

Story highlights

Trump, for the first time as a presidential candidate, addressed a largely black audience

He has been criticized throughout his campaign for not reaching out to African-American voters in their communities

Washington CNN —  

A subdued Donald Trump on Saturday directly addressed a largely African-American audience for the first time as a presidential candidate, delivering a warmly received message of unity that focused on fixing economic hardship in the black community.

Trump spoke to members of the Great Faith Ministries, a nondenominational church in Detroit, part of his outreach to what is typically a sizable Democratic voting bloc. His visit, however, was greeted by protests outside of the church ahead of his arrival.

Sitting in a pew at the front of the congregation, Trump took a selfie with a church member and at one point held up a baby over his shoulders. He then addressed the congregation.

“For centuries, the African-American church has been the conscience of this country. So true,” Trump said, reading from prepared remarks. He added, “The African-American faith community has been one of God’s greatest gifts to America and its people.”

Trump told the audience he was there to “listen to your message” and said he hoped his appearance would “also help your voice to reach new audiences in our country.” He said he would lay out his plans for economic change and school choice – issues that he said would benefit black communities – in the future.

“When I see wages falling, people out of work, I know the hardships this inflicts and I am determined to do something about it. I will do something about it,” Trump said. “I do get things done, I will tell you. I’m going to get things done.”

Speaking in a measured tone, Trump lamented what he said was a nation that was “too divided.”

“We talk past each other and not to each other. And those who seek office do not do enough to step into the community and learn what’s going on. I’m here today to learn, so that we can together remedy injustice in any form, and so that we can also remedy economics so that the African-American community can benefit economically through jobs and income and so many other different ways.”

“I believe we need a civil rights agenda for our time,” said Trump, before he concluded by citing 1 John 4:12.

“No one has ever seen God, but if we love one another, God lives in us and his love is made complete in us,” Trump said, adding, “That’s so true.”

Draped with prayer shawl

After Trump finished speaking, the church’s pastor, Bishop Wayne Jackson, draped a prayer shawl over Trump’s shoulders, much to the crowd’s delight, and handed him a Jewish Heritage Study Bible.

“This is a prayer shawl straight from Israel. Whenever you’re flying from coast to coast – I know you just came back from Mexico and you’ll be flying from city to city – there is an anointing. And anointing is the power of God,” Jackson said. “It’s going to be sometimes in your life that you’re going to feel forsaken, you’re going to feel down, but the anointing is going to lift you up. I prayed over this personally and I fasted over it, and I wanted to just put this on you.”

Later, Trump swayed along with the music as the congregation’s chorus sang.

Donald Trump wears a prayer shawl during a church service at Great Faith Ministries, Saturday, September 3, in Detroit.
Evan Vucci/AP
Donald Trump wears a prayer shawl during a church service at Great Faith Ministries, Saturday, September 3, in Detroit.

After the service concluded, Trump accompanied Ben Carson, his former primary rival turned top surrogate, to the retired neurosurgeon’s boyhood home in Southwest Detroit. Carson told CNN’s Jeremy Diamond he wanted Trump to see areas in the city that are now blighted but were prosperous when Carson was a boy.

Mixed reviews

Carletta Vaughn, a Hillary Clinton supporter and a senior pastor at Holy Ghost Cathedral in Detroit, said Trump was “scripted” but she felt like he was “honest and transparent” with his message.

“I think that the experience of being in an African-American church and the presence of God, it was clear that it was new to him, but it was not in any way offensive,” she said. “It was great.”

Vaughn, 63, said she doubts he changed any minds in the crowd but that he left people with a more relatable impression.

Taurus Simpson, a pastor from Saginaw, Michigan, said he saw a more “humble” version of Trump. But Simpson said he doubts the mogul will make large gains with black voters “overnight,” saying it will take a while to erase the perception that African-Americans have of Trump.

“Perception is everything. What we had seen is that he had no care about the blacks at the beginning of this,” he said, referring to Trump’s campaign.

Sonia Green, 53, also said she saw a different side of the politician. “I saw Donald Trump the human being, instead of Donald Trump the guy that just, you know, ‘We’re going to build a wall, we’re going to keep them out,’” she said.

As far as whether Trump will make inroads with minority voters, however, Green said the “proof will be in the pudding.”

“We’ll see about what he says, the actions that he takes,” Green said. “Not just for people of color, but all people.”

Greeted by protesters

Dozens of protesters gathered outside the church before Trump arrived, some of whom chanted, “Whose city? Our city!”

At one point, several tried to rush toward a gate near the church’s entryway. Four police officers on horseback blocked them. Some of the protesters urged others to remain peaceful.

Lawrence Glass, the president of the Council of Baptist Pastors of Detroit and Vicinity, addressed reporters and demonstrators at a news conference earlier in the morning, declaring that black voters “will not be trumpets to get his message of fear and hate out.”

“He is speaking at a black church, which is not equivalent to speaking to a black church,” Glass added.

As Trump was set to speak, about a dozen mostly black protesters outside the church followed around Eric Jones, a black Trump supporter from Michigan who was wearing a Trump T-shirt and button. They called him a “sellout,” with one protester hurling a racial epithet at him.

Some of the protesters attempted to converse with Jones, who tried to respond to their questions, but the taunting and shouting drowned him out. He tried walking away but was followed by the group.

Protesters try to enter the property of Great Faith Ministries Church in Detroit before a visit by Donald Trump on September 3 in Detroit, Michigan.
JEFF KOWALSKY/AFP/Getty Images
Protesters try to enter the property of Great Faith Ministries Church in Detroit before a visit by Donald Trump on September 3 in Detroit, Michigan.

Jones told CNN he wasn’t surprised by the reaction, and that he experienced a similar response when he walked among protesters at the Republican convention in Cleveland last month. “The fact is, you got to have honest dialogue in order to change your circumstances.”

Jones said he likes Trump because he’s an “outsider” and “has the best policies,” like his proposals to reform immigration laws.

“You can’t have a country unless you have some borders,” he said.

Outreach to African-Americans

The Republican nominee has been criticized throughout his campaign for not reaching out to African-American voters in their communities, an issue Jackson said Trump was looking to remedy.

“If we don’t sit down and dialogue, then we don’t know. You just can’t get up and say, ‘Well, what the “H” you have to lose?’ We need promise that’s going to be real,” Jackson told CNN’s Brooke Baldwin Friday. “And you only can make it happen when you sit down and have a dialogue with someone, a communication with someone. And I’m encouraging him.”

Jackson held a one-on-one interview with Trump before the service Saturday that will eventually air on the Impact Network, an African-American-founded Christian broadcast television network. The interview came under controversy when it was revealed Trump was provided with questions ahead of time so he could better prepare.

Jackson told reporters Saturday that Trump’s answers weren’t scripted, though he acknowledged Trump was ready for the questions.

“He just sat down like a normal guy and answered the questions,” Jackson said.

The GOP nominee has stepped up his outreach to African-American voters in recent weeks, trying to draw a contrast between himself and Clinton, whom he has called “a bigot” for seeing minorities as votes, rather than human beings.

Early Saturday evening, Trump’s campaign issued a statement outlining its “new civil rights agenda,” highlighting his previously stated positions on public safety, education and job security.

It says a Trump administration would work with law enforcement at all levels of government – and even the Mexican government – to fight crime, in particular gangs, violent offenders and “the international drug cartels.”

The statement called for school choice and allowing states to use federal money to “help parents and students” find alternatives to public schooling, including charter schools, religious schools and home schooling.

Regarding job security, Trump railed against globalization and said illegal immigration – a signature cause of Trump’s campaign – was particularly harming African-Americans.