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Redding Man Trump Called 'My African American' Is Leaving The GOP

(CNN) -- The man then-candidate Donald Trump called "my African American" at a 2016 rally is leaving the Republican Party and no longer supports the President.

Gregory Cheadle, of Redding, California, told "PBS NewsHour" he believes the Republican Party is pursuing a "pro-white" agenda and using black people like him as "political pawns."

"I'm just sick and tired of the way blacks and other people of color have been treated by this administration and by the GOP," Cheadle told CNN's Erin Burnett on Thursday on "Erin Burnett OutFront." He said he has been frustrated with Trump's rhetoric on race and the lack of diversity in his administration and judicial appointments.

Cheadle told Burnett he wouldn't use the term "racist" to describe the President, but said Trump has a "white superiority complex."

Trump singled out Cheadle at a rally in 2016 in an attempt to tout his support among African Americans. Exit polls of the 2016 election found that Trump received 8% of votes cast by African Americans, with 89% of them choosing Democrat Hillary Clinton. Opinion polls in the subsequent two-and-a-half years have found that he remains highly unpopular among African Americans.

Moreover, a July Quinnipiac University poll showed a majority (51%) of voters believed that Trump is a racist. Forty-five percent said that he is not.

Cheadle told Burnett he is now more critical of the 2016 moment when Trump said, "Look at my African American over here," at a California rally. At the time, Cheadle told CNN he was not offended by Trump's comment. Now, he said he questions Trump's intent.

Cheadle pointed to the recent attacks by Trump on four congresswomen of color, when he told them to "go back" to where they came from, and on Democratic Rep. Elijah Cummings of Maryland, when the President called Baltimore "a disgusting, rat and rodent infested mess."

"President Trump is a rich guy who is mired in white privilege to the extreme," Cheadle told PBS. "Republicans are too sheepish to call him out on anything and they are afraid of losing their positions and losing any power themselves."

"When you look at his appointments for the bench: White, white, white, white, white, white, white," Cheadle told PBS. "That to me is really damning to everybody else because no one else gets a chance because he's thinking that the whites are superior, period."

Cheadle is a 62-year-old real estate broker, according to PBS, and said he is running for Congress as an independent in 2020. The outlet reports he has in the past mounted four unsuccessful bids for Congress.

"We just haven't had people called the names publicly that we have had with this administration," Cheadle told PBS. "To stay on this ship now, as a black Republican, I couldn't do it."

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