That's interesting. I expect his gains with black voters to be disproportionately Southern and rural but this would probably be a slight gain. There are a number of black Philadelphia precincts where Romney got zero votes.
Trump in 2016 got 13% of Black male vote nationally and 4% of the Black female vote nationally.
I don't know how the vote broke down in Philadelphia in 2016.
I'm presuming it was significantly lower than the national averages based on what I know about Philadelphia.
Likely so. But I'm expecting Trump to do worse among suburban black men this time (think Michael Steele) and better among urban and rural black men.