One of the biggest challenges for Donald Trump will be winning over minority voters.

Racial tension in America is fraying to the point of ripping at the seams. In Cleveland, protests remain relatively peaceful.

In downtown, veteran Gary Winfield, 87, said the Republicans have no inclusiveness. He does not support Donald Trump, but thinks Trump's lack of political correctness is necessary.

“I'm not for what he says. I'm for his contribution to diversity, difference of opinion,” said Winfield.

Attracting African-American voters to the Republican Party is Michael Barnett's mission. He is the first black chairman of Palm Beach County.

"Before he decided to run for president, I can't think of anyone who ever referred to Donald Trump as a racist. The idea is insane to me,” he said.

Barnett is on Trump’s National Diversity Coalition. He said Trump is doing far better with African-American voters than Mitt Romney did in 2012. He points to the racial violence in the streets as proof of the current president's failures.

"It's a failure of leadership, Barack Obama deserves the blame. I think Donald Trump is what we need to bring law and order to our streets to make, whether you’re black or white, living in the rural communities or inner cities, safe again. We have put the grown-ups back in charge," he said.

Trump certainly has his work cut out for him. A new Pew Research poll shows 91 percent of African American voters support Hillary Clinton. C.J. Jordan is working for Trump’s campaign to change that.

"I understand what most think when they see me, they think I'm a Democrat. But I'm not," said Jordan, the RNC's deputy director. "But when I espouse Republican principles more and more as I talk to them, we have a lot in common more than we disagree about.”

Winfield said he has no doubt Donald Trump will become president. Whether that will lead to inclusiveness, however, he said is a different story.