Jimmy Kimmel sent his camera crew out into the streets this week to test President Donald Trump's claim that he would get 95% of the Black vote by the end of his first term.

On his show Monday night, Kimmel shared a statement Trump made during his 2016 campaign and said he wanted to put it to the test. 

“At the end of four years, I guarantee you that I will get over 95% of the African American vote I promise you,” Trump said at a rally in Michigan in August 2016, according to ABC News. 

Now that we are nearly four years into Trump's term, Kimmel sent a camera crew out to do an informal poll of Black people to see if 95% would be voting for Trump in November. 

Kimmel couldn't find a single Black Trump voter on Hollywood Boulevard.

Responses ranged from "hell no" to "absolutely not."

The host asked voters whether they had family members or friends who they thought were considering Trump, but each person said no. 

One man even joked that his black dog and black cat weren't voting for Trump.

During a speech this week, Trump repeated his unfounded assertion that he "has done more for the African American community than any president since Abraham Lincoln."

Trump supports his claim of receiving support from the Black community by mentioning the economy, even though the current unemployment crisis is disproportionately affecting Black people. The Black unemployment rate in September was 12%, almost double the rate of white workers and two points higher than Latinos, according to The Washington Post. 

When pressed on his lackluster polling numbers among Black voters at the first presidential debate, he pivoted to talking about how much support he has among members of the country's police force and army. 

Trump further enraged Black communities during the debate when he defended removing racial sensitivity training from all government offices and refused to condemn white supremacy, The Washington Post reported. 

“Proud Boys — stand back and stand by,” Trump told members of the white supremacist terror group, who gleefully celebrated the remark, as Blavity previously reported

According to The New York Times, members of the white supremacist organization lauded Trump for mentioning them and said on their private Telegram app channel that the comments had led to a spike in new recruits.