Albuquerque Journal

Pain from pandemic follows party lines, which affects responses

Red states have more economic incentive to reopen businesses

- BY MIKE DORNING AND GREGORY KORTE

President Donald Trump is pushing to reopen the United States economy quickly as his core supporters are hit harder by job losses than by the coronaviru­s.

The balance between lives and livelihood­s during the pandemic has been experience­d very differentl­y across the partisan divide. In states Trump won in 2016, 23 people have lost a job for every 1 person infected. In states Democrat Hillary Clinton won, 13 people have lost a job for every person infected.

Put another way, in Trump country, the virus’s greater pain has been economic, which helps explain why support for a swift reopening is so much more intense there.

“Basically, if you’re in a red state, you’re less likely to know someone who died or has been infected,” said Mike Murphy, a Republican political consultant who worked for a pro-Jeb Bush political action committee in 2016. “It just happens to line up with people’s political tribes, and then you’ve got Trump pouring gasoline on it.”

The question now is whether the president could face a backlash as the geographic locus of the pandemic shifts red. Confirmed COVID-19 cases rose 46% faster over the past two weeks in states that Trump won in 2016 than in the rest of country. If infections spike once lockdowns are lifted, Republican voters could blame GOP candidates who pushed for reopening.

Trump’s push to restart the economy, from hair salons to restaurant­s to churches, is buoyed by bluecollar voters whose jobs can’t be done from home and are more worried about the state of the economy than about an illness that’s largely invisible to them.

Those without a college education have been hit hardest by the COVIDrelat­ed downturn, with an April unemployme­nt rate of 16.3%, about double that of 8.2% for those with fouryear degrees.

Meanwhile, black and Hispanic Americans, who heavily vote for Democratic candidates, have been much more likely to die from the disease in places like New York, Detroit, Chicago and Washington, D.C.

It was the high death rate in largely Democratic urban areas that drove states’ initial lockdown orders, said Gregg Murray, a professor at Augusta University in Georgia who examined the decisions. Since deaths from coronaviru­s typically lag infection by several weeks, that suggests it will take some time for the public mood to shift as the virus surges in new areas.

“What we know from a lot of psychology research is mortality — and humans recognizin­g their mortality — has a huge effect on people’s behavior,” Murray said.

More people have contracted the virus in densely populated Democratic states than in more rural Republican states. The average number of confirmed coronaviru­s cases in states Clinton won in 2016 was 7.4 per 1,000 residents on Tuesday, against 2.9 per 1,000 residents in states that Trump won.

But the gap is narrowing. Confirmed cases grew 32% in Trump states from May 7 to May 21 versus a 22% increase in states Clinton

carried. New York and New Jersey, the epicenter of the pandemic in the U.S., are weeks past their worst in terms of new cases and deaths.

The impact of the pandemic and the recession in battlegrou­nd states is reshaping the 2020 election.

Michigan and Pennsylvan­ia, crucial swing states, have been hit hard. They each have 5.4 confirmed cases per 1,000 residents, mostly in urban and suburban areas that tend to vote Democratic. The U.S. average is 4.8 per 1,000 people.

But infection rates in other battlegrou­nd states like Wisconsin, Arizona, North Carolina and Florida are relatively low while job losses are high, suggesting voters there might favor policies that move toward a quicker reopening.

State reports of coronaviru­s cases are compiled by Johns Hopkins University.

 ?? NAM Y. HUH/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A woman looks at signs at a store closed due to COVID-19 earlier this month in Niles, Illinois. The geography of infections is affecting political debate, observers say.
NAM Y. HUH/ASSOCIATED PRESS A woman looks at signs at a store closed due to COVID-19 earlier this month in Niles, Illinois. The geography of infections is affecting political debate, observers say.

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