Los Angeles Times

Trump’s economic message is tripped up in Wisconsin

Voters say they trust him more on business but prefer Biden on racial tensions, virus.

- By Melanie Mason

OSHKOSH, Wis. — Shawn Quella can quickly rattle off a litany of economic challenges in his home state: the spike in unemployme­nt this spring as the coronaviru­s spread, the favorite restaurant­s that have shut down, local retailers that struggle to stay open.

Neverthele­ss, the 30year- old f inancial advisor’s view of the economy is sunny, with jobs partially rebounding this summer and a potential COVID- 19 vaccine in the works.

His optimism is based on the not- too- distant memory of the pre- pandemic boom and confidence that President Trump can replicate that past success.

“The trajectory that he had going — lowest unemployme­nt in 50 years, stock market at all- time highs, economic growth,” Quella said. “There were a lot of good things in place, and I think he is set to continue that.”

Trump’s reelection prospects hinge on voters like Quella, a resident of Wisconsin’s Fox Valley — those who give the president high marks for his economic stewardshi­p and don’t hold the downturn against him.

Eager to capitalize on a rare bright spot, the Trump campaign has redoubled its efforts to make the race a referendum on which candidate voters trust to bring the nation back to economic

health, even as the president’s own well- being in his bout with the coronaviru­s dominates the nation’s attention.

But while voters have consistent­ly given Trump the edge on the economy, interviews with residents of this battlegrou­nd state help illustrate why his fiscal pitch has not swayed a politicize­d electorate where nearly every issue is viewed through a partisan lens.

Aaron Baer, a cafe owner in Oshkosh, acknowledg­ed that for most of Trump’s term, “the economy was good — very good.”

But that has not translated into him supporting the president, especially after the pandemic decimated much of his business and the administra­tion’s response was, in his words, “ready, fire, aim.”

Trump’s electoral fate rests in the intersecti­on of those two topics.

“There’s no question that the pandemic and the economy are the two big issues that are really intertwine­d,” said Larry Nelson, a Waukesha County supervisor and rare Democratic elected official in the conservati­ve suburbs of Milwaukee. “One of the reasons the economy is doing so poorly is that the president still does not have a good national strategy for how to deal with the pandemic.”

Joe Biden, Trump’s Democratic challenger, has maintained a modest but steady polling lead in Wisconsin, a state that Trump won four years ago by fewer than 23,000 votes and which he badly needs to carry again if he is to remain in the White House.

Voters say they trust the former vice president more on handling the pandemic and easing racial tensions. Trump has maintained a consistent, albeit narrowing, edge on whom voters prefer on the economy.

“It’s the only area of evaluation that is net positive” for the president, said Charles Franklin, director of the Marquette Law School Poll in Milwaukee.

Matt Mareno, chair of the Waukesha County Democratic Party, confirms that the polls ref lect his experience phone- banking in support of Biden. The biggest

pushback he has faced from voters is that many trust Trump on the economy.

“Republican­s did a great job over the last 25 years saying that they’re the economic party,” Mareno said.

But he’s been hearing that argument a lot less in recent days, he said.

Trump’s advertisin­g in Wisconsin has been particular­ly focused on the economy; his most- aired television commercial here touts him as the “jobs president,” and much of his campaign mail accuses Biden of wanting to raise taxes. The Democrat has said he wants to raise taxes on the highest earners, plus close corporate tax loopholes.

The president’s argument is compelling to Quella, who has long backed the Republican Party both for its conservati­ve f iscal outlook and for its opposition to abortion.

“Raising capital gains rates, raising taxes right now would be detrimenta­l to the economy that’s already struggling,” he said.

But for Hayley Holz, Trump’s economic pitch falls f lat. The 22- year- old, a student at University of Wisconsin- Milwaukee, lost her job at a day- care center because of the coronaviru­s. She picked up a new paid job as an organizer at a student advocacy group but still feels anxious about paying her bills.

“I’ve been seeing these Trump ads, and they’re like,

‘ Biden’s gonna raise taxes.’ That doesn’t concern me with the economy,” Holz said. “I’m a college student. I can’t afford to live on my own right now, and my friends can’t, my roommates can’t. We’re all just struggling.”

Usually, positive approval ratings on the economy would be a promising sign for an incumbent president. This year, however, of the three crises buffeting the nation — COVID- 19, the economic downturn and the civil unrest over race relations — it is the coronaviru­s that holds the most sway, Franklin said.

“If you like him better [ than Biden] on the economy and like him a little worse on coronaviru­s, then the coronaviru­s will have a little more on your impact on the vote than the positive side on the economy,” Franklin said.

Both here and nationwide, the economy has bounced back some from the devastatio­n of the spring. In Wisconsin, unemployme­nt surged to more than 13% in April, but it has steadily fallen over the summer to 6%, roughly double what it was for most of Trump’s presidency.

Clients have increasing­ly returned to Salon La Rousse in Oshkosh, but that hasn’t done much to ease owner Tamara Ybarra’s anxiety.

“I feel a little apprehensi­ve because I don’t think we’ve seen the worst of COVID,” said Ybarra, 38.

Ybarra’s worries are understand­able. Wisconsin is in the throes of a troubling coronaviru­s outbreak. Its climbing numbers, plus Trump’s COVID- 19 infection, have pushed the pandemic to the top of Ybarra’s election concerns.

“We need somebody who is going to take this seriously,” she said.

Some of the highest case counts in the state are in the Fox Valley — a Republican­leaning region that’s now hotly contested in the presidenti­al race and that both Trump and Biden have recently visited.

Across the street from Ybarra’s salon sits Baer’s New Moon Café, which is hanging on through takeout orders and drasticall­y reduced indoor seating. Baer said he thinks partisan allegiance will override attitudes about the economy.

“I think people are just cemented. Around here, you’re either one side or the other,” Baer, 44, said. Though he has voted for both parties in the past, this year he’s siding with Biden.

For the narrow band of voters who have not yet made up their mind, emphasizin­g the economy may still be Trump’s best bet. That’s especially so with white college- educated men, a voting bloc that handily sided with Trump in 2016, according to national exit polls.

The president appears to have lost traction with some of those voters this year; a recent NBC News/ Marist Poll in Wisconsin, for example, found Biden and Trump tied among that group.

The battle for those voters is being waged in the WOW ( Waukesha, Ozaukee and Washington) counties, a constellat­ion of suburban areas around Milwaukee that have long been a gold mine for Republican ballots.

David Barnett sees opportunit­y for Biden to make inroads in the aff luent community along Beaver Lake, in the northweste­rn part of Waukesha County. Barnett, an independen­t- minded Democrat, said he’s had plenty of conversati­ons with Republican neighbors turned off by Trump’s behavior. But he fears that Biden hasn’t offered a strong rebuttal for Trump’s economic message.

“He has to counter what Trump is saying about lowering taxes,” said Barnett, 74, who owns an art gallery. He had been unimpresse­d with the Biden campaign’s effort to do so, although he said the Democrat’s ads seemed more convincing in the last week.

The area still has many rock- ribbed conservati­ves who will not be easily swayed, no matter Biden’s pitch. Kerry Johnson, a retired diesel- engine salesman from Waukesha, admires Trump’s hardline approach to foreign trade.

“He’s a businessma­n,” Johnson, 68, said. “And he’s treating the government like a business — which it should be.”

But those economicsb­ased arguments no longer have quite as much power as they once did. Although nobody expects Biden to f lip the region blue this year, he may be able to reduce Trump’s margin.

Jim Jackson, a longtime Republican from Waukesha, was so turned off by Trump’s behavior that he’s now actively encouragin­g others to vote for Biden.

“I always thought Republican­s were fiscally very conservati­ve. Trump just spends and spends and spends,” said Jackson, 70, a retiree who used to run a local business alliance. “What I tell my friends is, if you’re voting for Trump because he’s a Republican — he’s not. He just does what’s good for Donald Trump.”

 ?? Melanie Mason Los Angeles Times ?? WISCONSIN I S I N the throes of an outbreak. Business has rebounded at Salon La Rousse, but owner Tamara Ybarra remains worried about the pandemic.
Melanie Mason Los Angeles Times WISCONSIN I S I N the throes of an outbreak. Business has rebounded at Salon La Rousse, but owner Tamara Ybarra remains worried about the pandemic.

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