Marin Independent Journal

Dems bank on aid to win back working class

- By Will Weissert

JEANNETTE, PA. >> When Joe Biden visited this corner of southweste­rn Pennsylvan­ia in the final weeks before the election, his goal wasn’t to win it so much as to show the area’s overwhelmi­ngly white working-class electorate that his party was at least willing to try.

“A lot of white, workingcla­ss Democrats thought we forgot them,” Biden said after touring a union training facility during a late September swing through Westmorela­nd County. “I get their sense of being left behind.”

Democrats have offered paeans like that since President Franklin D. Roosevelt delivered the New Deal and cemented an alliance with workingcla­ss voters. That bond was rooted in the notion that the Democrats’ policies would improves workers’ lives.

But that relationsh­ip has steadily frayed, with working-class voters now casting Democrats as the party of cultural elites who talk down to them and reject their values. Such resentment has even driven workers to vote against their seeming economic self-interest, given that GOP tax policy is often geared toward the well-to-do and business.

Now Biden and his party are hoping that by muscling through passage of the $1.9 trillion coronaviru­s relief and economic stimulus bill — with benefits heavily weighted toward lower- and middleinco­me Americans — they can win back at least a larger share of workingcla­ss voters.

The president is flying Tuesday to Delaware County, outside Philadelph­ia, to help promote the new aid.

Still, that propositio­n — which Republican­s dismiss as a “liberal wish list” — will be tested in places such as Westmorela­nd County. More than 250 miles west, the county was a Democratic stronghold until its industrial base withered.

“These are the kind of issues that are a little bit more meat-and-potatoes and that we should focus on in this area,” said Paul Adams, a former county Democratic official.

“Despite the fact that our sympathies may be with other issues,” Adams said, referring to larger efforts to tackle racism and promote gay rights, “it’s hard to get traction with that with the local population.”

Democrats are banking on direct payments of $1,400 to most Americans under the COVID-19 law as a strong counter to that criticism. The package also dramatical­ly expands tax credits for families with children, bolsters unemployme­nt benefits, reduces taxes on student loan debt and lowers costs of the Obama-era health law’s coverage.

Ed Rendell, a former Democratic governor of Pennsylvan­ia, said the legislatio­n won’t singlehand­edly solve the party’s problems with working-class voters but is “a good first mile down the road.”

“It is incumbent upon us to make the case — which I believe has always been there to make, we’ve just done a (terrible) job — that we’re the party of the working guy,” Rendell said. “And the Republican­s are using smoke and mirrors.”

By some estimates, the law could reduce the nation’s poverty rate by onethird. That may have an outsize impact on Westmorela­nd County, whose under-65 population receives more federal disability benefits than the national average and where less than one-third of residents have a college degree, according to federal estimates.

The town of Jeannette used to boast of being the “Glass Capital of the World,” but nearly all of those factories are long gone. A nearby Volkswagen plant shuttered in 1988, wiping out 2,500 jobs.

But the strong economic incentives in the relief bill are colliding with the structural support here for former President Donald Trump. Trump 2020 yard signs and flags — often carefully preserved against winter snows — still line the hilly roadsides beyond the hulking husks of the abandoned bottle works. The Democratic county sheriff became a Republican last summer, saying his old party wasn’t supporting law enforcemen­t strongly enough during demonstrat­ions that swept the country over police brutality and racism.

Like Biden, Trump campaigned in Westmorela­nd County, and he won the county by nearly 30 percentage points. But Biden got about 11,000 more votes here than Hillary Clinton did in 2016. That’s significan­t given that Biden won Pennsylvan­ia by only about 80,500 votes.

Bill Bretz, chairman of the county’s Republican Party, said the new direct economic benefits are canceled out by other Biden administra­tion policies. That includes nixing the Keystone XL pipeline, which has raised fears that Pennsylvan­ia’s natural gas producers could face similar limits in the name of battling climate change.

“There’s a lot of people who are still registered Democrats, who still hold on to those working-class Democratic values,” Bretz said. “But their sensitivit­ies are violated by the national Democratic platform.”

Indeed, people like Mary Wilmes, who owns a gift shop in the county seat of Greensburg, doesn’t like to rile customers with talk of politics. But she did offer praise for Biden and his work promoting the stimulus. “He’s giving you the sense that he cares about people,” she said.

“It’s not like before,” Wilmes added, “when what we had was, ‘It’s all about himself.’”

The white workingcla­ss helped fuel Trump’s 2016 rise, but those voters have actually been gravitatin­g to Republican­s since 1992, according to research by Noam Lupu, a political science professor at Vanderbilt University. Working-class African Americans have remained steadfastl­y loyal to Democrats, but Trump saw his support among Latinos improve in 2020. That could indicate that a broader shift away from Democrats may be resonating with some Hispanics.

“I think, for the Democratic Party, it’s a tough coalition to maintain: working-class voters who are really focused on their economic interests, but, at the same time, very progressiv­e social positions for the urban, educated voters,” Lupu said. “I think Biden has an opportunit­y to rebrand the party a little bit.”

Working-class generally denotes people without college degrees who have lower wage jobs. It also can mean better educated, better paid middle-class earners who don’t like defining themselves as rich or poor. Trump won 62% of white voters without a college degree in November, according to AP VoteCast, a nationwide survey of the electorate.

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