The Guardian (USA)

Many midwest Democrats stayed home in 2016. Will they turn out for Biden?

- Chris McGreal in Cleveland, Ohio

Jamal Collins took the trouble to vote four years ago even though, like a lot of people in Cleveland, he didn’t imagine it would change very much.

Eight years of deflated hopes for

Barack Obama had left the African American teacher wondering if any president could really make that much difference to the lives and livelihood­s Collins saw around him. He even thought there might be an upside to the election of Donald Trump.

“I’m kinda glad it happened,” Collins said a few weeks after the new president moved into the White House. “It really is an eye-opener on what’s really going on. The real truth about America. The real truth that there’s still a lot of racism. People voted for this sort of stuff.”

A lot of people in Cleveland chose not to vote. Driven by disillusio­nment with Obama and dislike for Hillary Clinton, turnout fell in the overwhelmi­ngly Democratic city where nearly half the population is black, as it did in others across the midwest, helping to usher Trump to victory.

This year, Collins sees it differentl­y.

“Trump’s presidency, the last four years, have been absolutely horrible. Trump blew life back into white supremacy. Him being so open and unapologet­ic about the stuff he says, and things that he’s done, really gave that

power,” he said.

“Plus coronaviru­s, because now we have tens of thousands of people, especially in the black community, really suffering from Covid-19. We have an economy decimated to almost the proportion­s of the depression. The loss of jobs and loss of wealth is worse than I’ve ever seen before.”

Collins will be voting for Biden and encouragin­g anyone else he can to do the same because the election hangs in good part on the turnout in major midwestern cities. Trump decisively won Ohio four years ago after the state had voted twice for Obama. But with the president holding a lead of just 1% in the aggregate of recent polls, the result in Ohio may come down to just a few thousand votes in Cleveland.

Four years ago, Clinton won nearly 50,000 fewer votes than Obama in Cuyahoga county, which includes Cleveland and its small satellite cities, in part because so many Democrats stayed home.

In neighbouri­ng Michigan, Democratic turnout in Detroit fell by about 60,000 votes in 2016. Trump took the state with a majority of just 10,704 votes. Similarly, the drop in turnout between presidenti­al elections in the Democratic stronghold of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, was more than double the number of votes – just 23,000 – that Trump won the state by.

Those victories were key to the president winning the electoral college and taking the White House.

The Democrats have reason to hope Biden can turn that around on 3 November. More than 8m people have registered to vote in Ohio, the second highest on record after Obama’s 2008 race. The number registerin­g as Democrats has surged 20% in the state this year while Republican­s have fallen 6% although they still have a slight lead in total registrati­ons. Little more than half of the electorate are independen­ts.

Two-thirds of the drop in Republican voters is in Cuyahoga county. Those retreating from Trump include blue collar workers and white women living in the Cleveland suburbs.

“Voting for him was a big mistake,” said a shop assistant, Lynn, who is married to a factory worker, after a campaign worker knocked on her door. “We both didn’t like Hillary and thought Trump would be good for bringing jobs back. I lost it with him that first year. I realised he was completely unfit to be president. But my husband hung on, believing in him until Covid. We’re both voting Biden just to get him out. I don’t know what Biden will do but at this point I don’t care.”

Like others who once backed Trump and have turned away she did not want to be identified because “we have some crazy neighbours around here”.

Lynn is among about 2.5m Ohioans who applied for absentee ballots, double the number in 2016. Nearly one quarter of the electorate has already voted in Cuyahoga county, whether by post or in person.

“What we’re seeing right now is astronomic­al volumes of people voting by mail,” said Erika Anthony of Cleveland Votes, a nonpartisa­n get out the vote group. “Weirdly, despite the fact that every sort of tactic that we normally would be deploying to get people to vote has been compromise­d because of the pandemic, I will say there’s been an increased excitement when we are engaging with residents, potential voters.”

But for all that, less than half of the population of Cleveland registered to vote. Some in the city have never been to the polls. Others turned out for Obama but not since.

“Voter apathy is a real thing,” said Anthony. “If I’m a black person particular­ly, I really am not seeing anything that’s demonstrat­ing to me that democracy is working for me.”

Cleveland is among the most racially segregated cities in the country and one in three residents lives below the poverty line. It struggled through the Obama years, never really recovering from the 2001 recession or the national economic collapse seven years later. Then came coronaviru­s.

Amanda King, an African American volunteer working to register voters in Cleveland said some voters are more motivated to turn out this year.

“I think that among young and educated voters, there’s a feeling that this is our duty to vote in this election because it’s consequent­ial. It feels more pressing than the Trump-Hillary election,” she said. “I think for some people, their bubble has been burst. After the Obama presidency they were thinking we’re a progressiv­e society, things are great. And then this four years of Trump has really made some people come to the realisatio­n that our country is not the democracy that it could be or should be.”

But King, who runs an art collective, Shooting Without Bullets and who helped curate City Champions, the Guardian’s week-long focus on the city last year, said she met far less enthusiasm in one of the city’s poorest neighbourh­oods, Hough, where she visited barbershop­s, a popular gathering place for discussion among African American men.

“When I do voter registrati­on in

Hough, which is a majority black neighbourh­ood that has been disinveste­d from, redlined, a lot of that population is functional­ly illiterate, it’s a very different response over there. There’s a lot of people who are not interested and who don’t believe in electoral politics,” she said.

“Many of their arguments were that whether it’s Trump, whether it’s Obama, whether it’s Bush, whether it’s Clinton, they’ve never cared about me. Me choosing them as leadership has never changed the conditions in which I’m living. And you look at that neighbourh­ood, and you look at those statistics, and you say, you’re damn right. I understand that frustratio­n.”

King said dire prediction­s for four more years of Trump are doing little to galvanise people in neighbourh­oods like Hough.

“That might work for white women who voted for Trump last time but that’s not going to work necessaril­y for the people on the fence. You can’t say to someone who has nothing, to someone who is constantly in a state of struggle, well this guy is gonna make it worse. There’s no more fear to be had. They’re not selling greatness here, they’re selling well, it’s worse or worse,” she said.

“I’m thinking that there’s a lot of barbershop­s around the midwest where this conversati­on is happening. It scares me because I know that we need to turn out for this election.”

Detroit and Milwaukee also saw a drop in voting in African American neighbourh­oods in 2016 that local activists in part attributed to a lack of interest because Obama was not on the ballot or disillusio­nment because he was able to achieve less than they had hoped, in part because of Republican obstructio­n.

Collins grew up in overwhelmi­ngly black East Cleveland where his father worked for General Electric and his mother was a bus driver.

“People feel like their vote is not going to make a difference. And people may be too concerned with other stuff that’s going on right in front of their face versus getting into politics. They don’t trust politician­s, never have,” he said. “Up until Obama, there were never a lot of people voting around here because I don’t think they really saw them making a change.”

Collins, who teaches at a school and a community centre, said coronaviru­s forced his classes online but some of young people he teaches don’t have computers. Others lack decent internet connection­s. They might rely on their phones for social media but that doesn’t work for interactiv­e lessons.

“These are the kinds of problems a lot of their families are focused on, not voting,” he said.

Democratic politician­s remain confident but have a different concern.

Kent Smith is running unopposed for re-election as a state representa­tive in Euclid, a majority black small city within Cuyahoga county that is effectivel­y a suburb of Cleveland. He is less worried about turnout than whether the votes get counted.

“I really think that in 2020, because of the global pandemic and the change in how people are voting, it’s really going to be turnout versus the number of votes that are ruled ineligible,” he said.

Smith said a combinatio­n of voters not being used to filling out postal ballots – a common error is to put the date instead of date of birth – and efforts by Ohio’s Republican secretary of state, Frank LaRose, to throw roadblocks in the way of voting by post which is more favoured by Democrats, has raised concerns of large numbers of ballots being discounted.

“Projection­s of turnout are healthy for the Democrats. It’s a matter of how many of those votes will actually count,” said Smith.

 ?? Photograph: DaShaunae Marisa/The Guardian ?? ‘Voter apathy is a real thing,’ said Erika Anthony of Cleveland Votes.
Photograph: DaShaunae Marisa/The Guardian ‘Voter apathy is a real thing,’ said Erika Anthony of Cleveland Votes.
 ?? Photograph: DaShaunae Marisa/The Guardian ?? Jamal Collins will be voting for Biden and encouragin­g anyone else he can to do the same.
Photograph: DaShaunae Marisa/The Guardian Jamal Collins will be voting for Biden and encouragin­g anyone else he can to do the same.

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