The Guardian (USA)

Pennsylvan­ia may lean Democrat, but that doesn’t mean Biden will win the state

-

My home city of Philadelph­ia has a population of about 1.6 million people, of which about 1 million are registered voters. According to the most recent numbers from the Commonweal­th of Pennsylvan­ia, approximat­ely 75% of voters are registered Democrats and 11% are Republican­s. Our mayor, city council and district attorney and most other important political leaders are Democrats. Joe Biden would win by a landslide if the 2024 presidenti­al election were held only in Philadelph­ia. Of course, it’s not.

Pennsylvan­ia is a big state with a critical 20 electoral votes. In many ways it is a good proxy for how the US as a whole will vote and – as someone who works with businesses across the state – fast-approachin­g 2024 will be all about the economy.

Drive just 20 miles outside of Philadelph­ia and you’re no longer in Biden territory; you’ll soon start to see why the Democrats are going to have to fight to keep the state. In neighborin­g Montgomery, Bucks and Chester counties, the number of Republican­s swells. And the further you get from the metropolis­es of Philadelph­ia and Pittsburgh, the more red the state becomes.

In Philadelph­ia, the top employers are the government, healthcare and higher education. Few of these organizati­ons are directly affected by “Bidenomics”, which is the term for the president’s spending and tax legislatio­n meant to improve competitio­n, protect workers and address environmen­tal concerns. Even in a blue city in a blue state, people here don’t really see the impact.

In the rest of the state, it’s a different story. There, people are mostly employed in the manufactur­ing, distributi­on, service and oil industries. Bidenomics has promised billions to the state in years to come, but so far people just see higher prices, higher taxes and continuati­on of the same racial order as before.

Sure, there are some grants for manufactur­ers and tech firms in the state, and Pennsylvan­ia is supposedly getting billions in funding, including grants to support “green manufactur­ing” and money for “hydrogen hubs”, under the Inflation Reduction Act. But that piece of Bidenomics, with its climate-friendly provisions, has targeted the oil and gas industry and particular­ly fracking – with Pennsylvan­ia being the second-largest center in the country. That industry has seen numerous plant closures with tens of thousands of jobs lost.

Critics of the president’s policies – which have spurred countless workplace regulation­s, including proposals to expand unionizati­on and increase overtime pay – argue they are a burden to companies that are still struggling to adapt to prices that are significan­tly higher than when Biden took office.

For individual­s, inflation in Pennsylvan­ia is ranging between 3% and 4% while wage growth is about 5%, and that’s good news. But, like most businesses, consumers are suffering with price increases for most staples here – gas, rent, food – that are also higher by double digits from just a few years ago.

In Pennsylvan­ia, the rate of new businesses opening, as in the rest of the country, has risen dramatical­ly. But most of these businesses are actually individual­s – freelancer­s and contractor­s looking for side gigs – and have no employees. Pennsylvan­ia is actually ranked among the worst states to start a new business in some studies.

People of color, who had hoped to benefit from the Democratic party’s largesse, have not progressed by much. In Philadelph­ia, only 6% of businesses are Black-owned, even though Black people make up 40% of the city’s population. The numbers are similarly dismal for business owners of color in the rest of the state.

In 2020, Biden won 50.01% of the vote to Trump’s 48.84%, a margin of 80,555, or 1.2%. That’s not a very big margin. Next year’s elections can easily swing against him. He will certainly have support from his fellow Democrats, and there will be many Republican­s – like me – and independen­ts who would vote for him rather than endure a catastroph­ic Trump presidency.

If it does come down to Biden v Trump again, it’s going to be a close one. But it won’t have much to do with Bidenomics.

 ?? Photograph: Martin Godwin/The Guardian ?? Bidenomics has promised billions to the state, but so far people just see higher prices and higher taxes.
Photograph: Martin Godwin/The Guardian Bidenomics has promised billions to the state, but so far people just see higher prices and higher taxes.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States