The Mercury News

Democrats angry at Biden back him anyway

Voters from a Minnesota suburb fear a possible Trump presidency

- By Thomas Beaumont

HOPKINS, MINN. >> Aishah AlSehaim laments the 30,000 Palestinia­ns killed in Gaza, a grim statistic from a war with Israel that she wishes President Joe Biden would try harder to stop.

But the 38-year-old clinical data scientist, an Arab American from the Democratic-heavy suburb of St. Louis Park, Minnesota, is voting for the Democrat on Tuesday anyway because her top priority is stopping Republican Donald Trump.

“It's not even about hope to affect change in the coming years, but simply that things don't get more screwed up nationally and internatio­nally,” she said.

Biden's campaign isn't likely to trumpet endorsemen­ts such as Al-Sehaim's. But they give credence to the reelection effort's strategy of promoting Biden administra­tion programs but also turning out disaffecte­d Democrats by invoking their fears of Trump.

For many reluctant Biden voters in suburban Minneapoli­s and around the country, any potential value of a protest vote in a primary or general election is outweighed by starkly practical considerat­ions about a possible second Trump presidency.

Biden is still expected to sweep Democratic primaries in Minnesota and 15 other states on Super Tuesday and will likely secure his party's nomination in the coming weeks. While campaign officials note the president's accomplish­ments on liberal priorities such as climate change, they are all too aware of concerns about his age and a lack of enthusiasm not just for Biden but about politics at large. Biden's strongest supporters acknowledg­e his campaign does not inspire voters the same way that Barack Obama or Ronald Reagan once did.

“I'm not sure, because of the poison that's been injected into the system over the last 10 years, if anybody gets that morning-in-America enthusiasm again,” said Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, a Democrat, referring to Reagan's famous reelection campaign television ad. “It doesn't surprise me that much that what you're finding is people who say they're going to support him, but it's not an Obama-type new thing.”

Biden aides argue there is more enthusiasm for the president than the interviews suggest. They point to the 600,000 voters who voted in Michigan's primary this past week, more than three times the turnout for

Barack Obama in 2012.

One of Biden's token primary challenger­s is Rep. Dean Phillips, a threeterm congressma­n representi­ng this very tract of Minneapoli­s suburbs. Yet among nearly two dozen interviews conducted over three days with Democratic voters in his district, Phillips got barely a mention.

Beating Trump was the most common theme in interviews with profession­als, students and cross section of age, gender and racial and ethnic background­s.

“It frightens me to think about Trump being in office again,” said Audra Robinson.

The 52-year-old marketing executive from Brooklyn Park says she is specifical­ly troubled by Trump's praise for Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, a rightwing nationalis­t Trump routinely lauds while campaignin­g, “and whatever his affinity for (Russian President Vladimir) Putin is.”

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