Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Biden juggling priorities with midterms looming

President eager to please Dems, slow GOP’s momentum

- By Josh Boak

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden wants to tame inflation. He wants Congress to protect access to abortions. He wants to tackle voting rights. And he’s taking on China, promoting constructi­on of new factories, addressing climate change, forgiving student debt, pardoning federal marijuana conviction­s, cutting the deficit, working to lower prescripti­on drug prices and funneling aid to Ukraine.

Biden is trying to be everything to everyone. But that’s making it hard for him to say he’s focused on any single issue above all others as he tries to counter Republican momentum going into the midterm elections.

“There’s no one thing,” Biden said Wednesday when questioned about his top priority. “There’s multiple, multiple, multiple issues, and they’re all important.”

Biden’s exhaustive to-do list is a recognitio­n that the coalition of Democratic voters he needs to turn out on Election Day is diverse in terms of race, age, education and geography. This pool of voters has an expansive list of overlappin­g and competing interests on crime, civil rights, climate change, the federal budget and other issues.

The Republican candidates trying to end Democratic control of Congress have a far more uniform base of voters, allowing them to more narrowly direct messaging on the economy, crime and immigratio­n toward white voters, older voters, those without a college degree and those who identify as Christian.

In the 2020 election, AP VoteCast suggests, Biden drew disproport­ionate support from women, Black voters, voters younger than 45, college graduates and city dwellers and suburbanit­es. That gave Biden a broader base of support than Republican Donald Trump and it also is a potential long-term advantage for Democrats as the country is becomming more diverse and better educated.

But in midterm elections that normally favor the party not holding the White House, it requires Biden to appeal to all those constituen­cies.

“Coherence and cohesion have always been a challenge for the modern Democratic Party that relies on a coalition that crosses racial, ethnic, religious and class lines,” said Daniel Cox, a senior fellow in polling and public opinion at the conservati­ve American Enterprise Institute.

Biden devoted his public remarks last Tuesday to abortion, Wednesday to gasoline prices, Thursday to infrastruc­ture and Friday to deficit reduction, student debt forgivenes­s and historical­ly Black colleges and universiti­es. In most of his public speeches, Biden says he understand­s the pain caused by consumer prices rising 8.2% from a year ago and that he’s working to lower costs.

Cox said there are signs that Biden’s 2020 coalition is fracturing, with younger liberal voters not that enamored with him, and he does not appear to have done much to shore up Hispanic support.

But compared with 2016, when Trump won the presidency, Biden made relative progress with one prominent bloc that generally favors Republican­s: white voters without a college degree, as he won 33% of their votes compared with 28% who supported Hillary Clinton in 2016, according to a 2021 analysis by the Pew Research Center.

Keeping those voters in the Democratic coalition could be essential for maintainin­g control of the Senate.

Biden has traveled repeatedly to Pennsylvan­ia, campaignin­g last week for Senate nominee John Fetterman with the goal of picking up a seat in the state. Fetterman, with his sweatshirt­s and shorts, exudes a blue-collar image, a contrast with the Republican nominee, Dr. Mehmet Oz, who rose to fame as a TV show host.

“Democrats need to hold on to as much of that bloc as possible, especially in key whiter states like Pennsylvan­ia, Ohio and Wisconsin,” said William Frey, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institutio­n.

The test for Democrats is how to address broader concerns about the economy and inflation that affect everyone, while also highlighti­ng the specific issues that could energize various segments of their base. That can involve trade-offs.

As Republican­s have made crime a national issue, Biden’s message that he backs the police could help with those white voters. But it could also turn off younger voters in Senate races in Georgia and Florida who believe the police are part of the problem on civil rights, according to Alvin Tillery, a professor at Northweste­rn University and director of its Center for the Study of Diversity and Democracy.

 ?? AL DRAGO/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? President Joe Biden meets with students after speaking about his student loan forgivenes­s plan Friday at Delaware State University in Dover, Delaware.
AL DRAGO/THE NEW YORK TIMES President Joe Biden meets with students after speaking about his student loan forgivenes­s plan Friday at Delaware State University in Dover, Delaware.

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