Los Angeles Times

Democrats take battle to Detroit suburbs

TV ads attack Trump early in working-class areas he won in 2016.

- By Michael Finnegan

STERLING HEIGHTS, Mich. — Democrats in Michigan have been mobilizing for months for a fierce general election fight against President Trump, determined not to lose this Midwest battlegrou­nd as they did in 2016.

Even before they know who their nominee will be, Democratic groups are pouring millions of dollars into anti-Trump ads here, portraying the Republican president as an unstable leader who threatens Americans’ healthcare and the nation’s security.

A network of progressiv­e groups across Michigan has already identified voters susceptibl­e to voting against Trump and started reaching out to them on issues they care about most.

Michigan’s presidenti­al primary — the biggest of six Democratic contests Tuesday — will test the appeal of former Vice President Joe Biden and Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders in a state likely to play an outsize role in deciding whether Trump wins a second term.

If Democrats are to recapture Michigan, voters in this Detroit suburb in the heart of bellwether Macomb County will be key.

The predominan­tly white county backed President Obama’s reelection in 2012 after an auto industry bailout that kept the region’s top employers — and their many suppliers — in business.

But in 2016, it chose Trump over Hillary Clinton. Trump’s combative rhetoric on immigratio­n and trade resonated with its workingcla­ss voters, and so did his disruption of the political establishm­ent.

“I support him, because I’m sick and tired of the same old, same old,” Jack Shaw said recently as he downed chicken wings and beer at Gator Jake’s Bar & Grill.

The induction tooling salesman has backed Democrats in the past, but he voted for Trump and plans to do so again. He credits the president for the many “Help Wanted” signs around Sterling Heights.

In 2016, Trump played both to voters’ deep resentment over the region’s troubled economy and to its fraught history of racial tension, said Democratic consultant Joe DiSano, a Macomb County native.

“He uncannily tapped into it and continues to do so,” DiSano said.

The question now is whether Trump retains enough appeal among white working-class voters in communitie­s ravaged by industrial decline to win the state again. Whether Democrats draw a strong turnout of black voters could also be decisive.

The number of manufactur­ing jobs in Michigan has plummeted over the last two decades from 888,000 to 631,000. After the Great Recession, a regionwide recovery during the Obama years continued under Trump, but lately the trend has turned downward in manufactur­ing — contrary to the president’s boasts.

“We have not come close to gaining back all of the manufactur­ing jobs we lost,” said Gabriel Ehrlich, an economic forecaster at the University of Michigan.

He attributed the most recent troubles to slowing vehicle sales, Trump’s trade war and a strong dollar that makes U.S. exports more costly.

Trump’s victory here in 2016 was thinner than in any other state: He beat Clinton by fewer than 11,000 votes of 4.8 million cast.

Trump’s narrow wins in Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvan­ia gave him an electoral college victory even as Clinton carried the national popular vote, 48% to 46%.

“People know that Michigan matters and, quite frankly, four years ago they didn’t,” said Rep. Debbie Dingell, a Democrat who represents working-class suburbs west of Detroit.

The Democratic super PAC Priorities USA is spending nearly $6 million on anti-Trump television ads that start running this month in Detroit, then later this spring in Flint, Grand Rapids and other parts of Michigan.

“We cannot allow Trump and his campaign to define the election in a critical state like Michigan before we even have a nominee,” said Patrick McHugh, executive director of Priorities USA.

Beyond the advertisin­g, a wide array of local groups — among them, a network of suburban women known as Fems for Dems — already has begun groundwork, with activities such as phone banks and door-to-door canvassing to promote candidates for all offices on the 2020 ballot.

In 2018, such groups were crucial to Democratic women capturing three statewide offices — including the governorsh­ip for Gretchen Whitmer, who recently endorsed Biden.

Biden and Sanders are now both running ads aimed at Michigan’s working class. A Biden spot shows him visiting a car assembly plant as Obama says his vice president “revitalize­d American manufactur­ing as the head of our middle-class task force.”

Taking a more combative approach, a Sanders ad attacks Biden for supporting the North American Free Trade Agreement.

“The community has been decimated by trade deals,” autoworker Sean Crawford says as images of boarded-up factories and houses flash by.

Biden, who planned to campaign Monday in Detroit and Grand Rapids, had no offices or staff in Michigan as last week began, reflecting his trouble raising money before his victory in South Carolina propelled his dramatic Super Tuesday rebound.

By Tuesday, “doubledigi­t paid staff ” had arrived in Michigan, a Biden spokeswoma­n said.

Sanders, who held four Michigan rallies over the weekend, opened offices around the state months ago and assembled a big network of volunteers.

Trump, too, has assembled a sizable operation, with 30 staffers working in the state, said Rick Gorka, a spokesman for Trump Victory, a joint effort of the president’s campaign and the Republican National Committee. “The key aspect of our operation in Michigan is we never left,” Gorka said.

Using its elaborate data bank, Trump’s team is focused on maximizing turnout of rural white voters. Trump and Vice President Mike Pence have repeatedly campaigned in Michigan. In December, Trump railed against Democrats at a rally in Battle Creek on the night he was impeached.

Trump has also tried to win over black voters, at least enough to cut into Democrats’ typically huge margins. His campaign is opening community centers in black neighborho­ods of Detroit and other cities, and he often talks about sentencing reforms he signed into law.

Some Democrats fret about a recurrence of tepid turnout among black voters, which hurt Clinton in 2016. Others see Trump’s gestures as empty.

“We are not going to be fooled by these trappings of sensitivit­y,” said the Rev. Wendell Anthony, who heads the Detroit NAACP.

More challengin­g for Democrats are white working-class voters in places like Sterling Heights. Joining Shaw at Gator Jake’s on Saturday was his friend Bill Dietz, a retired Chrysler stamping plant supervisor.

Dietz, 73, didn’t vote in 2016 but approves of the job Trump is doing, particular­ly his tough and unpredicta­ble posture on the world stage.

“At first, I didn’t want a guy like that close to the button,” he said. “But now I don’t know. Maybe he’s scaring the other guys.”

 ?? Scott Olson Getty Images ?? FORMER VICE PRESIDENT Joe Biden campaigns Aug. 1 in Detroit, where a Democratic super PAC is spending millions on anti-Trump ads airing this month.
Scott Olson Getty Images FORMER VICE PRESIDENT Joe Biden campaigns Aug. 1 in Detroit, where a Democratic super PAC is spending millions on anti-Trump ads airing this month.

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