San Francisco Chronicle

Biden aims to win back the working class

- By Jonathan Weisman

With his call for a “blue-collar blueprint to rebuild America,” President Biden on Tuesday night acknowledg­ed rhetorical­ly what Democrats have been preparing for two years: a fierce campaign to win back white working-class voters through the creation of hundreds of thousands of well-paid jobs that do not require a college degree.

Biden’s economical­ly focused State of the Union address may have avoided the cultural appeals to the white working class that former President Donald Trump harnessed so effectivel­y, the grievances encapsulat­ed by fears of immigratio­n, racial and gender diversity, and the sloganeeri­ng of the intellectu­al left. But at the speech’s heart was an appeal to Congress to “finish the job” and a simple challenge. “Let’s offer every American the path to a good career whether they go to college or not,” he said.

In truth, much of that path was already laid by the past Congress with the signing of a $1 trillion infrastruc­ture bill, a $280 billion measure to rekindle a domestic semiconduc­tor industry and the Inflation Reduction Act, which included $370 billion for low-emission energy to combat climate change.

Whether or not Biden can persuade a divided Congress to act on his remaining plans, the money from those laws has just begun to flow, and a surge of hiring is coming. Many of those jobs will be in the industrial battlegrou­nds that Democrats either took back from Trump in 2020 or will need in 2024, when endangered senators such as Sherrod Brown of Ohio, Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Tammy Baldwin of Wisconsin face reelection.

But Democrats will have to match those jobs against Republican appeals aimed at white grievances.

Gov. Greg Abbott of Texas, a Republican, ordered state agencies and universiti­es this week to stop considerin­g racial and ethnic diversity in hiring. Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida is waging a campaign against diversity, equity and inclusion efforts while funding the shipping of migrants from the Mexican border to Democratic cities. The Republican-led House is holding hearings blaming immigrants lacking permanent legal status for the smuggling of fentanyl that is ravaging blue-collar cities and towns, though most of the arrests in the fentanyl trade have involved American smugglers.

Republican­s openly mocked Biden’s “Finish the Job” slogan, and among working-class voters, they have public opinion on their side. In a recent Washington Post/ABC News poll, just 36 percent of Americans without a college degree approved of Biden’s job performanc­e, compared with 53 percent of college graduates. His approval on economic issues was even worse, with just 31 percent of voters without a degree approving of his handling of the economy.

“Finish the job? On what? Fueling inflation? Opening the border? Lowering wages? Emptying our energy reserves?” asked Tommy Pigott, the rapid response coordinato­r at the Republican National Committee.

Without doubt, Democrats have their work cut out for them. About two-thirds of eligible voters do not have four-year college degrees, and over the past decade, Democrats have lost ground with them, especially with less educated white voters. In 2020, Biden won 61 percent of college graduates, but only 45 percent of voters without a fouryear college degree — and just 33 percent of white voters without a four-year degree.

In a New York Times/Siena College poll in September, 59 percent of white working-class voters said Republican­s were the party of the working class, compared with 28 percent who chose Democrats. Sixty-eight percent of these voters said they agreed more with Republican­s than Democrats on the economy, while just 25 percent picked Democrats. Beyond economics, white working-class voters sided overwhelmi­ngly with Republican­s on building a border wall, opposing gun control, stopping illegal immigratio­n and seeing gender as immutable and determined at birth.

Democrats, caught between those sentiments on social policy and the party’s core constituen­cies of people of color, women and the college-educated, are hoping that tangible improvemen­ts in well-being can persuade white voters without a college education to focus on their economic interests.

“Jobs are coming back, pride is coming back, because choices we made in the last two years,” Biden said Tuesday. “This is a blue-collar blueprint to rebuild America and make a real difference in your lives.”

Democratic problems with the working class are not limited to white voters. Some blue-collar Black, Latino and Asian American voters have drifted toward Republican­s, and Biden rolled out a range of economic appeals aimed broadly at people who are more sensitive to high prices.

He highlighte­d his efforts to lower insulin costs and cited pocketbook issues recognizab­le to almost any consumer — what he called “junk fees.” He identified “exorbitant” bank overdraft charges; credit card late fees; “resort fees” charged by hotels; change-of-service fees by cable and internet providers; and airline “surcharges.”

“Junk fees may not matter to the very wealthy, but they matter to most folks in homes like the one I grew up in,” Biden said. “They add up to hundreds of dollars a month.”

Other Democrats are taking a similar approach. On his first full day in office, Pennsylvan­ia’s new Democratic governor, Josh Shapiro, signed an executive order declaring that thousands of state jobs would no longer require a four-year college degree.

And it might work. The Pew Research Center found recently that 71 percent of voters with no degree beyond a high school diploma said the economy should be a top priority for the president and Congress this year, higher than any other issue.

To that end, Biden spoke of “a literal field of dreams” outside Columbus, Ohio, where a huge new Intel semiconduc­tor plant is being built that will, he said, “create 10,000 jobs,” including “7,000 constructi­on jobs” and “3,000 jobs once the factories are finished.” Already, unions in Ohio are ramping up training and apprentice­ship programs that are explicitly favored by the federal semiconduc­tor legislatio­n, the CHIPS and Science Act, and reaching out to women, teenagers, veterans and other workers who have traditiona­lly been outside the organized labor movement to prepare for the semiconduc­tor work.

“To the extent that manufactur­ing is characteri­stic of a lot of places that will become competitor­s for CHIPS investment, there’s implicit orientatio­n toward significan­t union history,” said Mark Muro, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institutio­n. “There are going to be significan­t numbers of noncollege jobs and a real opportunit­y for the economic inclusion of noncollege workers.”

“We just can go on and on, but it’s real, what the president has done,” said Mike Knisley, executive secretary and treasurer of the Ohio State Building and Constructi­on Trades Council, who was at the White House for the signing of the semiconduc­tor bill. “Everybody’s talked about it, Democrats and Republican­s alike, but Biden delivered.”

Beyond the Midwest, the Plumbers and Steamfitte­rs Local 81 in Syracuse, New York, is scrambling to bring in thousands of new members to work at Micron’s chip plant under constructi­on in upstate New York.

Last week, Biden promoted major infrastruc­ture projects in Baltimore, New York and New Jersey that will create tens of thousands of jobs, “every freaking one, union labor.”

None of this guarantees that rank-and-file union workers — or the 90 percent of privately employed workers who are not in a union — will shift back to the Democrats. Biden’s approval rating remains mired in the low 40s, and confidence in the economy is abysmal.

 ?? Pete Marovich/New York Times 2022 ?? President Biden meets workers in September at the site of an Intel semiconduc­tor plant in New Albany, Ohio. In his State of the Union address, Biden pointed to the jobs the plant will produce.
Pete Marovich/New York Times 2022 President Biden meets workers in September at the site of an Intel semiconduc­tor plant in New Albany, Ohio. In his State of the Union address, Biden pointed to the jobs the plant will produce.

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