The Evening Leader

President Biden makes third trip to Ohio since election

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WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden just can’t quit Ohio — even if it rejected him in last year’s election.

The Democrat travels to Cincinnati on Wednesday to push his economic policies. It’s the third visit of his presidency to Ohio, the only state he lost that he has visited multiple times.

Ohio was once an electoral prize that could decide who occupied the

White House, but its embrace of Republican­s has tightened over the past decade. The visit is a testament to Biden’s belief that going straight to voters will help cross a barbed political divide.

“Half of life is showing up, and Joe Biden shows up,” said John Anzalone, Biden’s presidenti­al campaign pollster. “He’s going to be a president for people who voted for him and people who voted against him.”

Ohio Republican­s, for their part, see the presidenti­al attention as a chance to make the case against Democrats. The state faces a heated Senate election next year with the retirement of Republican Rob Portman, who helped negotiate a $973 billion infrastruc­ture plan with Biden that now faces an uncertain future in the evenly split Senate.

The president’s visit will take him near the dangerousl­y outdated Brent Spence Bridge — a chokepoint for trucks and emergency vehicles between Ohio and Kentucky that the past two presidents promised without success to replace. But Republican­s are more focused on the increase in

shootings and crime in Cincinnati, which they blame on Democrats, although there are a host of factors, including the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“President Joe Biden will visit a great city suffering from devastatin­g levels of violent crime caused by the failed leadership of Democrat Mayor

John Cranley,” said Ohio Republican Party Chair Bob Paduchik, adding that he believes Biden also failed “to protect Americans and our southern border.”

Violent crime, particular­ly shootings and homicides, have been on the rise nationwide. But overall, far fewer crimes are committed than 10 years ago. Cincinnati, for example, saw a high number of shootings

and record homicides in 2020 as the pandemic raged, according to the city’s data. Homicides are slightly lower this year, with 49 homicides as of July 10 compared with 53 during the same period last year.

Before a town hall in Cincinnati to be shown on CNN, Biden will visit a training center for the Internatio­nal Brotherhoo­d of Electrical Workers to discuss policies to

create union jobs.

With presidenti­al visits to the Ohio cities of Columbus, Cleveland and now Cincinnati, the White House is betting that Biden’s policies are popular with independen­t voters and that the electorate will reward a president and party that are trying to solve their problems.

Democratic wins have been few and far between outside Ohio’s cities.

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