The Mercury News

SUBURBANIT­ES ARE VOTING, AND THAT’S GOOD FOR BIDEN

- By Lisa Mascaro and Steve Karnowski

BURNSVILLE, MINN. » Nearly two years after suburbanit­es helped drive a Democratic surge, there are clear signs these voters are engaged and primed to vote Democratic again.

Turnout in the Democratic presidenti­al primary has been strong across suburban counties, from northern Virginia to Southern California, that fueled the 2018 wave. In several key counties, turnout has exceeded that of four years ago. In some cases, it has bested the party’s recent high-water marks reached during the 2008 primary battle between Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton.

That has been particular­ly good news now for Joe Biden.

The former vice president, who’s running as a moderate, consensus candidate, soared to the top of the Democratic field this past week, showing strength in places such as Fairfax County in Virginia, and Mecklenbur­g County in North Carolina. Many suburban Democrats said they are motivated by their desire to oust President Donald Trump and a fear that Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, Biden’s chief primary rival, is a riskier bet.

“My main goal is to not have Trump get reelected,” Gail Hayes, a 67-year-old retired child care provider, said outside a coffee shop in Burnsville, Minnesota, a Twin Cities suburb.

Hayes noted that she’s ideologica­lly more aligned with progressiv­es such as Sanders or Elizabeth Warren,

the Massachuse­tts senator who dropped out of the race Thursday. But Hayes described herself as pragmatic and said she voted for Biden because she thinks he can win.

“I wanted to pick someone more moderate,” she said. “I really didn’t decide until a couple hours before I voted.”

The Democratic turnout overall has risen, with Iowa, North Carolina and Texas topping 2016 levels, but not the 2008 spike.

Virginia was an exception, jumping from 986,000 votes in 2008 to 1.3 million this time.

Much of that increase is coming in American suburbs that will be pivotal to the November general election.

Consider Burnsville, part of once-reliably Republican Dakota County. The sprawling community has grown more racially diverse and more Democratic in recent years. The strip mall where Hayes grabbed a coffee also housed a halal grocer linked with an African restaurant and a Latin grocer linked with a taco shop.

A surge of anti-trump sentiment in the area helped Democrats flip a Republican-held House seat in 2018. Now Dakota County is among the places Trump’s campaign must pick up ground if it wants to make good on its promise to win Minnesota in November.

“The suburbs have been a killing zone for Republican­s in the Trump era,” said GOP strategist Alex Conant, a top adviser on Florida Sen. Marco Rubio’s failed 2016 presidenti­al campaign. Conant said Republican­s must do better to attract young families and profession­als or Democratic gains in suburbs almost certainly will continue.

The opening contests of the Democratic presidenti­al primary, including 14 staged Tuesday, brought few signs that the Trump backlash in the suburbs has ebbed. In a dozen counties with swing suburban communitie­s, Democrats cast more ballots than they did four years ago, an analysis found. In nine of the 12 counties, the vote totals eclipsed 2008.

The numbers are a sign of both the energy and the population growth driving Democrats’ suburban strength. Both were evident last Tuesday in Virginia, where Democrats have won three straight election cycles since Trump was elected, powered largely by voters in suburban areas. That success includes every statewide race and flipping partisan control of the Legislatur­e and congressio­nal delegation.

In Chesterfie­ld County, just south of Richmond, young families have flocked to new subdivisio­ns, shifting the area’s politics at a stunning pace. The county voted for Trump in 2016 but since has helped elect Democratic Gov. Ralph Northam in 2017, sent Democrat Abigail Spanberger to Congress in 2018 and seated a new Democratic state senator in 2019. This past Tuesday, 25,000 more Democrats voted compared with the Democratic primary in 2016.

Voting was up for Democrats in Texas’ Dallas County, another area that flipped a House seat to Democrats in 2018, though turnout was not as high as when Obama was on the ballot. Outside of Denver, Andrea Staron, 38, said she used to vote Republican. But she left her presidenti­al choice blank in 2016.

On Super Tuesday, the law student who is antiaborti­on and deeply interested in anti-poverty work voted on Super Tuesday because she wanted to play a role in choosing an opponent to a president she detests.

Sanders has some “very interestin­g ideas,” she said, but “I want somebody who can beat Trump.”

She waited until the last minute. And she voted for Biden.

“The suburbs have been a killing zone for Republican­s in the Trump era.” — Alex Conant, GOP strategist

 ?? STEVE KARNOWSKI — AP ?? Gail Hayes, a retired child care provider from Burnsville, Minn., voted for Joe Biden on Super Tuesday: “My main goal is to not have Trump get reelected.”
STEVE KARNOWSKI — AP Gail Hayes, a retired child care provider from Burnsville, Minn., voted for Joe Biden on Super Tuesday: “My main goal is to not have Trump get reelected.”

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