Joe Biden will have to dump the elite if he wants to beat Trump

Donald Trump is connecting with ordinary Americans, but the president can beat him if he ignores the blinkered Washington consensus

Donald Trump locked up the Republican nomination last week, and President Biden’s campaign faces an uphill struggle to defeat him. He needs to rediscover “blue-collar Joe” and break out of the elite bubble.

Trump is running an effective campaign that has deepened support among working-class voters in the primaries and the general election. He has shown he understands how angry people are about spiking prices, elites growing richer, rising violent crime and a flood of refugees.

Biden’s approval rating, meanwhile, is stuck below 40 per cent. Two thirds of Americans still believe the country is headed in the wrong direction. While many problems contribute to this, the share of those polled choosing inflation and the cost of living as the cause of this dissatisfaction is about 30 per cent higher than that for the next problem. Inflation concentrates the mind.

Yet the White House, pundits and progressive commentators are all trapped in the same elite bubble that keeps them from seeing what is happening to most Americans.

The full article can be read at The Times.

President Biden’s Speech to Black Americans Won’t Bring Them Home—Yet

Is it time for Biden to be Biden?

President Joe Biden spoke directly to Black Americans Monday at the Mother Emanuel AME Church, in Charleston, South Carolina. It was the site where a white supremacist massacred nine worshipers during Bible study, and where President Obama, at the memorial service for those who died, sang “Amazing Grace.” What better place for the president to effectively launch his re-election campaign to win back Black voters, who are so central to the Democrats’ base. And what better place to learn why Biden will likely still be losing ground with Black, Hispanic, and younger voters.

Fortunately, the president added some asides that could become part of a very different message and get heard in the Black community and the Democratic base.

On Monday, the president welded the “poison” of “white supremacy” to the violent MAGA Republicans who threaten our democracy, the “insurrectionists waving Confederate flags inside the halls of Congress.” He called on voters to reject their “cramped view of America,” and to rally around his vision, where “we [can] all do well.” America is “not perfect,” Biden said, but it is “a nation continuously striving to be a more perfect union.”

And then he laid out his main strategy for re-election. I kept “my commitment to you,” and “I’ve done my best to honor your trust.”

The full article can be read at The American Prospect.

Are the Democrats Sleepwalking to Disaster?

Joe Biden has been an excellent president, but is also, I fear, the candidate least able to defeat Donald Trump. Other Democrats need to enter the race.

In decades (perhaps even centuries) to come, historians will focus on the 2024 presidential election much as they have on the election of 1860. They will understand, as too few Americans do today, that it will stand as a hinge point in American history.

My expectation—make that, my fear—is that they will focus most intensely on this question: Why were so many Democrats sleepwalking while the nation clearly teetered on the brink of authoritarian rule?

That question can (and must) be posed in a more specific way. With the prospect of a Donald Trump victory looming large, with polling showing that even Democratic base voters give Trump a higher approval rating than they accord President Biden, why did Democrats opt to run their weakest candidate—Biden—against Trump? Even as poll after poll showed Trump leading Biden in swing states, even as the electorate identified Biden’s presidency primarily with inflation and the high cost of living, even as Democratic House and Senate candidates were polling above Biden in swing states and nationally, even as Democratic governors had generally high approval ratings, why, oh why did the Democrats fail to run a serious primary opponent to Biden in the spring of 2024?

Well, we know why. Given the cards he was dealt (a two-year congressional majority that teetered on a razor’s edge), Biden did extremely well. He managed to get through Congress landmark legislation on rebuilding America’s industrial base, on mitigating the climate crisis, on restoring the nation’s sagging infrastructure, all while putting himself on the line for and with American workers as no president had ever done before. By most metrics, he’s been an excellent president, not just committed to restoring the country’s long-vanished mass prosperity but actually doing something about it.

And yet, that hasn’t made him the favorite in an election that will almost surely pit him against a candidate who poses the greatest threat to American democracy of anyone in our country’s long history. With each new poll, the popular discontent with the state of the nation—more particularly, the state of its economy; most particularly, the cost of living—rises ever higher, even despite the declines in the price of gas and some other essentials. And in each new poll, the doubts about Biden’s age remain constant.

Those discontents and those doubts are connected. Biden is no longer able, save in the rarest of instances, to make a forceful defense of his very real economic achievements. That’s more than a problem of inadequate delivery, however. The other problem is that he’s been highlighting the wrong achievements.

As Stan Greenberg’s polling for Democracy Corps has clearly documented, the number one issue for Americans—and for the constituencies that make up the Democratic base (young people, Blacks, Latinos, single women)—is the high price of food, shelter, and other necessities. A gap of nearly 30 percentage points separates this concern from the various (according to which group’s sample we look at) second-ranking concerns, be they crime, the climate, or other very real problems.

The full article can be read at The American Prospect .

‘This Is Grim,’ One Democratic Pollster Says

The predictive power of horse-race polling a year from the presidential election is weak at best. The Biden campaign can take some comfort in that. But what recent surveys do reveal is that the coalition that put Joe Biden in the White House in the first place is nowhere near as strong as it was four years ago.

These danger signs include fraying support among core constituencies, including young voters, Black voters and Hispanic voters, and the decline, if not the erasure, of traditional Democratic advantages in representing the interests of the middle class and speaking for the average voter.

Any of these on their own might not be cause for alarm, but taken together, they present a dangerous situation for Biden.

From Nov. 5 through Nov. 11, Democracy Corps, a Democratic advisory group founded by Stan Greenberg and James Carville, surveyed 2,500 voters in presidential and Senate battleground states as well as competitive House districts.

In an email, Greenberg summarized the results: “This is grim.” The study, he said, found that collectively, voters in the Democratic base of “Blacks, Hispanics, Asians, L.G.B.T.Q.+ community, Gen Z, millennials, unmarried and college women give Trump higher approval ratings than Biden.”

The full article can be read at The New York Times.