Neither the swing states’ actual economic conditions nor the partisan makeup of state government seems to have had much effect on the respondents’ answers. All but one of the states (Nevada) have rates of unemployment that differ by less than 1 percent from the national unemployment rate. And Democratic Party policy per se doesn’t seem to be a cause of discontent: Four of the states have Democratic governors, and in another (Nevada again), Democrats control both legislative houses, though not the governor’s office. That, too, shouldn’t come as much of a surprise. The particulars of Biden’s economic policies—higher taxes on the rich, re-industrialization, paid sick leave, affordable child care and college—all poll very well. It’s only when the name Biden is attached to people’s assessments of economic conditions that those assessments turn decidedly gloomy. I don’t mean to discount the widespread discontent over high prices
generally, particularly of food, and the systemic unaffordability of housing, health care, child care, and higher ed. I don’t mean to discount the fact that the president, any president, is held more accountable for such matters than any state-level official. But when all that discounting is done, it’s still apparent that the association of Biden with economic conditions brings down the assessment of those conditions. Biden may yet be able to mitigate this by stressing his support for popular progressive economic policies, and the continuation of the recovery (in which his actual
record is nothing short of stellar) may help some, too. But looking at this polling suggests that if he’s to defeat Trump, abortion and Trump himself are the themes he most needs to sound.
|