Biden will outline the plan, which the campaign said would
create 5 million new jobs, in a speech in northeastern
Pennsylvania, near his childhood hometown of Scranton.
At the same time, Republican Vice President Mike Pence will
attend a business roundtable focused on reopening the economy in
Malvern, a suburb of Philadelphia, before speaking to the
Philadelphia police union later in the day.
The opposing visits underscore Pennsylvania's status as a key
battleground state in November's presidential election.
President Donald Trump carried the state in 2016 by a slim
margin, the first Republican to do so since 1988.
Biden's announcement is the first prong of a broader economic
plan titled "Build Back Better" to revive the U.S. economy after
the devastating coronavirus pandemic.
The plan includes proposals to build a clean energy economy;
support caregivers, including those providing child and elder
care; and advance racial equity.
Biden will offer more details about those areas in the coming
weeks, senior campaign officials said.
Biden proposed trillions of dollars in new federal efforts on
climate change, healthcare and infrastructure even before the
pandemic, and he has since called for more stimulus spending. It
remains to be seen whether he could convince Congress to support
such ambitious proposals.
Both Biden and Pence are visiting areas that have grown less
politically hospitable for their party in the Trump era.
Biden will spend the day in Lackawanna County, a longtime
Democratic stronghold that like many parts of Pennsylvania with
large concentrations of union blue-collar workers has swung hard
toward Trump.
Meanwhile, Chester County, where Pence will travel, is one of
several counties near Philadelphia that have seen Democratic
gains since 2016, reflecting a broader trend in suburbs around
the country.
(Reporting by Joseph Ax and Jarrett Renshaw; Editing by Leslie
Adler)
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