Biden targets wealthy in Pennsylvania tour with a hometown visit
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[April 16, 2024]
By Jarrett Renshaw
PHILADELPHIA (Reuters) - U.S. President Joe Biden kicks off a multi-city
tour of the battleground state of Pennsylvania on Tuesday with a stop in
his hometown of Scranton where he will renew calls to increase taxes on
wealthy Americans and large corporations.
With 19 electoral votes, one of the highest counts among all 50 U.S.
states, and voters who swing between backing Democrats and Republicans,
Pennsylvania is a top prize in the 2024 presidential election that
features a rematch between Biden and his Republican rival, former
President Donald Trump.
Biden, who spent part of his childhood in Scranton before his family
moved to Delaware, won Pennsylvania in 2020 by less than 1.5%, or
roughly 80,000 votes. Trump beat Hillary Clinton there by fewer than
45,000 votes in 2016. Polls show another close race.
Biden will head to Pittsburgh on Wednesday and Philadelphia on Thursday
as part of an effort to draw contrasts with Trump on tax and economic
policies. Trump was in Eastern Pennsylvania on Saturday for a campaign
rally that drew thousands of supporters.
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"You got Joe Biden, a candidate who sees the world in the kitchen table
where he grew up in Scranton, Pennsylvania, and Donald Trump, who sees
the world from his country club down at Mar-a-Lago," said Michael Tyler,
the Biden campaign's communications director.
Biden is grappling with voter concerns about the U.S. economy despite
job growth, healthy spending and better-than-expected GDP increases.
Voters blame Biden for rising costs on an array of items from groceries
to construction supplies, along with high interest rates.
The latest Reuters/Ipsos poll found that voters trust Trump more than
Biden to better manage the economy and jobs by a 39% to 33% margin.
Biden is betting his economic populist message, which includes a new
billionaire's tax and closing corporate loopholes, will animate voters
in a blue-collar region of Pennsylvania that Democrats dominated before
Trump emerged. Scranton sits in Lackawanna County, which is whiter,
poorer and less-educated, on average, than the rest of the state, the
latest U.S. Census figures show.
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U.S. President Joe Biden speaks next to Michigan Governor
Gretchen Whitmer, as he meets with autoworkers after the United Auto
Workers (UAW) union recently endorsed Biden's reelection bid, at the
UAW Region 1 George Merrelli Technical Training Center in Warren, in
the Detroit metro area, Michigan, U.S., February 1, 2024.
REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File Photo
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Biden must stem the defections of white, non-college educated voters
in Pennsylvania and other rust-belt battleground states like
Michigan and Wisconsin if he hopes to stay in the White House,
campaign aides have said.
Former President Barack Obama won Lackawanna county by roughly 62%
in 2008 and 2012, while Hillary Clinton eked out a victory with
49.8% of the vote. Biden won the county by 53%.
The state's Republican and Democratic primary contests take place on
April 23.
Biden faces a loosely organized effort by critics who say he has not
done enough to stop the humanitarian crisis in Gaza, where Israel's
air and ground campaign has led to widespread disease and famine in
the Palestinian enclave.
Amber Viola, a 38-year-old Scranton resident who runs a popular
local political podcast, said she was invited by the Biden campaign
to attend the Scranton event but turned it down.
"I don't feel comfortable posing for campaign photos when there are
people dying," Viola said.
Voters mounted opposition efforts in Democratic primaries in other
battleground states like Michigan, Wisconsin and North Carolina to
register their protest. Biden has faced protests at many public
events in recent months.
(Reporting by Jarrett Renshaw; editing by Jeff Mason and Richard
Chang)
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