The Wall Street Journal - 22.02.2020 - 23.02.2020

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POLITICS


Philadelphia’s


Importance


In 2020 Race


Swing-state cities can be the tipping
point for candidates, especially
Democrats, on Election Day

up against Mr. Trump, with
Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobu-
char as his running mate.
“With Bernie, I think you
bring that younger genera-
tion,” she said.
Ms. Walker, who works in
regulatory labeling for phar-
maceuticals, said she has en-
joyed watching her retire-
ment fund’s balance rise as
the stock market has surged.
But she said new policies are
needed to help younger peo-
ple.
“When I look at the gener-
ation that’s coming up be-
hind us, their wages have
not risen to meet what it
costs,” she said.

Strawberry Mansion
Tonnetta Graham hasn’t
decided which Democratic
candidate to back, but she is
clear on one point: This low-
income, African-American
area needs help in its strug-
gles with gun violence, de-
clining population, school
closings and high unemploy-
ment. The vibrant U.S. econ-
omy hasn’t made its pres-
ence felt, she says.
“The trickle-down thing
isn’t working,” said Ms. Gra-
ham, 52, who heads a local
community development cor-
poration but said she was
speaking only for herself.
“Our access to jobs is getting
tougher because the jobs
that are coming through
Philadelphia, you have to
have a certain level of educa-
tion.”
Outside a Save A Lot su-
permarket, 26-year-old secu-
rity guard Mike Williams
said he doesn’t vote because
he doesn’t think it matters
to his life.
“Vote anyway!” Jeresia
English, 48, shouted at him
as she emerged from the
store. To Ms. English, who
has a medical disability,
health care is a key concern.
“I need my medical insur-
ance,” she said.
Ms. English said she loves
Ms. Warren but is “just vot-
ing blue” in November.

Cedar Park
In Democrat Matthew

Steuer’s dreams, localized
economies would replace
capitalism. The closest any
current candidate comes to
his worldview is Mr. Sand-
ers.
“For me, democratic so-
cialism doesn’t go quite far
enough, but it’s the best we
canaspireto,”saidMr.
Steuer, a 36-year-old carpen-
ter who lives in Cedar Park.
The gentrified West Philadel-
phia neighborhood is one of
several Sanders strongholds.

Clockwise from top: Kevin
Harden backs Sen. Elizabeth
Warren. Matthew Steuer is a
fan of Sen. Bernie Sanders.
Both say they will vote for the
Democratic nominee. Tonnetta
Graham says her low-income
area needs help. Patricia De
Carlo doesn’t have a preferred
Democratic candidate yet.

Mr. Steuer praised Mr.
Sanders’s support of “Medi-
care for all” and called him
the only hope to address cli-
mate change in a substantive
way. Still, Mr. Steuer said he
would vote for whomever
faces Mr. Trump. “I get a lit-
tle frustrated with people
who act like their vote is
some deep symbol of every-
thing they are,” he said.
Joanne Beer joined the in-
formal Philly for Bernie
group last summer and is
now a co-chair.
“I see his campaign as
sort of restoring democracy
to the people,” she said.
Ms. Beer, a 38-year-old
postdoctoral researcher, said
it is premature to ask any-
one to commit to vote in No-
vember for the Democratic
nominee with the primary
campaign still in flux.
“I don’t really agree with
giving any Democrat a free
pass,” she said.

Society Hill
Larry Spector lives in the
wealthiest part of Philadel-
phia and backs the richest
candidate in the Democratic
field, former New York City
Mayor Michael Bloomberg.
“I don’t think anybody
holds a candle to him in
terms of his qualifications,”
said Mr. Spector, a 69-year-
old lawyer who leads the
civic association in Society
Hill, a neighborhood with el-
egant colonial homes and
cobblestone streets.
Still, he said he wouldn’t
hesitate to vote for any Dem-
ocrat.

“Just in terms of overall
integrity and bringing the
country together and com-
passion for people and fight-
ing hate, any of these people
would be better,” he said of
the Democratic field.
Shannon Hanby, 32,
shares an anybody-but-
Trump outlook. “We cannot
have another four years of
Trump,” she said.
But she is leery of what
Mr. Sanders’s backers will do
if he again comes up short in
his quest for the party’s
nomination. “There is a very
loud group that only wants
Bernie,” said Ms. Hanby, a
consultant for employee
wellness programs, “and that
is very concerning.”

Norris Square
Philadelphia’s burgeoning
Latino population represents
a potential boon for 2020
candidates. The community
makes up about 15% of the
city’s population, but has
disproportionately low rates
of voting or registering to
vote, analysts say.
Take Iesha Delvalle. The
28-year-old caregiver of
Puerto Rican heritage said
she doesn’t see the point be-
cause she distrusts politi-
cians. “Some people do

break promises. They sell us
dreams. It’s sad,” she said.
Such attitudes exasperate
Patricia De Carlo. “I person-
ally get very upset with my
people,” said Ms. De Carlo,
75, a Puerto Rico native. She
said she doesn’t yet have a
preferred Democratic candi-
date.

Mayfair
On paper, Mike Keenan
seems a solid Democratic
vote. The 48-year-old
teacher voted for Mr. Obama
twice and for Mrs. Clinton,
he said, in large part because
of education funding.
But Mr. Keenan, a regis-
tered Democrat who lives in
northeast Philadelphia’s
working-class Mayfair neigh-
borhood, said he is leaning
toward voting for Mr. Trump
this year.
For him it goes beyond
the economy. “I think people
are proud to be American
again,” he said.
Peter McDermott’s job
this fall will be to turn out
Democratic votes in Mayfair
and nearby areas where Mr.
Trump enjoys support. The
high-school teacher is the
elected Democratic leader in
Ward 64, a cluster of neigh-
borhoods where many city
workers live.
Four years ago Mrs. Clin-
ton barely won there, while
losing another northeast
ward.
Among Mr. McDermott’s
targets this year will be
Democrats who don’t consis-
tently vote and those who
backed Mr. Trump in 2016.

Philadelphia has been a
Democratic bastion for de-
cades. That doesn’t mean the
party can overlook it in the
2020 race.
The nearly 1.1 million reg-
istered voters in the nation’s
sixth-largest city account for
about 12% of
all voters in
Pennsylvania,
a key battle-
ground state.
More than 800,000 of them
are registered Democrats,
giving the party a 7-to-1 ad-
vantage over the GOP, which
has 118,000 registered vot-
ers. Republicans are also
outnumbered by voters who
eschew either major party.
But as in other swing-
state cities like Detroit and
Milwaukee, the challenge for
the Democratic presidential
nominee—whoever it is—will
be to unify a diverse elector-
ate and rack up enough
votes to help flip the state.
In 2016, Donald Trump
carried Pennsylvania by just
44,292 votes.
Some Democrats stayed
home, backed a third-party
candidate or cast a ballot for
Mr. Trump.
Had Hillary Clinton
matched Barack Obama’s
turnout and share of the
vote in Philadelphia in either
of his runs, she would have
picked up 26,000 to 30,
more votes. A slightly better
showing here and in the sub-
urbs and she could have won
Pennsylvania, which along
with Wisconsin and Michi-
gan vaulted Mr. Trump into
the White House.
“Democrats in Philadel-
phia realize how much is rid-
ing on our shoulders in this
election. I think we realize
how much we need to step it
up,” said Sarah Hansel, a 33-
year-old lawyer who leads
the Philadelphia Young Dem-
ocrats.
The fight for votes here
will be neighborhood by
neighborhood. Here’s a look
at what voters are saying
about the race, the issues
and the party’s odds of unit-
ing in November:


Mount Airy


In this middle-class, ra-
cially integrated neighbor-
hood full of old stone houses
in northwest Philadelphia,
34-year-old lawyer Kevin
Harden said many of his
neighbors support former
Vice President Joe Biden, a
Pennsylvania native.
Not him. He’s backing
Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth
Warren.
The self-described pro-
gressive said he sees her as
a bridge-builder who cares
about race, workers and in-
come inequality.
But whoever secures the
party’s nomination will get
his vote in November, he
said. “I will be pushing D,
trust me, even if it’s Michael
Bloomberg,” he said with a
laugh.
To Mr. Harden, sitting out
such an important election
with important policies on
the line reflects “a level of
privilege that I’ve never ex-
perienced.”
Rhonda Walker, 58, said
she would love to see Ver-
mont Sen. Bernie Sanders go


BYSCOTTCALVERT


IncreaseinDemocraticvotesin26 Nodata

MAYFAIR

SOCIETY HILL

CEDAR
PARK

STRAWBERRY
MANSION

MOUNT
AIRY

NORRIS SQUARE
Center
City

PHILADELPHIA

Turnout Trends
In 2016, Hillary Clinton didn't get as many votes in
Philadelphia as Barack Obama did four years earlier.

Percentage decline in votes for the Democratic presidential
candidate in 2016 compared with 2012

-10% -5% 0%

Source: Philadelphia City Commissioners

In the ebb and flow of a
long presidential campaign,
such currents can change
rapidly. Still, the campaign is
heading into a crucial stretch
where these markers will be-
gin to matter more.
The mystery man of the
Democratic primary, former
New York Mayor Michael
Bloomberg, formally took the
stage for the first time when
he participated in a Demo-
cratic debate in Nevada. It
didn’t go well.
He was roundly attacked

by the other five candidates
on stage, and, as even the
Bloomberg team acknowl-
edged, didn’t respond force-
fully. That raises the ques-
tion of whether the former
mayor and his big checkbook
will be the force in the cam-
paign’s moderate lane that
many had been expecting.
Nobody went after Mr.
Bloomberg harder than Sen.
Elizabeth Warren, who ap-
pears to have revived her
flagging campaign with a fi-
ery performance. But she

went after most of the other
candidates on the stage al-
most as hard, while giving a
pass to her fellow liberal,
Sen. Bernie Sanders. Mean-
time, moderates Pete Butt-
igieg, the former mayor of
South Bend, Ind., and Sen.
Amy Klobuchar are locked in
a new struggle to knock each
other out.
The net result is that the
Democrats’ front-runner, Mr.
Sanders, skated around the
scrum with little damage,
raising fears among many

party leaders that the candi-
date they consider least
suited to beating Mr. Trump
in the fall is consolidating
his position. Both the
Bloomberg and Buttigieg
campaigns issued memos
warning that Mr. Sanders
could build an “insurmount-
able” lead in delegates in the
next few weeks, when 16
states holding more than
35% of the total delegates to
the summer nominating con-
vention will vote.
Meanwhile, the signs were

generally positive for the
Trump campaign. Though
most national polls still
show the president trailing
all of the leading Democratic
contenders, they also show
his position improving.
A new Wall Street Jour-
nal/NBC News poll placed his
job approval at 47%, match-
ing the highest ever, with
slightly stronger numbers in
a set of swing states. A Quin-
nipiac poll had him ahead of
all Democrats in the crucial
state of Wisconsin.

Democrats just had per-
haps the most dramatic and
consequential week of the
presidential campaign—
though not
necessarily
the week
many party
leaders had
hoped for.
President
Trump, meanwhile, had a
week sprinkled with good
political omens.


BYGERALDF.SEIB


Democratic Candidates Tussle While Trump Inches Upward



THIS
WEEK

ELECTION


22


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