Biden’s best shot against Trump lies in 3 ‘Blue Wall’ states

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Josh Wingrove | Bloomberg News (TNS)

President Joe Biden’s reelection prospects largely hinge on the so-called Blue Wall, a trio of industrial states that offer the ultimate test for his message of a manufacturing revival.

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In Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, his campaign sees signs for optimism, even as recent polling shows Biden trailing presumptive GOP nominee Donald Trump in those key battlegrounds.

The Biden campaign says it ranks no swing state above another — and is focusing on all of them keep open multiple paths to get to 270 Electoral College votes. It has ramped up sharply, doubling its battleground state staffing this month.

But unique factors in those one-time Blue Wall bastions – from demographics to the presence of well-placed allies – position them as his best shot at holding the White House. Biden can clinch a victory with their electoral votes even if he loses four other crucial swing states – Arizona, Georgia, Nevada and North Carolina.

The Blue Wall states had long voted for Democrats in presidential contests before Trump won all three in 2016. Biden then swept them in 2020 and has traveled repeatedly to them since, including Thursday’s visit to Saginaw, Michigan, suggesting a heavy focus on keeping them in his column.

Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin are dotted with the kinds of small cities and manufacturing centers that Biden has long begged his party to not forget. Michigan and Pennsylvania in particular are also organized labor strongholds where the president – who appeared on an autoworker picket line last year – can hammer his oft-repeated message that unions built the middle class.

At the same time, Biden has a major cash advantage over Trump and is painstakingly linking efforts in those three states with their state-level parties.

“The tactical advantage we are building in states we know are going to be razor close — we have that, they do not,” said Dan Kanninen, the Biden campaign’s battleground states director.

Favorable demographics

The Blue Wall states offer a more favorable demographic picture than some of the others that were close in 2020, with one or all having relatively strong concentrations of key groups for Biden, such as union voters, college-educated voters and Black voters.

And Democrats are optimistic about how a relocation boom since the pandemic may help Biden’s chances in places like Wisconsin’s Dane County, the deeply blue area that includes Madison.

“This time, even more than last time, the issues are on our side,” said Tanya Bjork, a Biden campaign adviser in Wisconsin.

When voters in these states have gone to the ballot box since Biden’s 2020 victory, they’ve delivered wins to his party: Democrats flipped a Pennsylvania Senate seat, won a key seat on Wisconsin’s Supreme Court and gained full control in Michigan for the first time in 40 years.

“It would be a frost-belt strategy for the president, if he can come back,” said Charlie Cook, founder of the Cook Political Report. “It would be more likely to be Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania.”

Of the Blue Wall states, Michigan is so far the only one to hold a primary. Some 13% of Democratic primary voters there lobbed a protest vote against Biden by choosing “uncommitted” to show dissatisfaction with his handling of the Israel-Hamas conflict. Yet the campaign sees a rich target in the nearly 300,000 voters who got behind GOP challenger Nikki Haley in that state’s Republican primary – many of them in suburban districts Biden had already been eyeing.

“There’s no road to the White House that isn’t going to go through Michigan,” Representative Debbie Dingell, a Democrat and Biden ally, told Bloomberg Television.

Tailor-Made message

Still, recent surveys do not paint an upbeat picture for Biden in these states. A February Bloomberg News/Morning Consult poll found Trump leading by two percentage points in Michigan, four in Wisconsin and six in Pennsylvania.

“Michigan is one where I think Donald Trump is in the driver’s seat,” said Aric Nesbitt, the Republican leader in Michigan’s state Senate. “His campaign seems better organized and ready to take advantage than I’ve seen in the last two presidential cycles.”

And while Biden’s economic message and industrial policy are tailor-made to appeal to places that were once manufacturing powerhouses, he has deep challenges with voters in Blue Wall states on those issues. Two-thirds in each state said the national economy is on the wrong track in the recent Bloomberg News/Morning Consult poll.

The Biden campaign seeks to frame voters’ choice as a referendum on Trump. “This stark contrast will drive our victories across the battlegrounds that will decide this election,” spokesman Josh Marcus-Blank said.

Biden also will be counting on the strength of candidates in key U.S. Senate races to help him hold off Trump. Pennsylvania Senator Bob Casey, a Biden ally, is up for reelection this year. Senator Tammy Baldwin won her previous race in Wisconsin by 11 points, an unusually wide margin.

These states also offer Biden a different kind of firewall: Each has a Democratic governor, quelling concerns about Trump trying to interfere with or influence the counting of votes.

(With assistance from Annmarie Hordern.)

©2024 Bloomberg L.P. Visit bloomberg.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Chicago Bears hire Seattle Seahawks assistant Kerry Joseph as their quarterbacks coach

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Whatever direction the Chicago Bears go with their quarterback situation, the new infrastructure for development at the position is coming together.

Four days after hiring Shane Waldron as their offensive coordinator, the Bears added another assistant to the mix with Kerry Joseph following Waldron from Seattle to become the new quarterbacks coach on Matt Eberflus’ staff.

The Bears announced the move Friday evening.

Waldron and Joseph coached together for the last three seasons, with Joseph serving as the Seahawks assistant wide receivers coach in 2021 and assistant quarterbacks coach in 2022 and 2023. Now he will take on much bigger responsibilities inside the quarterbacks room at Halas Hall. At a pivotal time for the organization, he will be tasked with overseeing the growth of either three-year starter Justin Fields or a prospect selected in April’s draft.

Joseph was part of the offensive staff in Seattle in 2022, with Waldron and quarterbacks coach Dave Canales, when quarterback Geno Smith revived his career with a Pro Bowl season that also earned him Associated Press Comeback Player of the Year honors.

Joseph, 50, will serve as the quarterbacks coach for the American Team at the Senior Bowl next week. He replaces Andrew Janocko, whom the Bears fired along with coordinator Luke Getsy this month after the team’s passing offense ranked 27th in the NFL averaging 182.1 yards per game.

The Bears still need to hire wide receivers and running backs coaches to fill out their offensive staff. They also are interviewing defensive coordinator candidates.

Sanjay Lal, who spent the last two seasons as the Seahawks passing game coordinator and receivers coach, was in the mix for the Bears receivers coach job but decided Friday to explore other opportunities, according to a source. The Bears remain in competition to fill out their coaching staff, as eight teams entered the month in the hunt for new head coaches. Six of those vacancies have since been filled, with those teams working to fill out their staffs.

Before his time with the Seahawks, Joseph was the passing game coordinator and running backs coach at Southeastern Louisiana in 2019. He began his coaching career at McNeese State, where he was the co-offensive coordinator for three seasons and worked with the wide receivers and quarterbacks.

Joseph was also a quarterback at McNeese State but moved to safety in the NFL. He played in 56 games over four seasons with the Seahawks. He also played quarterback in the Canadian Football League and NFL Europe.

The Bears on Tuesday officially hired Waldron, who was the Seahawks offensive coordinator for three seasons after four seasons with the Los Angeles Rams.

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Editorial: We can’t help but be happy for long-suffering Detroit Lions fans

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Yes, the Detroit Lions are in the Chicago Bears’ division. Yes, the Bears play them twice a year.

But we can’t help but root for the Lions as they make their improbable way through the NFL playoff gauntlet and are one win away from their first-ever Super Bowl appearance.

Chicagoans can relate. Lions Nation is one fan base that has seen almost nothing but failure in the nearly six decades that make up the Super Bowl era. One measly playoff win in all that time.

The Bears put their fans through a lot of disappointment on the field, verging on abject embarrassment sometimes. But we at least can (and do) continue to bask in the brutal majesty of the 1985-86 Bears. Lions fans have Barry Sanders highlights on YouTube, and that’s pretty much it.

Also, as fellow Upper Midwesterners, we ought to have each other’s backs, with the obvious exception of the Green Bay Packers, who’ve won quite enough, thank you very much.

The Lions’ success this year is sort of a football version of when the Cubs finally won it all in 2016, some 108 years after last doing so. Watching Lions fans, young and old, celebrate the two playoff victories in their own stadium reminded us a little of the multigenerational delirium that took hold when that Cubs team broke through at last.

It’s a lovely thing to see people bond over something shared, a phenomenon sports at its best promotes more often than just about anything else in this fractious age.

So have your day, Detroit! A lot of us are enjoying seeing folks in our neighboring state experience something for the first time even if they have more than a little gray in their hair.

If the Lions win it all, we will be glad for you. But that pledge is good for this season only.

Join the discussion on Twitter @chitribopinions and on Facebook.

Submit a letter, of no more than 400 words, to the editor here or email letters@chicagotribune.com.

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Marriages in the US are back to pre-pandemic levels, CDC says

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By MIKE STOBBE (AP Medical Writer)

NEW YORK (AP) — U.S. marriages have rebounded to pre-pandemic levels with nearly 2.1 million in 2022.

That’s a 4% increase from the year before. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released the data Friday, but has not released marriage data for last year.

In 2020, the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic, there were 1.7 million U.S. weddings — the lowest number recorded since 1963. The pandemic threw many marriage plans into disarray, with communities ordering people to stay at home and banning large gatherings to limit the spread of COVID-19.

Marriages then rose in 2021, but not to pre-pandemic levels. They ticked up again in 2022 and surpassed 2019 marriage statistics by a small margin.

New York, the District of Columbia and Hawaii saw the largest increases in marriages from 2021 to 2022. Nevada — home to Las Vegas’ famous wedding chapels — continued to have the highest marriage rate in the nation, though it slightly decreased from 2021.

The number and rate of U.S. divorces in 2022 fell slightly, continuing a downward trend, the CDC said.

Overall, marriages remain far less common than they once were in the U.S.

According to data that goes back to 1900, weddings hit their height in 1946, when the marriage rate was 16.4 per 1,000 people. The rate was above 10 in the early 1980s before beginning a decades-long decline. In 2022, the marriage rate was 6.2 per 1,000 population.

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The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Science and Educational Media Group. The AP is solely responsible for all content.