Wednesday, October 9, 2024

What the campaign feels like in Pennsylvania

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Oct 09, 2024 View in browser
 
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By Charlie Mahtesian

Supporters of Vice President Kamala Harris gather outside a campaign rally for former President Donald Trump.

Supporters of Vice President Kamala Harris gather outside a campaign rally for former President Donald Trump near the Santander Arena in Reading, Pennsylvania today. | Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

AD DELUGE — In the 2024 presidential race, there are swing states and then there is Pennsylvania. This year it looms as the essential battleground — it’s the single biggest trove of electoral votes (19) that is in play — and the state stands to blow up the electoral strategy of the campaign that loses it in November.

It’s why the Trump and Harris campaigns have carpet-bombed Pennsylvania with ads, why the candidates have spent so much time stumping there — and why Donald Trump had rallies scheduled in Scranton and Reading today, his second visit to the state in five days.

Political strategist James Carville once famously described Pennsylvania as Philadelphia and Pittsburgh with Alabama in between, but that’s a bad mischaracterization. While it nods to some of the state’s rural and small-town character outside its two most populous cities, the description fails to account for the state’s diversity or its political complexity.

At the moment, the race for Pennsylvania is exceptionally tight. Kamala Harris leads Donald Trump by a single percentage point, according to polling averages.

To provide better insight into the seven battleground states, over the campaign’s final 26 days Nightly will run a series of interviews with POLITICO reporters who have recently been on the ground reporting in those states. Tonight, we’ll hear from Holly Otterbein, a national political reporter for POLITICO with impeccable Pennsylvania credentials. She grew up in York County, went to college in Philadelphia, covered politics at the Philadelphia Inquirer and currently lives in Philadelphia.

Pennsylvania seems to be the center of the political universe this year. What makes it so important?

It’s math, pure and simple. There are seven battleground states in the presidential race, and Pennsylvania has more electoral votes than any of them — 19 sweet, sweet electoral votes, to be exact. Which is why, between now and Election Day, your readers will be forced to hear more about my beloved commonwealth and its inscrutable voters than they could possibly ever want.

We know Kamala Harris and Donald Trump, along with their allies, see Pennsylvania as the linchpin because they’re spending more on advertising here than any other swing state. As a Philadelphian who watches Jeopardy, the deluge of ads is like nothing I’ver seen. Is this how Iowa feels during the primary season?

What issues are dominating the political debate in Pennsylvania this year? Are they different from in any of the other battleground states?

The economy is always the biggest issue for voters here and everywhere. High prices have hit people in Pennsylvania hard. On top of that, one unique issue for us is always fracking because of the state’s natural gas industry. So it’s no surprise Trump’s campaign has tried to point to Harris’ 2019 proposal to ban fracking, and it’s no surprise that Harris long ago reversed herself on that position.

Philadelphia and its suburbs delivered big margins for Joe Biden in 2020, enough to overcome Trump’s advantage in the rest of the state. Is that the Harris recipe also? 

Absolutely. That’s been the recipe for every winning Democrat in Pennsylvania recently — with one extra ingredient added in. Harris needs to drive up turnout in Philadelphia, decisively carry the surrounding suburbs, do well in the swing counties like Erie — and cut Trump’s margins in MAGA country.

What does Trump’s path to victory in Pennsylvania look like?

Run up the score in MAGA country. Don’t get killed in the Philly suburbs. Do a little better with Black and Latino men in the city of Philadelphia.

Democratic presidential vote margins in Philadelphia, the state’s most populous city, have been in decline since 2012. Are Democrats worried about this? 

Democrats never stop worrying about this. There’s hope among some in the party that Harris will do better than Biden did in the city, in part because she would make history as the first Black and Asian American woman president. But at the same time, there’s a lot of anxiety that Trump could overperform among Black and Latino men in Philly.

Will we know who won Pennsylvania on Election Night? If not, how soon do you expect we might get a call?

Americans may remember — even have PTSD from — Pennsylvania taking a few days to count its ballots in 2020. That’s because of a state law that doesn’t let election administrators process mail ballots until Election Day. That law is still on the books. The good thing, though, is that election officials say their equipment and procedures for counting ballots are better now — and there will be less mail voting this presidential race than in 2020, when there was a pandemic and many people didn’t want to leave their homes.

So things should move faster. But when we know the winner will also depend on how close the race is and pending litigation that could affect whether certain ballots are counted.

Lightning round question: Name one place, issue or thing we should be watching in Pennsylvania in the campaign homestretch. 

Your readers should be watching (and rooting for) the Phils! In all seriousness, it sounds crazy, but some Democrats have argued to me that the Phillies doing well makes voters feel better about the city — and that’s good for them. Hey, I’ve heard stranger election theories.

Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Reach out with news, tips and ideas at nightly@politico.com. Or contact tonight’s author at cmahtesian@politico.com or on X (formerly known as Twitter) at @PoliticoCharlie.

What'd I Miss?

— Milton threatens to trigger flood insurance reckoning for Congress: Hurricane Milton, a monstrous storm set to hit western Florida tonight, is poised to deplete the finances of the government’s chronically indebted flood insurance program. Congress is already bracing for a fight over what to do about it. Key lawmakers and aides are beginning to game out the likely impact on the National Flood Insurance Program, which is the primary option for millions of American homeowners to protect their finances from catastrophic flooding.

— Kremlin confirms Trump secretly sent Covid tests to Putin at peak of pandemic: The Kremlin confirmed today that former United States President Donald Trump sent Russian President Vladimir Putin Covid-19 testing kits during the height of the pandemic, as reported by American journalist Bob Woodward in a new book. That the U.S. and Russia exchanged medical equipment during the pandemic was already known. But Woodward writes in his book that when Trump was still president in 2020, he “secretly sent Putin a bunch of Abbott Point of Care Covid test machines for his personal use” during a time period when Covid tests were scarce. Trump denied to ABC News that he sent such Covid test kits to Putin.

— Biden decries Trump’s ‘onslaught of lies’ as Milton nears landfall: In his strongest terms yet, President Joe Biden today condemned what he called “a reckless, irresponsible, relentless promotion of disinformation and outright lies” about the federal response to Hurricane Helene and now Milton, the storm charging toward Florida’s Gulf Coast. He named names, saying former President Donald Trump “has led the onslaught of lies.” In recent days, Trump, the Republican presidential nominee, has helped spread false information about the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s response, including suggesting that victims will only receive $750 payments and wrongly stating that disaster dollars have been diverted to house undocumented immigrants.

Nightly Road to 2024

Former President Donald Trump arrives at a campaign rally at Riverfront Sports, Wednesday, Oct. 9, 2024, in Scranton, Pa.

Former President Donald Trump arrives at a campaign rally today. | Julia Demaree Nikhinson/AP

REVISIONIST HISTORY — Lawmakers from both parties are vowing to fight back if former President Donald Trump makes good on his pledge to put a Confederate general’s name back on an Army base if he’s reelected. Trump’s Friday endorsement of changing the name of the Army’s Fort Liberty back to Fort Bragg — undoing the work of a congressional renaming commission — and the bipartisan backlash signal a fresh culture-war fight between him and Congress if he’s victorious in November.

Lawmakers in 2021 approved a process to remove the names of Confederate leaders from nine bases over Trump’s objections in the final days of his presidency. If Trump tries to reverse it, lawmakers could use legislation to attempt to stop him.

TRUMP AT THE GARDEN — Former President Donald Trump plans to hold a rally at Madison Square Garden arena in New York City and will hold a rally near Coachella, California on Saturday as he heads to two blue states in the final stretch of the presidential election. The plans for the rally at an iconic Manhattan venue, home of the NBA’s New York Knicks and the NHL’s New York Rangers, were confirmed by two Trump campaign officials.

While the Trump campaign is focused on the seven battleground states that will decide the election, the stops in states a Republican presidential candidate has not won in recent elections is unusual given the compressed time frame of the campaign and the incredibly tight race. An official said the large venues were chosen because of crowd size growth. While Trump has continued to hold messaging events at smaller venues, the campaign claims they have seen an uptick in public interest.

THE BRO VOTE — Donald Trump, confronting a yawning gender gap that has him lagging badly with women, is betting that support from young men will help propel him to the White House. And he’s getting an assist from a crew of pro-Trump millennial pranksters who are capitalizing on college football tailgates, Tinder and even the “Hawk Tuah Girl” podcast.

The Nelk Boys, digital content creators and hosts of the popular “Full Send” podcast, are mounting a multi-million-dollar voter registration push aimed at turning out young men. They plan to sign up voters at a “Send the Vote” music festival later this month that will feature a performance by pro-Trump rapper Waka Flocka Flame, and at a pair of Penn State football games.

It’s the latest effort in an all-out campaign by the former president to turn out young men, a demographic his campaign views as critical to his election given the overwhelming support Kamala Harris is expected to receive from young women. The question the Trump operation faces, however, is whether it can turn out a subset of voters his allies concede are uncertain to cast ballots.

AROUND THE WORLD

SUMMIT POSTPONED — A summit of allied countries aimed at coordinating more military support for Ukraine set for Saturday Oct. 12 has been postponed following the cancellation of U.S. President Joe Biden’s visit to Germany. At the end of a three-day trip to Germany, Biden was due to chair a meeting of the Ukraine Defense Contact Group, a loose alliance of more than 50 countries known as the Ramstein Format, named for the air base in which it is usually held.

The grouping coordinates military support for Kyiv, and is a critical platform for discussing the ramp up in supplies of air defense systems and ammunition to the war-ravaged country. However, as Hurricane Milton bears down on the Florida coast this week the White House announced early Tuesday that Biden’s trip to Germany wouldn’t happen. Ahead of the Ramstein meeting, Biden was set to hold talks with German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, French President Emmanuel Macron and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer in Berlin on the Saturday morning, while Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy was also set to present his so-called Victory Plan at Ramstein later in the day with the hope of securing further military support.

MESSAGE TO VIKTOR — Ursula von der Leyen today slammed Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán after he spoke to the European Parliament for cozying up to Vladimir Putin, allowing foreign interference by Russia and China, and letting down the Hungarian people.

“There are still some who blame this war not on the invader but on the invaded. Not on Putin’s lust for power but on Ukraine’s thirst for freedom,” the European Commission president said. “I want to ask them,” she said while looking directly at Orbán: “Would they ever blame the Hungarians for the Soviet invasion of 1956? Or the Czechs and Slovaks for the Soviet repression of 1968? Or the Lithuanians for the Soviet crackdown of 1991?” The rhetorical questions were met with applause from pro-European political groups.

In the past, the Parliament has criticized von der Leyen for being too soft when addressing rule of law and human rights issues in Hungary. Her rebuttal of Orbán’s policies comes weeks before the team of 26 European commissioners will go before Parliament for their sign-off — and she needs MEPs’ support for her second term. In her most recent address, in unusually strong words, von der Leyen called out the Hungarian prime minister for cozying up to Putin.

Nightly Number

1.7 million

The number of vehicles that Honda is now recalling, due to a steering problem that could lead to crashes. The safety recall order comes from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

RADAR SWEEP

NOBEL NOTES — Two huge Nobel prizes — in chemistry and physics — each just went to researchers who study artificial intelligence. In case it wasn’t clear, the Nobel committee made it obvious — it’s now possible to win science’s biggest prize by studying AI. And while AI already has all sorts of practical implications on our lives, the choices make manifest and further encourage a shift in direction within the scientific community, towards studying what AI means for the future. Chris Stokel-Walker reports in WIRED.

Parting Image

On this date in 1936: President Franklin D. Roosevelt makes the first appearance in a tour of the Midwest in Dubuque, Iowa. The president can be seen on the rear platform of his train.

On this date in 1936: President Franklin D. Roosevelt makes the first appearance in a tour of the Midwest in Dubuque, Iowa. The president can be seen on the rear platform of his train. | AP

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