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Saturday, November 23, 2024

In Pennsylvania, a Trump-Biden battle on uneven ground

Door-to-door canvassing and weekly rallies for Donald Trump, while Joe Biden's campaign avoids both due to the coronavirus: Democrats in Pennsylvania's rural counties are battling to win back the key electoral state, but the pandemic is not making it easy.

People registar to vote during a Republican voter registration in Brownsville, Pennsylvania on September 5, 2020. – Less than two months before the November 3 presidential election, the contrast between Republicans and Democrats is striking in Washington County, in the suburbs of Pittsburgh. Andrew Caballero-Reynolds / AFP

The difference between the Republican and Democratic efforts in Pennsylvania's Washington County, in the distant suburbs of Pittsburgh, is stark this election season: three tents welcomed the president's supporters this weekend, as team Biden tried to stick to public health guidelines by organizing primarily online.

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Trump backers without anti-virus masks, arrived by the dozens to pick up yard signs and T-shirts emblazoned with the slogan "Make America Great Again" in an atmosphere akin to a family reunion.

A day prior, state representative Tim O'Neal had walked along the county's hills to rally Republican supporters, saying he has knocked on 3,500 doors since late June.

But on the Democratic side, "we are not canvassing door-to-door," says Christina Proctor, the local Democratic party's vice chair. "We don't want to put our volunteers at risk."

"I am frustrated with that, I do feel they (Trump's campaign) are creating some enthusiasm with their events and they are still knocking doors and because we are taking the pandemic so seriously, we are not doing that — I am concerned that that will put us at a disadvantage," she said just two months out from the November 3 vote.

The local Biden campaign team, wearing face masks, hands out its yard signs from its office.

Reinvigorated voters

Republican county official Dave Ball said that caution won't do much to counter the lack of enthusiasm for Biden, who already faced a tough battle locally due to his environmental stance.

Ball said 2016 Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton hit a nail into her electoral coffin when she advocated to close coal mines.

2020's version could be shale gas fracking, an industry that in recent years has become key to the region, with tens of thousands of jobs directly or indirectly linked.

The Pennsylvania-born Biden has previously said he would block the issuing of new permits on public land, but stated just last week he would not ban shale gas fracking, despite his emphasis on moving away from fossil fuels in order to battle climate change.

But according to Republican Ball, that pledge may not carry much weight locally: "those words came out of his mouth… but I don't believe that he is committed to it," he said, pointing to a number of prominent Democratic figures who denounce fracking and the fossil fuel industry.

A few figures might justify his confidence. In this county that stood solidly Democratic before swinging for Trump in 2016, the gap between registered Democrats and Republicans is narrowing.

The year Trump was elected, there were more than 14,000 registered Democrats than Republicans, says Ball.

Today that margin has shrunk to 2,000 in favor of the Democrats.

At a rally this weekend, at least one former Democrat registered for the rival party for the first time.

"I haven't voted for years," said Martin Angelo, a 64-year-old retired miner. "Trump made me want to vote again."

'Unpredictable'

The county's Democrats concede they have work to do, but plan to fight.

Bill Tasczak is getting involved in a campaign for the first time, phonebanking for Biden after having voted in the past for Republicans Ronald Reagan and George Bush Sr.

"I hate Donald Trump and all he is about," the 71-year-old said.

A possible second Trump term "concerns me — that's why I am getting involved this year."

Likewise Brian Still, a 67-year-old retail worker, says "this election cycle is the most important in my lifetime."

"The division that's been sown… I have never seen anything like it."

"You can feel it in the air, you can cut it with a knife."

Democratic official Proctor, who became politically engaged after feeling shocked post-Trump election, thinks the determination of these volunteers could make the difference.

Trump captured Pennsylvania by only a narrow majority of 44,000 votes in 2016, she emphasized, meaning Democrats just need to close the gap in a few key counties to beat him back.

"If we could get 5,000 additional votes in Washington County for Joe Biden, we will have done our job to hand Pennsylvania to Joe Biden"," she said.

Recent polls suggest the race will be close in Pennsylvania, though nationally Biden has the lead.

O'Neal, the Republican representative knocking on doors, says he's seeing first-hand that voters' reactions are unpredictable when it comes to Trump.

"I have had what I thought were hardcore Republicans who weren't supportive of him, and hardcore Democrats who were," he said.

"President Trump is one of those politicians that really is not defined necessarily by party."

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