Biden visits shipyard to put wind in re-election sails
WASHINGTON: President Joe Biden on Thursday (Jul 20) visits a shipyard symbolizing the industrial boom he hopes will put wind in his re-election campaign's sails, even if polls show most Americans cool on him continuing as their economic captain.
The Democrat's pitch, which he'll make at the Philly Shipyard in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, is simple and dramatic.
What he calls "Bidenomics" revolves around bringing back manufacturing after decades of offshoring and the hollowing out of industrial towns.
It's a strategy kickstarted by the Inflation Reduction Act, which poured almost US$500 billion in spending and tax breaks into green energy, as well as other huge legislative wins funding infrastructure and semiconductor development.
The main focus of this return to industrial might is in high-tech areas like microchips and clean energy. At the Philly Shipyard, Biden will view work on a ship to be used for building ocean wind farms.
"President Biden's economic agenda - Bidenomics - is fuelling America's clean energy future, creating American-made products in American factories with American workers," the White House said ahead of the trip.
Biden can point to a surprisingly strong, stable recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic-induced slump.
Not only has the US economy defied a chorus of warnings that recession is around the corner, but the once shocking surge of inflation is being tamed and, at three per cent, is already lower than in other major economies.
NOT GETTING CREDIT
That's a scenario the 80-year-old president hopes will power him to re-election next year. Not by coincidence, Pennsylvania is one of a handful of swing states that will decide the result in a close race - potentially a rematch against the man Biden defeated in 2020, Donald Trump.
The polls, though, show gloomy sentiment persisting and only a minority saying they trust Biden's performance.
A Monmouth University poll released this week found just 34 per cent approval for Biden's handling of inflation, the most politically toxic aspect of the economy.
On jobs and unemployment - currently at just 3.6 per cent - there was marginally better news for Biden. The poll found 47 per cent approve of his handling in this area, but 48 per cent disapprove.
And despite the statistics regularly rolled out by the White House showing the US economy leading G7 powers in recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic era, only 30 per cent of respondents thought this was the case, while 32 per cent thought the US economy is doing worse than other countries.
"The president has been touting Bidenomics, but the needle of public opinion has not really moved," Patrick Murray, director of the Monmouth University Polling Institute, said. "Americans are just not giving him a lot of credit."
As in most other issues in the deeply divided country, Biden got high marks from Democrats but even stronger negative marks from Republicans.
White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said patience was needed.
Jean-Pierre rattled off the achievements of "near historic lows" in the combined unemployment and inflation stats and repeated the line that the US economy is the envy of the industrialised world.
"The polls don't tell the whole story so we're going to continue to have that conversation," she said.