US
elections 2020
Trump and the suburbs: is he out of tune with
America's increasingly diverse voters?
Mounting suburban backlash to Trump’s handling of the
pandemic is threatening his re-election prospects.
Suburbs are becoming more progressive, valuing
diversity, and Trump is promoting a caricature of what they really are,
strategists say
Lauren Gambino
@laurenegambino
Published onSun 9 Aug 2020 09.35 BST
Speaking on
a hot, windy afternoon during a visit to the fracking fields of west Texas last
month, Donald Trump conjured an ominous vision of suburban America under siege:
terrorized by rising crime and threatened by the development of low-income
housing.
“It’s been
hell for suburbia,” Trump declared, touting his decision to rescind an
Obama-era fair-housing rule to combat racial segregation in the suburbs, part
of his promise to preserve what he called the “Suburban Lifestyle Dream”. To
the scattered crowd in attendance, he added: “So, enjoy your life, ladies and
gentlemen. Enjoy your life.”
Nearly 500
miles east, in the expanse of metropolitan Houston, Democrat Sri Preston
Kulkarni is running to represent a suburban congressional district that is
worlds apart from the one that exists in Trump’s imagination.
Texas’ 22nd
congressional district, which is almost the size of Rhode Island and nearly as
populous, is so diverse that his campaign is distributing literature in 21
languages. Protests against police brutality and racial discrimination spread
throughout the region after the death of George Floyd, a black man who died
under the knee of a white Minneapolis police. And Floyd, a native of Houston,
was laid to rest in the district.
“This is
new Texas,” said Kulkarni, a former diplomat who grew up in Houston. “It’s
diverse, it’s educated, it’s dynamic.”
And it’s
not only Texas. From Atlanta to Phoenix, this pattern is part of a longterm
political realignment of the suburbs that has been dramatically accelerated by
Trump’s presidency.
Once a
cornerstone of the Republican coalition, these densely populated metropolitan
suburbs are turning increasingly Democratic. At the same time, the more
sparsely populated exurban areas have become even more deeply Republican,
countering, for now, Democrats’ gains elsewhere in the suburbs. The fight then
is increasingly for the voters in the middle, the suburbanites lodged between
liberal and conservative America.
Until now,
Trump has appeared uninterested in persuading these swing voters back,
alienating them further with the inflammatory rhetoric and hardline views on
race and cultural heritage that excite his base.
But their
mounting backlash to Trump’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic and his
attempts to stoke racial grievance have imperiled the president’s re-election
prospects and put his party at risk of being shut out of power in Congress.
Trump is promoting a vision of America’s suburbs that
no longer exists
In recent
weeks, Trump has sought to appeal, with little subtlety, to suburban voters. In
one tweet, he vowed to protect “the Suburban Housewives of America” from the
threat posed by his Democratic presidential rival Joe Biden.
In a play
to the perceived racist fears of white suburban voters, he wrote: “I am happy
to inform all of the people living their Suburban Lifestyle Dream that you will
no longer be bothered or financially hurt by having low income housing built in
your neighborhood.”
Demographers
and political strategists say Trump is promoting a vision of America’s suburbs
with aproned housewives, leafy cul-de-sacs and picket fences that no longer
exists.
“He’s
talking about an America that’s at least 40 or 50 years old,” said William
Frey, a demographer at the Brookings Institution. “The suburbs of today are
really a microcosm of America.”
A
decades-long rise in the number of people of color, immigrants and college
graduates, have transformed the sleepy bedroom communities of yesteryear into
sprawling amalgams of America’s diversity. There are also far fewer housewives
and the overall rates of violent crime have declined significantly.
In response
to the recent upheaval, Trump adopted a strategy used by Richard Nixon as a
presidential candidate during the turmoil of 1968, vowing to be a “president of
law-and-order” and protect suburbanites from outside threats.
But
suburban voters say they strongly disapprove of his handling of the protests,
according to a New York Times/Siena College survey. An even larger share say
they have a favorable view of the Black Lives Matter movement, which Trump
denounced as a “symbol of hate”.
Overall,
recent polling shows suburban voters backing Biden by historic margins.
Suburban women are not going to be fooled by Donald
Trump’s antiquated notion of what they should care about.
Shannon Watts
A recent
NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist survey found that just 35% of suburbanites would vote
for Trump, almost the same proportion – 33% – who said they approved of his job
as president. That contrasts with 60% of suburban voters who said they would
support Biden.
The
disaffection is particularly pronounced among suburban women: 66% said they
would support Biden, compared to 48% of suburban men.
“The Trump
administration has in many ways radicalized women and moms,” said Shannon
Watts, founder of Moms Demand Action, part of Everytown for Gun Safety, which
is spending heavily on political races in diversifying Sun Belt states.
Watts was a
stay-at-home mother of five when she started the group in 2012, after the Sandy
Hook elementary school shooting. She realized then that she had been “living in
a bubble” as a white suburban woman, and was awakened to the trauma of gun
violence that disproportionately impacts communities of color every day.
Watts
believes white suburban women across the country, for whom gun reform is
increasingly a voting priority, are having a similar realization in response to
the Black Lives Matter protests. In November, she hopes they will join Black
and Hispanic women in removing Trump from office.
“Suburban
women are diverse and decisive,” she said, “and they are not going to be fooled
by Donald Trump’s antiquated notion of what they should care about.”
Suburban
women as a force in American politics is not new. In the 1990s, campaigns
targeted the “soccer moms.” After the September 11 terrorist attacks, they
became the “security moms”. And in 2008, Sarah Palin, the Republican vice
presidential nominee, rebranded them “hockey moms.”.
In 2018,
suburban women – both as candidates and voters – helped Democrats regain
control of the House by flipping long-held Republican districts on the
outskirts of Atlanta, Dallas and Houston. In a rout, Democrats swept all seven
districts of Orange county, once a fortress of suburban conservatism known as
Reagan country.
Now in 2020
– less than three months before the November election – Democrats are
increasingly confident about their strength in the suburbs, as the Biden
campaign expands its footprint in states like North Carolina, Arizona and
Texas.
Trump won
suburban voters by four percentage points in 2016, according to exit polls.
Some strategists believe he has an opportunity to do so again this year, if
swing voters perceive Democrats as moving too far left.
“Suburbanites
have not moved wholesale to the Democratic party,” said Tom Davis, a former
Republican congressman from Virginia.
The
affluent suburban district he once represented is now solidly Democratic, part
of a political metamorphosis that has all but wiped from power the Republicans
who once dominated this southern state.
‘The politics
are only beginning to catch up with the new demographic realities’
Though the
suburbs have changed, Davis said they remain an aspirational destination for
upwardly-mobile families and young people, a place where residents expect low
crime, fewer taxes, better schools and stable property values. As such, he said
they have a distinct political identity as homeowners and parents that still
aligns more closely with the Republican agenda.
“Trump is
speaking to suburbians who don’t want the city moving out to where they are,”
Davis said. “That’s why they live there. It’s a statement. It’s not a racial
statement – but it is a values statement.”
Republicans
continue to thrive in suburban areas surrounding smaller cities like
Indianapolis and Jacksonville, Florida, which tend to be less diverse and more
conservative.
Voters in
these communities overwhelmingly backed Trump in 2016 and provided decisive
margins in states such as Wisconsin, Pennsylvania and Michigan, where fewer
than 80,000 votes sealed his victory.
Democrats
do not need to win these voters, but they cannot afford to ignore them either,
said Lanae Erickson, the senior vice-president at the center-left thinktank
Third Way.
In a new
analysis of suburban counties in six battleground states, shared exclusively
with the Guardian, Third Way identified 30 smaller suburban counties where
Democrats have an opportunity to breach these Republican firewalls.
Using voter
file data, the analysis projects, that for example, that in Pennsylvania
Democrats will grow their vote total in the state’s most populous suburban
county, Montgomery Ccounty, by 28,792 votes. By contrast, Democrats are
expected to gain a total of 145,511 votes across the state’s nine smaller
suburban counties, due in part to an influx of Latinos.
In a
razor-thin election like 2016, when Hillary Clinton lost the state by just
44,000 votes, these counties could be decisive.
Suburbanization
will continue to reshape American politics long after 2020.
“The
politics are only beginning to catch up with the new demographic realities”,
said Stephen Klineberg, a professor of sociology at Rice University and the
author of Prophetic City: Houston on the Cusp of a Changing America. “By 2050,
all of America will look like Houston looks today.”
In that
sense, the open race for Texas’ 22nd congressional district is like peering
into the future, Klineberg said.
There in
the sprawl of Houston’s suburbs, Kulkarni, whose father is from India and whose
mother is a descendent of the city’s namesake, Sam Houston, is running against
Troy Nehls, the Republican sheriff of Fort Bend county, which covers much of
the district and is almost equally split among Asian American, African
American, Hispanic and white voters.
During the
Republican primary, which tested the candidates’ fealty to Trump, Nehls
denounced an early effort by local officials to mandate mask-wearing and
mimicked the president’s rhetoric on the protests. But on social media, he has
vowed to “build bridges” between the minority communities in his district and
law enforcement.
As Houston
grapples with the devastation caused by the coronavirus pandemic and the
ensuing economic crisis, as well as the aftershocks of the racial justice
protests, Kulkarni says voters of all political stripes are ready to move
beyond a “politics of division”.
“They are
tired of the attacks on science and healthcare,” Kulkarni said. “They like the
fact that we live in a diverse area. And I think there’s actually more of a
consensus now than I’ve ever seen before that diversity is our strength, not
our weakness.”

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