In Wisconsin, Joe Biden Can’t Escape the War in Gaza
Inside the auditorium at a Wisconsin technical college Monday, Joe Biden was outlining his latest student loan relief effortâa plan that could not only give more than 30 million Americans the âfreedom to chase their dreams,â but that could also, in theory, appeal to the young voters he needs in order to win this key swing state in November. Outside, meanwhile, some of those same young voters were gathered on the street accusing him of war crimes and shouting for him to âgo to hell.â
âHey hey, ho ho, Genocide Joe has got to go,â demonstrators shouted outside on the Truax campus of the Madison Area Technical College, in Wisconsinâs capital city. âStop the war machine!â
It was a relatively small demonstration compared with some heâs faced: Later that day, more than 100 protesters shut down Michigan Avenue in Chicago, where the president was holding a fundraiser in a city that will play host to the Democratic convention in August. But the 50 or so who demonstrated in Madison on Monday nevertheless seemed to reflect a larger contingent of Wisconsin voters who disapprove of Bidenâs policy on Israel, which he has supplied with military aid as the country continuously bombs Gaza, where more than 33,000 Palestinians have reportedly been killed as of this week. (âThe president believes in making your voice heard, and participating in our democracy is fundamental to who we are as Americans,â campaign spokesperson Lauren Hitt tells Vanity Fair in a statement. âHe shares the goal for an end to the violence and a just, lasting peace in the Middle East. Heâs working tirelessly to that end.â)
Bidenâs trip to Wisconsinâthe second in recent weeksâcame a week after more than 8% of primary voters in the state cast âuninstructedâ ballots in protest of his approach to the Israel-Hamas war. He still enjoyed a commanding victory in the Democratic primary, winning out with a higher percentage of the vote than Donald Trump did in the Republican primary. To Democrats, this signaled that the party is more unified behind Biden than the GOP is around Trump, who ceded nearly 13% of the vote to Nikki Haley, even a whole month after she suspended her candidacy. âOn the Republican side, we saw voters rejecting Trump for who he is,â says Ben Wikler, chair of the Wisconsin Democratic Party. On the Democratic side, thereâs âa much higher level of unity among Democrats. And the protests were based around a current policy, where the presidentâs objective is to reach a just and enduring peace in the Middle East, which is exactly what the protest voters are calling for.â
âWe have a much more addressable challenge on the Democratic side,â Wikler tells me.
But itâs still a significant challenge. Wisconsinâs protest vote last week more than doubled the margin of Bidenâs narrow 2020 victory. In Madison, the college town and liberal bastion that Biden visited Monday, the âuninstructedâ share was even higher. According to The Daily Cardinal, a student newspaper at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, results in 20 wards on or near the campus nearly quadrupled the state average. The âuninstructedâ vote in the Badger State didnât quite rise to the level of the âuncommittedâ vote in Michigan, another battleground, which is home to the largest percentage of Arab Americans of any state in the country. Yet it underscored a major vulnerability for Bidenâs reelection campaignâparticularly among younger voters, a majority of whom appear to disagree with his mostly steadfast support for Israel.
Itâs hard to overstate the importance of Wisconsin to Bidenâs reelection bid; the state proved decisive to Trump in 2016 and to Biden in 2020. But itâs also part of the âblue wallâ in the Midwest that the president is counting on this fallâin what is likely to be an even closer election than last cycle. âWisconsin is the must-win state in American politics,â Wikler says.
Democrats have had some cause for celebration there recently: Biden turned the state blue again in 2020. Voters in the 2022 midterms also reelected Democratic governor Tony Evers, whom the president Monday described as âone of the best governors in the United States.â And, in 2023, the Wisconsin Supreme Courtâwhich got a liberal majority after the election of Janet Protasiewicz months earlierâstruck down the partisan gerrymander that Republican Scott Walker, the stateâs former governor, signed in 2011. âIt is a new day in Wisconsin,â Evers later said of that ruling.
But Trump, seeking to replicate his 2016 upset there, has set his sights on the state: The GOP is hosting its convention this summer in Milwaukee, Wisconsinâs largest city. He has run even withâand in many cases has ledâBiden in polls of state voters. And last week, the day of the stateâs primary, he held a rally in Green Bay, where he continued to spread lies about the 2020 election that fueled both a fake-elector plot to throw out Bidenâs win as well as a partisan âauditâ into the results that dragged well into 2022. âWe won this state by a lot,â Trump insisted from the rally stage last week.
Itâs hard to imagine that Trumpâs timeworn grievances from 2020 will win over a majority of 2024 swing-state voters, who have proven to be more animated by the issues Biden has made central to his campaignâincluding abortion rights, democracy, and shoring up the middle class. âTrump is far out of step with the people of Wisconsin,â says Brianna Johnson, Wisconsin communications director for the Biden campaign. Still, the matchup is almost certain to be a nail-biter. The state is âgonna split down the middle,â a Biden supporter, hoping to get a glimpse of the president in Madison on Monday, predicted, as a man waved a Trump flag from the bed of a pick-up truck in the parking lot. Even a relatively small number of defections from Bidenâs 2020 coalition in a battleground like Wisconsin could upend his prospects.
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