From Kannapolis to Durham, college students, and retirees are talking prices and values.
Itâs a kitchen table kind of electionâjust ask North Carolinians.
Even as Democrats tout job growth, tech reshoring, and other achievements under President Joe Biden, many Americans feel the pinch of aggregate inflation, high housing prices, and more.
As former President Donald Trump makes the case that he can manage the economy better, Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris must persuade voters she can improve things even as she defends the administration she has co-helmed for almost four years.
On the day North Carolina kicked off early voting, The Epoch Times heard from voters across the battleground state. Economic worries were a common theme.
Kannapolis
Kannapolis offers one vantage point on the Tar Heel State.
A blue-collar former mill town north of Charlotte, itâs split between two red counties, Rowan and Cabarrus.
A statue of the late NASCAR driver Dale Earnhardt, Sr. honors one famous native. Thereâs no statue (yet) of George Clinton, the funk music pioneer who first entered the world in a local outhouse.
On the morning of Oct. 17, there was a long line to vote at the Kannapolis train station. Thankfully, it was, as they say in Kannapolis, a blessed day: sunny, dry, and, though cool, not cold.
A nearby Irish pub was decked in Halloween decorations. Three flagsâAmerican, Irish, and Blue Lives Matterâfluttered above the entrance. Signs for Harris, Trump, and other candidates crowded the grass nearby.
During a recent appearance on âThe View,â the vice president was asked if she would have diverged from Biden on any choice he made as chief executive.
âThere is not a thing that comes to mind,â she said, later adding that she would appoint a Republican to her cabinet. She also suggested health care and domestic violence would be more significant in her administration, though without overtly criticizing the current president.
Phyllis Kimble, a retired IT worker, had a ready answer when asked what she hoped the vice president would do differently from Biden.
âI just hope sheâll make this economy better than what it is. Thatâs my main thing,â the Harris voter told The Epoch Times in Kannapolis.
Alfonso Patterson, another early voter for Harris, told The Epoch Times he is concerned about his rising property tax bill.
It clearly matters to Jordan and Lauren Williams. They came to the train station to vote for Trump and gubernatorial candidate Mark Robinson, also a Republican.
âAs a business owner, I need the economy to get back to where [it was],â Lauren Williams said.
âJust go out for a day and get gas, buy groceries, and try to go get a Big Mac, and see where youâre at,â she said.
Bo Bollinger, a newly retired regional service manager for a scientific company, put it more bluntly.
âThe economy is crap,â he said. He cast his ballot for Trump.
Talking Economics, or Not, in Durham
As the people of Kannapolis cast their early ballots, both campaigns were stumping throughout the state.
Surrogates for Trump took part in a multi-day North Carolina bus tour. Participants included Michael Whatley, the Trump-aligned GOP leader who formerly oversaw the North Carolina Republican Party.
The nominee himself was missing, but not for long. Heâll speak in Asheville, a city hit hard by Hurricane Helene, on Oct. 21. That same day, he will join an â11th Hour Faith Leaders Meetingâ in Concord with his son, Eric, and Trump administration alumnus Dr. Ben Carson.
Harris was also missing. Yet, she had held a rally at East Carolina State University in Greenville on Oct. 13.
Like Trumpâs running mate Sen. JD Vance (R-Ohio), who rallied in Wilmington on Oct. 16, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz took to the state as it flickered in and out of the spotlight. On the afternoon of Oct. 17, he materialized in the gymnasium of a Durham community center alongside a blast from the Democratsâ past, former President Bill Clinton.
Clinton and former President Barack Obama have actively campaigned for Harris. Meanwhile, although former President George W. Bush has not endorsed a candidate this cycle, his vice president, Dick Cheney, has backed Harris.
Before the two national Democrats appeared, local politicians warmed up the crowd. One was Mark-Anthony Middleton, Durhamâs mayor pro tempore.
âAs Durham goes, so goes the state of North Carolina,â he said.
Thatâs not quite right, though optimistic enough for a political speech.
Home to elite Duke University and the Research Triangle, a regional tech hub, Durham County always votes for Democratsâin 2020, by more than 80 percent. In one precinct, 13, Biden claimed almost 93 percent of the vote. Yet, in the rural northern third of the county, more than 78 percent of Precinct 28 voters chose Trump.
Near an early voting site at the gateway to Dukeâs tree-lined campus, Elizabeth, an undergraduate who was ânot sure yetâ of her major, wore a coconut tree-themed t-shirt, signaling her enthusiasm for Harris. She had already cast her early ballot.
The economy did not make her list of top issues, which were, in her words, âwomenâs rights and access to voting.â
âI think itâs more of a popular thing to support the Democrats on a campus like Duke,â said Dana Baca, a pre-med student. The early voter for Harris noted that Dukeâs Republican organization had recently reactivated.
She didnât highlight the economy as a motivation for backing Harris either. Her reasons for choosing Harris were, in order of importance, abortion, concern for racial minorities, and U.S. policy on Israel.
âI support whatever Vice President Harris and President Biden are doing,â she said, adding she hoped for a rapid cease-fire in the Middle East.
Noah Mason, who had just voted for Harris with his parents, said the economy is his top concern, âtied in with climate change, especially.â
Mason, who is bartending while taking a gap year from college, hopes to make enough money to move out of his familyâs home without taking on massive debt.
His mother, Kelli, believes the Democrats have managed the economy effectively. She cited tech investmentsâNorth Carolinaâs Wolfspeed is getting CHIPS Act funding for semiconductor component manufacturing in nearby Siler Cityâas well as overall economic growth.
âWe have 401(k)s that have done exceedingly well in the past two years and three years,â she said.
At the Durham community center, Clinton focused on the kitchen table.
He touted a proposed national price-gouging law as a fix for what he called âresidual inflation,â blaming large grocery chains for the high price of groceries.
Clinton also promoted Harrisâs plan to raise the earned income tax credit. He also praised Bidenâs record, pointing to employment growth that Trump has attributed in part to post-COVID âbounce-back jobs.â
Other topicsâfor example, foreign policy at a time of rising international tensionâwere almost afterthoughts.
Clinton finally mentioned Israel and the Palestinians near the close of his speech. That was when a young woman in the crowd waved a small Palestinian flag.
Cassidy, who did not wish to share her last name, told The Epoch Times she didnât brandish the flag as an act of protest.
âIâm voting for Harris, no questions asked,â she said. âItâs more like, âHey, stop funding Israel.ââ
She said her own life experiences, including weight fluctuations and a lack of money during grad school, had left her with âempathy for other minorities that Iâm not a part of.â
But Cassidyâs stated empathy for those with different perspectives did not necessarily extend to conservatives, particularly her own flesh and blood.
âFamily-wise, thatâs maybe a bridge too far,â she said before suggesting she had more sympathy for an Israeli she knows whose perspective differs from her own.
The Apex View
In Apex, first-time voter Ryder Shaw and his mother, Ashley Anderson, rejected the idea of not empathizing with a family member, even if they have different politics.
âI donât really care what someoneâs political view is as long as they have good personal values,â Shaw said.
Along with Shawâs girlfriend, fellow first-time voter Alaina Tumminelli, they cast their early ballots for Trump.
âIt honestly seems like both candidates want to do the same thing for our country, but in different ways,â said Tumminelli, who studies at East Carolina University.
Apex, named for the high point of the Chatham Railroad, is a blend of older and newer Souths. At a downtown restaurant, men and women in Southeastern Conference prep attire peruse an encyclopedic menu of bourbons. On a side street, open front porches are lined with inviting rockers.
Unlike Cassidy and some others in Durham County, Shaw, Anderson, and Tumminelli brought up concerns with the economy, including inflation. They werenât reassured by the deceleration of inflation in recent quarters.
âAs a college student, I feel like it can be hard sometimes to even go get simple groceries or a tank of gas,â Shaw said.
âThe salary you make has gone up, but youâre still paycheck to paycheck,â Anderson said.
Shaw said his friends, all of whom are conservative, care a lot about this election as future first-time home buyers. He described one friend who wanted to live his American Dream: get married, have kids, and buy a home.
âHe doesnât know if heâs going to be able to get a house,â Shaw said.
âItâs hard to plan out a life when you donât know where the economyâs going to be, or if itâs even going to improve,â Tumminelli said. âIt could be the difference between you being able to support a family and you barely being able to support yourself.â
For now, she and her boyfriend are supporting two dogs, Bowser and Andy, and a catââSylvester, but we all call him Pink Nose,â Tumminelli said.
But not every early voter in Apex thinks the economy is bad.
Suresh Balam, an engineer, wouldnât reveal who earned his vote.
âBoth have their pros and cons,â he said of Trump and Harris.
âAs far as the markets are concerned, I think itâs all doing good,â Balam said when asked about economic conditions.
Inflation, he added, âis probably under control now.â
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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