U.S. voters split on whether Trump or Harris will make life more affordable

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U.S. voters split on whether Trump or Harris will make life more affordable

In a sparsely furnished row house in north Philadelphia, Saiyda Bey gets comfortable on a grey chaise lounge. The home smells of incense and her black kitten, Kit Kat, is pacing around the room. 

Bey, 33, proudly wears a “Blacks for Trump” hat she bought for $20 outside the J.D. Vance rally in Pennsylvania earlier this week. She’s nervous while looking over a few notes she made in preparation for this interview, yet happy to share her thoughts on the upcoming presidential election.

“I think life would be better under Donald Trump because of his plan to secure more jobs within the impoverished neighbourhoods,” said Bey, who, like many Americans, has been struggling with the high cost of living and blames the current government for the state of the economy.  

“I had always been struggling. I just struggled less under Donald Trump’s administration.”

Americans are divided on which presidential candidate will be able to make life more affordable for middle and lower income families. Neither Donald Trump or Kamala Harris have released a detailed economic platform, yet polls suggest many Americans believe the Republicans are focused on the economy and tax cuts, while the Democrats promise to tax the rich and corporations.

The north Philadelphia neighbourhood where Bey was born and raised has a 39 per cent employment rate and the median annual income was just over $28,000 in 2022, according to U.S. Census data. Most of the people there are African American and live below the poverty line.

WATCH | Democrats and Republicans alike are worried about the economy: 

What do Democratic and Republican voters share? Deep economic anxiety

3 days ago

Duration 2:01

U.S. voters at competing Democratic and Republican rallies are expressing serious concerns about their economic futures, as the cost of living quickly emerges as a dominant issue of the 2024 presidential campaign.

The economy under Biden

Under the Biden administration, the price of groceries has soared and interest rates have risen to the highest they’ve been since 2001, making it harder for some Americans to pay their mortgages or buy homes. But things are improving, with the Federal Reserve now saying a long-awaited rate cut is on the table for September, which will lower borrowing costs.

“What we are seeing right now is unemployment rate which is very low, and an inflation rate that has reached normal levels,” said Francesco D’Acunto, the A. James Clark Chair in Global Real Estate at Georgetown University in Washington D.C.

A bill showing high and low prices for steak
An image from an ad displayed at the Republican National Convention in July showed soaring inflation. However, the inflation rate is around three per cent and trending downwards and experts say wages are growing at a faster rate than inflation. (Republican Party)

Inflation in the U.S. is currently around three per cent and trending downward toward the target rate, which is two per cent. Two years ago, it was close to 10 per cent, a 40 year high.

However, D’Acunto says wages are growing at a faster rate than inflation, and middle-class households should have already started to see an uptick in their bank accounts as a result.

“Over the last few months, they should have started to see … a reversal of this unbalance,” he said.

D’Acunto says inflation began to rise during the pandemic when borders were closed and China was unable to send goods to the U.S., Canada or other countries. That increased the price of goods dramatically, while the war in Ukraine drove up energy prices.

“Those causes were neither due to Trump, back then when inflation started to go up, nor Biden,” said D’Acunto.

Working 3 jobs to pay the bills

Bey has three jobs. She works part time as the director of memberships at the YMCA, and tends bar at two different bars. Sometimes, to make ends meet, she has to rent a car so that she can also deliver food for Uber Eats or InstaCart.

“Just to pay rent and utilities, which are electric, gas and water, anywhere from $1,200 to maybe $1,600-$1,700,” Bey said. “That’s just in this neighbourhood.”

The photos shows a street full of row homes, which are homes that are side by side and share a common wall. The neighbourhood is rundown. There is grass growing out of the cracks in the sidewalk.
Saiyda Bey lives in north Philadelphia, on a street filled with row homes. The 33-year-old lives with her teenage daughter and younger sister, in the home she grew up in. (Caroline Barghout/CBC)

She says that’s what it used to cost to live in the suburbs or a higher income area.

After paying her bills, Bey says she’s left with about $100 a week for food and transportation. Still, she’s doing better than some of her friends who she says were forced to move out of the neighbourhood. 

“This is already a below living standard neighbourhood,” said Bey. “So to not be able to afford to live sustainably and comfortably in this neighbourhood is a problem.” 

Laid off and trying to get by

Pierce Hacking worked as a currency management associate at TD Bank until he was laid off last June. He’s now living below the poverty line and looking after his dad, who was diagnosed with cancer after he recovered from a stroke.

“We’re just a regular family trying to get by,” said Hacking, who volunteers for Harris’s campaign.

Hacking, 32, lives in the Maple Shade community of New Jersey, where there is a 63 per cent employment rate and the median annual income is $71,748, according to census data.

Piece Hacking is a larger man with a bald head and auburn beard and moustache. He is smiling. He has on a gray shirt with sign language on the front in the colors of the rainbow.
Piecre Hacking, 32, says he’s voting for Kamala Harris in the upcoming U.S. presidential election. The New Jersey resident believes the Democrats care about Americans and want to make life better for them. (Caroline Barghout/CBC)

He’ll be voting for Harris in the upcoming election and says he believes she’s the right person to lead the country. 

“She has an economics degree,” said Hacking. “And that never seems to be brought up by people.” 

Harris has said she would push for paid family leave and affordable child care. She has also said that building up the middle class would be a “defining goal” of her presidency. 

As a California senator, Harris proposed the LIFT Act in late 2018 to boost incomes of low and moderate-income earners by establishing a refundable tax credit that matched up to $3,000 in earnings for unmarried workers and up to $6,000 for married workers. The bill never passed the introductory stage.

She had also proposed a refundable tax credit to try to help people who pay more than 30 per cent of their income toward rent. 

“Kamala Harris has given me so much hope,” said Hacking.

He says he thinks she’ll stand up for all Americans and will continue to introduce tax credits and programs that will help the people who are struggling.

WATCH | How will the upcoming election play out?

Kamala Harris vs. Donald Trump: How would it play out?

19 days ago

Duration 6:48

With a Harris vs. Trump election looking likely, The National’s Ian Hanomansing asks U.S. political insiders Cornell Belcher and Chris Cillizza to break down how the campaign could play out, and what a possible path to victory for Kamala Harris might look like.

So which party is better for the economy?

Hans Noel, an associated professor of government at Georgetown University, says that while Republicans are traditionally thought to be better for the economy, historically, the U.S. economy has done well under both parties.

“Democrats have, actually, a pretty good record on the economy, at least on some metrics like economic growth and …income distribution,” he said. 

Noel says inflation is high worldwide, and if anything, the U.S. economy has recovered from the coronavirus pandemic better than some other democracies. However, he notes that voters have historically blamed incumbent parties for things that go badly under their watch.

He says that at the end of the day, voters need to determine where each party stands on the issues they’re aligned with, and vote for the candidate that most reflects their views.

Bey says when Trump was president, she received unemployment income from the government during the COVID crisis, which helped her get by. In 2020, Trump signed the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act, a $2.2 trillion economic stimulus bill.

But Bey has been a Donald Trump fan since before he was elected president in 2016. She believes his business background makes him best suited to pull the country out of inflation and make life better for Americans.

“He cares about making a change in America that doesn’t take us back to where we are coming from,” she said. 

Published at Sat, 10 Aug 2024 08:00:00 +0000

WARNING: This story contains graphic images

An Israeli airstrike on a Gaza City school compound housing displaced Palestinian families killed around 100 people, the Gaza Civil Emergency Service said on Saturday, while Israel said the toll was inflated and 19 militants were among the dead.

Video from the site showed body parts scattered on the ground and more bodies being carried away and covered in blankets on the floor. Empty food tins lay in a puddle of blood and burned mattresses and a child’s doll were among the debris.

In another part of the Tabeen school complex in Gaza City, men prayed over a dozen body bags laid out on the ground.

The territory’s Civil Emergency Service, which has a credible record in stating casualty numbers, and the Hamas-run government media office said in separate statements that the complex had been attacked as its occupants were performing dawn prayers.

People stand amid debris inside a building damaged by a rocket attack.
People inspect the damage inside a school for displaced people following an Israeli strike in Gaza City on Saturday. (Mahmoud Issa/Reuters)

“So far, there are more than 93 martyrs, including 11 children and six women. There are unidentified remains,” said Palestinian Civil Defence spokesperson, Mahmoud Bassal, in a televised news conference.

Tens of thousands of displaced Palestinians have sought shelter in Gaza’s schools, most of which have been closed since the war began 10 months ago.

Around 350 families had been sheltering at the compound, Bassal said — some of the hundreds of thousands of Palestinians displaced by Israel’s onslaught on Gaza.

The upper floor housing families and the lower floor, used as a mosque, were both hit, he said.

People hold up a crying person.
People mourn in the wake of the Israeli strike at the school compound in Gaza City on Saturday. (Mahmoud Issa/Reuters)

The Israeli military said the death toll was inflated.

“The strike was carried out using three precise munitions, which can not cause the amount of damage that is being reported,” the military said in a statement.

It added that no severe damage was caused to the compound, and provided aerial photos and videos which it said proved this.

People stand amid the debris of a destroyed building.
People are seen inside a school compound damaged by a deadly Israeli strike in Gaza City on Saturday. (REUTERS)

The compound, and the mosque that was struck within it, “served as an active Hamas and Islamic Jihad military facility,” Israeli Lt.-Col. Nadav Shoshani said on X.

An Israeli army official said the part of the mosque that was struck was reserved for men.

Israel says Palestinian militant groups embed among Gaza’s civilians, operating from within schools, hospitals and designated humanitarian zones — which Hamas and its allies deny.

People carry a body wrapped in a white sheet.
People react as they transport the body of a family member killed in an Israeli strike on a Gaza City school compound housing displaced Palestinians. (Omar Al-Qattan/AFP/Getty Images)

Hamas said the strike was a horrific crime and a serious escalation. Izzat El-Reshiq, a member of Hamas’s political office, said the dead did not include a single combatant.

Tens of thousands of displaced Palestinians have sought shelter in Gaza’s schools, most of which have stopped functioning since the start of the war 10 months ago.

A separate strike on Saturday killed three Palestinians in Al-Nuseirat, in central Gaza and another killed one person in the nearby Deir Al-Balah city, medics said.

A child with a bandaged head cries as they are comforted by an adult.
An injured child cries at a hospital in Deir el-Balah, central Gaza, on Saturday following an overnight Israeli strike. (Eyad Baba/AFP/Getty Images)

Later in the day an Israeli strike killed three Palestinians in Rafah, near the border with Egypt, where the Israeli army has operated since May, medics said.

Separately, the Israeli military said the head of general security in Hamas’s military wing, Walid Alsousi, had been assassinated in southern Gaza. There was no immediate Hamas comment.

The Iranian-backed Hezbollah armed group in Lebanon said it launched a drone attack against military positions in northern Israel.

Further calls for ceasefire

“Canada condemns the Israeli strike that killed Palestinian civilians sheltering at a school in Gaza, including children,” Global Affairs said on social media. “An immediate ceasefire is desperately needed, alongside the release of hostages.”

The White House said it was “deeply concerned” about the Israeli strike on the Gaza City school compound and that it was in contact with Israeli officials asking for further details.

The European Union’s foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said on X that he was horrified by the images from the school. France and Britain condemned the airstrike.

WATCH | U.S., Qatar, Egypt push for ceasefire talks to resume: 

U.S., Qatar, Egypt push for Israel-Hamas ceasefire talks to resume next week

2 days ago

Duration 4:01

Leaders of the United States, Egypt and Qatar have called on Israel and Hamas to meet for negotiations on Aug. 15 in order to finalize a ceasefire and hostage release deal.

A spokesperson for Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, Nabil Abu Rudeineh, urged Israel’s ally Washington to put an end to “blind support that leads to the killing of thousands of innocent civilians, including children, women, and the elderly.”

Egypt, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia and Turkey all condemned the strike.

Senior Hamas official Sami Abu Zuhri said it should serve as a turning point as mediators push to resume ceasefire talks.

WATCH | Some Gazams live on the street, in cemeteries due to overcrowding: 

Some Palestinians in Gaza live on the street and in cemeteries due to overcrowding

4 days ago

Duration 1:54

Muhammad Abu Ghalban says he’s building a shelter in a cemetery in Gaza because every hospital and school he went to was overcrowded. Duaa Abu Jamae says after being displaced from her home that was bombed, she found no place to go other than the street.

A Hamas official told Reuters the group was studying the new offer for talks but did not elaborate.

Egypt said that the killing of Gaza civilians showed Israel had no intention to end the war. Qatar’s foreign ministry described the strike as a “horrific massacre.”

Speaking to Al Jazeera television, Khalil Al-Hayya, the head of the Hamas team for the indirect ceasefire talks with Israel, said statements of condemnation were no longer sufficient.

“Dismiss [Israeli] ambassadors, close down embassies, and sever ties with the occupation,” he said.

Egypt, the United States and Qatar have scheduled a new round of ceasefire negotiations for Thursday, as fears are growing of a broader conflict, involving Iran and its Lebanese ally Hezbollah.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who has said he will not end the war until Hamas no longer poses a threat to Israelis, said a delegation would be sent to the Aug. 15 talks.

WATCH | Netanyahu blasts Gaza war critics in fiery speech to U.S. Congress: 

Netanyahu blasts Gaza war critics in fiery speech to U.S. Congress

17 days ago

Duration 2:05

In a fiery speech to the U.S. Congress skipped by some top Democrats, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu slammed critics of his country’s war against Hamas as ‘useful idiots’ for Iran, and said America and Israel must stand together.

Israel launched its assault on Gaza after Hamas fighters stormed into southern Israel on Oct. 7, killing 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and capturing more than 250 hostages, according to Israeli tallies.

Since then, nearly 40,000 Palestinians have been killed in the Israeli offensive in Gaza, according to the health ministry, which does not distinguish between combatants and civilians.

Health officials say most of the fatalities have been civilians. Israel, which has lost 329 soldiers in Gaza, says at least a third of the Palestinian fatalities are fighters. Iran-backed Hamas does not publish its casualties.

Published at Sat, 10 Aug 2024 13:21:55 +0000

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