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Presidents crisscrossing New York create a stark split-screen

Stephanie Lai and Jordan Fabian, Bloomberg News on

Published in Political News

President Joe Biden and Donald Trump will be mere miles apart from each other this week in Manhattan, but the backdrops couldn’t be more stark: the presumptive Republican nominee sitting in a dingy courtroom and the current commander-in-chief attending fundraisers with New York City’s elite.

The disparate split-screen highlights the benefits of incumbency. Biden will make a stop in Syracuse, New York, on Thursday to unveil $13.6 billion in semiconductor investments, a key part of his White House’s jobs message, before boarding Air Force One for campaign events in New York City and the surrounding suburbs that evening and Friday.

Trump began his Thursday with a campaign stop at a midtown Manhattan construction site, where he met with construction workers and criticized Biden’s labor and economic policies.

He then made his way to a downtown courthouse for the eighth day of his criminal trial involving hush money payments to a porn actress. He could be hit with fines or other admonishments from the judge for violating a gag order by disparaging witnesses involved in the case.

But Biden’s advantages only go so far. The president’s visit to Manhattan comes as Columbia University, an Ivy League school, is engulfed by student-led protests against the Israel-Hamas war. Biden is not scheduled to visit the university, but it’s likely anti-Israel protesters could follow him to other stops in the city, as they have done repeatedly since the war began in October.

Ivy League demonstrations

 

Demonstrators at Columbia were filmed yelling antisemitic slogans and taking Israeli flags from counter-protesters. Biden this week condemned the protests, which sparked further backlash from opponents of Israel’s war and raised more questions about his standing with young voters.

The political and legal challenges confronting the respective nominees have kept it a close race. Trump leads Biden in six of seven swing states, according to a Bloomberg News/Morning Consult poll released Wednesday, with the difference between the candidates in three battlegrounds within the margin of error. The poll also showed support among swing-state voters for Israel aid has plummeted in recent months.

Rising anger over Biden’s support for Israel among young and progressive voters poses an acute danger to his reelection campaign. That’s especially true among Arab and Muslim voters in Michigan, a battleground state Biden won in 2020 that makes up part of the “Blue Wall” crucial for Democrats to win the White House.

The protests have also divided Democrats in Congress, with progressive Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez lauding the demonstrations at Columbia, Yale and Berkeley on Monday, while Representative Tom Suozzi, a moderate who just won a special election in a Long Island swing district, went to Columbia’s campus that same day to show support for Jewish students.

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