President Biden went to Wisconsin and Florida on the heels of his State of the Union (SOTU) address to spotlight what he frames as his administration's accomplishments and draw contrasts with Republicans. The visits follow trips to Maryland, New York and Pennsylvania last week.
The labor message: At a Laborers' International Union of North America training center in DeForest, Wisconsin on Wednesday, Biden pointed to local projects and workforce development programs that the infrastructure law and American Rescue Plan funded. He also reiterated recent economic stats on job numbers and unemployment along with his proposal to require that construction materials for federal infrastructure projects be made in America.
Wisconsin is one of several Rust Belt states that went from supporting Barack Obama (D) in 2008 and 2012 to supporting Donald Trump (R) in 2016. Biden narrowly won Wisconsin in 2020.
On Medicare and Social Security: The theme of Biden's visit to Tampa, Florida Thursday was protecting and strengthening Medicare and Social Security. Biden noted Florida has the highest percentage of seniors in the nation.
The president highlighted a provision in the Inflation Reduction Act allowing Medicare to negotiate drug prices. He also criticized Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) – whom many anticipate will run for president in 2024 – for not expanding Medicaid in Florida under the Affordable Care Act.
During both his Wisconsin and Florida stops, Biden criticized Florida Sen. Rick Scott's (R) proposal to sunset all federal legislation after five years. Biden said the proposal would likely lead to drastic cuts to Medicare and Social Security.
On Wednesday, Scott said, "In my plan, I suggested the following: All federal legislation sunsets in five years. If a law is worth keeping, Congress can pass it again." Scott said, "I've never advocated cutting Social Security or Medicare and never would." See more from our Alexander Bolton here.
Our Al Weaver noted that some Republicans have distanced themselves from Scott's proposal.
Florida's presidential elections tend to be close. Trump won the two most recent races after Obama won the previous two.
Reactions: Our Mychael Schnell discussed SOTU reactions with Sarah Matthews, former deputy press secretary and special assistant to Trump, and Michael LaRosa, former press secretary to Jill Biden and special assistant to President Biden.
Matthews said Biden's touting of accomplishments was "maybe just a little bit out of touch. I understand wanting to explain to the American people what your accomplishments are … but I think that right now, a lot of people feel as if they're not feeling the effect of that legislation that he's put in place."
LaRosa said, "Sarah's right – people are not feeling the economy. … If you're not feeling a healthy economy … chances are, you may vote a different way." LaRosa compared Biden's situation to Obama's, saying the Affordable Care Act didn't improve public opinion until people started feeling its effects in 2012, and Obama won reelection.
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