A Harris Campaign Stop That Shrugs Off Voters
Salena Zito /
PITTSBURGH—Billed as a kickoff bus tour on the eve of the Democratic National Convention, presidential candidate Kamala Harris and her running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, instead spent Aug. 18 in Beaver County in tightly controlled stops before heading to Chicago.
Harris held a short rally at a private airport hangar surrounded by supporters—mostly members of local unions who were bused in for the event—before the vice president went to two retail stops and visited a phone bank before finishing the day at a local Sheetz gas station.
Beaver County, west of Allegheny County and adjacent to the airport, was once a powerful component of the Democratic Party, filled with union families who worked at the steel mills in Aliquippa and Ambridge. As the Democratic Party shifted left, the voters moved toward the Republican Party. In 2020, then-President Donald Trump won the county over Joe Biden by nearly 20 percentage points.
While some local Democrats thought the move was strategic, to show Harris was attempting to expand her universe, others were more cynical. They cited tight control of who attended the vice president’s planned events and the risk she would take doing an event in Pittsburgh and possibly facing her party’s pro-Hamas contingent, which has become politically vocal here.
That movement, spearheaded by the Pittsburgh Democratic Socialists of America, came to a head recently when a proposed ballot question that would ban Pittsburgh from doing business with companies with financial ties to Israel spurred accusations of antisemitism and placed Pittsburgh Mayor Ed Gainey on the hot seat.
The Democratic Socialists of America’s Pittsburgh chapter submitted the petition to the city to put the question to voters this November.
Gainey’s initial reaction as mayor was concern about the implications of a ban that would grind to a halt the city’s ability to deliver services.
Gainey did not, however, publicly object to the ballot question.
When the ballot petitions were handed in last week, it was discovered that over a dozen employees within Gainey’s administration had signed the petition—including Maria Montano, his director of communications.
Within days, Montano stepped down from her position.
Since the Oct. 7 terrorist attacks in Israel, Pittsburgh has become a hotbed of pro-Palestine protests, including an encampment that was set up on the grounds of the University of Pittsburgh. The city has also become a hotbed of vandalism to synagogues, Jewish-owned businesses, and the homes of Jewish residents in the neighborhood of Squirrel Hill, where the massacre of 11 congregants at the Tree of Life synagogue occurred almost six years ago.
Several longtime Democrat strategists in Pennsylvania believe Harris avoided Pittsburgh for any of her stops and stuck close to the airport so she could avoid the possibility that protesters would interrupt her kickoff tour in an important battleground state.
Many Harris supporters expressed disappointment in not being able to find a way to see her when she was in Beaver County.
The details of her event were kept under lock and key until her arrival—given the distance of Beaver County to the city of Pittsburgh, it made it difficult for supporters to get there in enough time to see her.
Harris was greeted at the airport by three congressional Democrats from Pennsylvania—Sen. Bob Casey and Reps. Chris Deluzio and Summer Lee—as well as Allegheny County Executive Sara Innamorato. Two Harris-Walz buses were parked there.
Harris greeted her invited supporters by arriving to the beat of her campaign song, Beyonce’s “Freedom.”
An Emerson College Polling/RealClearPennsylvania survey in the state’s presidential race found that 49% of voters said they support Trump and 48% said they support Harris. With undecided voters’ support allocated, Trump extended to a 2-point lead, 51% to 49%. With third-party candidates on the ballot, it was 47% Trump, 47% Harris.
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