Joe Biden has spent most of his presidency insisting to Americans that the economy is on the right track. Poll after poll has shown that most voters do not believe him. That may be changing.
After months of resilient hiring, better-than-expected economic growth and a declining rate of inflation, new data shows that Americans are becoming upbeat about the US economy, potentially reversing the deep pessimism Biden has struggled to counter for much of the past three years.
That trend could reshape campaigning ahead of Novemberâs presidential election, in which Biden is expected to face off against Donald Trump, the frontrunner for the Republican nomination. Experts believe the presidentâs case for a second term will benefit from more optimistic views of the economy â but the hangover from the inflation wave that peaked a year and a half ago presents Republicans with a potent counterattack.
âOver the last couple of years, people have been feeling the most pain on day-to-day spending, on things like groceries and gas prices and prescription drugs. And, fortunately, those prices are beginning to come down, which gives Democrats a stronger hand than we had just a few months ago,â said Adam Green, co-founder of advocacy group the Progressive Change Campaign Committee.
âFor a campaign that says that they want to finish the unfinished business of the Biden presidency, our polling shows that itâs perfectly OK to acknowledge that there has been pain, and thereâs more business to do,â said Green.
He added that the Biden campaign should âreally focus the votersâ attention on the forward-looking agenda of one party wanting to help billionaires and corporations, and the Democratic party wanting to challenge corporate greed and bring down prices for consumersâ.
Biden has been unpopular with voters, according to poll aggregator FiveThirtyEight, even as employment grew strongly and the economy avoided the recession that many economists predicted was around the corner. While itâs not the only factor, pollsters have linked votersâ disapproval with Biden to the wave of price increases that peaked in June 2022 at levels not seen in more than four decades, and which have since been on the decline. An NBC News poll released this month showed Biden trailing Trump by about 20 points on the question of which candidate would better handle the economy, a finding echoed by other surveys.
But new data appears to show Americans believe the economy has turned a corner. Late last month, the Conference Board reported its index of consumer confidence had hit its highest point since December 2021, while the University of Michiganâs survey of consumer sentiment has climbed to its highest level since July of that year.
âThe people who give positive views of the economy, they tend to point to, the unemployment rate is low, and they also point to that inflation is down from where it was,â said Jocelyn Kiley, an associate director at Pew Research Center, whose own data has found an uptick in positive economic views, particularly among Democrats.
Trump and his Republican allies have capitalized on inflation to argue that Biden should be voted out, though economists say Bidenâs policies are merely one ingredient in a trend exacerbated by Russiaâs invasion of Ukraine, and global supply chain snarls that occurred as a result of Covid-19. Nikki Haley, the former South Carolina governor who is the last major challenger to the former president still in the race has said the economy is âcrushing middle-class Americansâ.
But votersâ improving views of the economy could blunt those attacks ahead of the November election, where the GOP is also hoping to seize control of the Senate from Bidenâs Democratic allies and maintain their majority in the House of Representatives. Lynn Vavreck, an American politics professor at the University of California, Los Angeles, said Trump might have to fall back to tried-and-true tactics from his 2016 victory over Hillary Clinton, such as promising to institute hardline immigration policies.
âThe economy is growing. People donât really say that they feel good about it, but if youâre gonna load up your campaign on those peopleâs feelings, I feel like thatâs a little risky,â said Vavreck, who has studied how economic conditions can affect presidential campaigns.
âYou could do that, and that would be a bit of a gamble, or you could find an issue on which you believe you are closer to most voters than Joe Biden, that is not about the economy, and you could try to reorient the conversation around that issue.â
There is already evidence that harnessing outrage over the flow of undocumented immigrants into the United States is key to Trumpâs campaign strategy. The former presidentâs meddling was a factor in the death of a rare bipartisan agreement in Congress to tighten immigration policy in exchange for Republican votes to approve assistance for Ukraine and Israelâs militaries.
With the economy humming along, Trump is apparently nervous that the US economy could enter a recession at an inconvenient moment. âWhen thereâs a crash, I hope itâs going to be during this next 12 months because I donât want to be Herbert Hoover,â he said in an interview last month, referring to the US president who is often blamed for the Great Depression that began 95 years ago.
Even though the rate of inflation has eased, albeit haltingly, prices for many consumer goods remain higher than they were compared with when Biden took office, which his opponents can still capitalize on, said the Republican strategist Doug Heye.
âConsumers go to the grocery store, and they spend money, and theyâre upset with what things cost, and that should always be what theyâre talking about,â Heye said.
While Biden has been quick to take credit for the strong hiring figures during his administration, polls show that hasnât landed with voters. In recent months, the White House has shifted strategy, announcing efforts to get rid of junk fees and accusing corporations of âprice gougingâ.
Evan Roth Smith, head pollster for the Democratic research firm Blueprint, said that lines up with his findings that voters care less about job growth and more about the fact that everything costs more.
âVoters just felt a prioritization mismatch between what they were experiencing, the kind of pressures they were under, which isnât that they didnât have jobs, itâs that they couldnât pay their bills,â Smith said.
âMakes all the sense in the world that if the White House and president and the Biden campaign are touting this stuff, that they are going to make headway, and are making headway with voters in getting them to feel like Joe Biden in the Democratic party do understand.â