Meeting Myself in Bucks County

Pennsylvania in the Political (and Personal) Crucible

By Robert S. Eshelman <

http://www.tomdispatch.com/post/174995/robert_eshelman_republican_nosedive_in_pennsylvania>

In 1991, at age 17, I fled Bucks County, an
overwhelmingly white, working-class region in southeast
Pennsylvania where I grew up. I left because the life of
the working class was brutal and I wanted no part of it.
I cringed at the racism and xenophobia that seemed to
rise out of the anxieties of precarious labor. I
desperately hoped there was some alternative to coming
home each day looking as battered as did so many grown-
ups I would catch staring blankly into TV screens or
half-empty glasses of beer.

My father was laid off twice in the 1980s, two
recessions ago, first from his job at a mustard factory,
which packed up and moved south, and later from a
company that produced tractor-trailer doors and side-
view mirrors. I've only seen him cry twice. The first
time was during his brother's funeral; Uncle Jim was
killed in a drunk-driving accident. The next time was
when he and I had an argument about my skipping a night
of work at my first dishwashing job. He demanded I go; I
spit back that at least I had a job -- cruel words from
a 14-year-old with a Mohawk. Recently, the tip of one of
his fingers was shorn clear off while working with a
shrink-wrap machine with defective safety gear. He
didn't push the issue with the employee compensation
folks, though, for fear of creating problems.

My mom has worked in the same factory for more than 30
years. Along with about a hundred others, some
immigrants from Southeast Asia, she makes small motors
that can be used in dialysis machines, rotating
advertising signs, or those amusement park games where
you maneuver a metal claw hoping to extricate a small
fuzzy animal. I'm amazed this type of production still
exists in the U.S. So is she, especially since a holding
company took over from the original family owners and,
in turn, sold the firm to a tight-fisted corporation
that's been cutting corners -- and jobs.

Statistics tell us that Bucks County -- one of those
places Nixon's "southern strategy" hit hard when, under
Ronald Reagan, it moved north in the 1980s -- has been
undergoing a political sea change. The pressure of the
Obama campaign and its well organized "ground game," as
well as the global economic meltdown and diminished
support for the war in Iraq have all had their effect.

For the first time since the 1960s, registered Democrats
outnumber Republicans in the county. Since April the
Democratic Party has outpaced Republicans in registering
voters by a margin of almost two to one. In fact -- and
this should stun anyone -- the total number of new
voters who choose "Independent," "no affiliation," "the
Green Party," or other even smaller third party options
surpassed Republican Party registration in those months.
Think of that as just one more small indication of the
utter bankruptcy of the Bush years and, of course, of
the Grand Old Party.

With the upcoming election, this heavily white county,
which tilted ever so slightly for Kerry in 2004, and
went heavily for Hillary Clinton in the primary, may
become a solidly blue area, coalescing -- albeit
somewhat reluctantly -- behind an African-American
Democrat.

Last weekend, with no small amount of trepidation, I
returned to my old home in Bucks County, that former
land of Reagan Democrats I had fled years before,
curious to see for myself just what was driving this
shift, and what it might mean beyond the November
elections. Think of it as a modest journey to meet my
younger self, and to see how both my home and I had
grown in these last years. Of course, I was no less
curious about whether the pervasive racism and class
anxiety I remember so well from my teenage years was now
bubbling over. The only thing I didn't expect was what I
found - a political atmosphere as quiet and mild as the
clear fall air.

A Hillary Voter

It was a crisp Saturday morning and I was in my mom's
car. (As on many Saturdays, she was on her way to work
before 5 am, and today had gotten a ride with a co-
worker.) So here I was, driving through rural Republican
northern Bucks County on my way to meet up with some
Obama canvassers in Doylestown, the county seat.

This was, after all, one of the four counties that the
wonk political website Politico.com has identified as
key nationally to determining a presidential winner in
2008. According to the Wall Street Journal's Matthew
Kaminski, it is also considered one of four "collar
counties" ringing Philadelphia that will decide the
coming election in Pennsylvania.

This world, my former world, whizzing by outside the
window, has also, for months, been the fierce focus of
countless pundits and reporters in a determined search
for those white male working-class voters who supposedly
gave Hillary the nod and were then endlessly said to be
looking McCainwards (and later, their female
counterparts, Palinwards) rather than vote for a black
guy.

It was the sight of someone in a garish yellow chicken
suit holding a "yard sale" sign that made me take the
sudden U-turn. Pulling into a parking lot, I noticed a
couple of early morning shoppers sifting through piles
of tangled denim, corduroy, and polyester clothes, while
others were checking out a table of glassware.

Sharon Palmer, 61, was presiding over the sale, a
benefit for a local homeless shelter. In many ways she
is one of the anthro-political subjects from this part
of the state that much of the media has focused on.
White and middle-class, she was a Hillary supporter
during the primary.

What does she think of the elections?

"Everyone's talking around the issues," she responds.
"Looking at my hair, you can probably tell I was a
Hillary supporter."

I nod knowingly -- as if short, grey hair = Hillary were
an obvious equation.

Is she supporting Obama?

"Yeah, but not enthusiastically. It's prejudice. Not
because he's black, but because I wanted to see a woman
in the White House."

Then why not support Palin, I ask.

"Sarah," she says, half-horrified, half-amused. "She's
got no qualifications and no experience. She's a middle-
aged cheerleader with her winks and 'hey, ya'll.'"

A recent Newsweek poll found that Palmer's attitude is
typical. Women who backed Hillary have now gone to Obama
86% to 7%, putting to rest Republican dreams of Palin's
prospective charm among Democratic women. When it comes
to Obama, though, Palmer shows little more than a
resigned pragmatism toward what he might actually
accomplish as president.

"The financial crisis is a whole separate ball of yarn.
It's going to take a long time to sort that one out. But
health care..." she begins, only to trail off. A moment
later, she adds, "We're realty agents, independent
contractors. We pay for our health insurance." It's a
seeming non sequitur, or at least an unfinished thought,
that somehow makes perfect sense.

How much?

"Fourteen hundred dollars a month for me and my
husband." Obama. Case closed.

>From the yard sale, I head toward Doylestown along Route
313. During my youth, sprawling farmlands lined this
road. Now, mini-malls and McMansions pepper the
landscape as if some vengeful God of chain stores and
overpriced housing had conjured them up from the rustic
soil. The patches of tall trees that remain bear the
colors of the changing of seasons -- amber, red, gold
and yellow.

Knocking on Doors

Shane Wolf, a tall, 36-year-old marketing executive from
New York and a volunteer canvasser for the Obama
campaign, strides up the driveway of a home in
Sellersville, a town of 4,500 in the northern part of
the county. Stepping up to the door he gives it a solid
knock and within a few moments a shirtless man in his
thirties with a slight paunch appears. Shane asks whom
he will be voting for on November 4th. "I won't be
voting for McCain," he barks, "I just can't imagine
Palin as President."

>From my vantage point on the sidewalk in front of the
gruff man's quarter acre of tightly manicured lawn and
his drab, blue-grey paneled home, he remains partially
obscured by the screen door. He holds it only slightly
ajar, as if as a protective barrier against Shane -- and
undoubtedly the Democratic Party liberalism he
represents.

The man's oblique support for Obama may be no ringing
endorsement, but it speaks volumes about the political
shift that has occurred in this county. A recent
Politico/Insider Advantage poll of four key counties in
Missouri, Ohio, Virginia, and Pennsylvania showed Obama
topping McCain 47% to 41% here. That's still within the
poll's large margin of error, but he was startlingly
stronger among the county's sizeable group of self-
defined "independents" (46%-32%). Among 30-44 year-olds
like the man Shane has just canvassed, he is leading by
a whopping 12 points (49%-37%).

And keep in mind that his was the least welcoming
reception Shane got while I was following him that
afternoon. As we made our way through endless cul-de-
sacs of near identical aluminum-sided homes, I felt ever
more amazed that this was the place I so desperately
fled as a teenager.

While we drive to another corner of Sellersville, Shane
relates campaign stories. "Once, I knocked on a door and
the guy asked me if I was from New York. I thought he
was going to punch me. By the way, he was Republican.
Instead, he said that he was voting for a Democrat for
the first time since Kennedy." As Shane remarked, the
average age in that heavily Republican community must
have been 127, and yet many of the conservative
homeowners were remarkably willing to give his Obama
pitch a solid listen.

Has he dealt with any racism while canvassing for Obama?
"I think the n-word was used once. I was stunned."

I, of course, was stunned for a different reason. Here
was Shane -- an out-of-town Democrat -- alone and door-
knocking for an African-American candidate in this
Republican stronghold and yet he hadn't faced a flurry
of racial invectives or even many stern skeptics. What
on Earth was going on?

By the time we make it back to Doylestown, it's late
afternoon and the Obama office is teeming with
volunteers. Groups of late morning and early afternoon
canvassers have returned and are milling about, drinking
coffee, and swapping stories from the field. I've been
around political campaigns before and this one
definitely has the wind at its back.

Shane and I retire to a nearby café, where I ask him how
he thought the day went and how well, in his assessment,
the campaign is connecting with Bucks County voters. "No
one slammed the door," he replies, chuckling. Then he
adds in all seriousness: "As the campaign has reached
out to traditionally Republican voters, they've begun to
realize that it's time to set aside how they feel about
social issues. Eight years of Bush's failed policies
have created a perfect storm, capped off by this
economic meltdown. There's something that matters more
to them now than how often the candidates go to church."

What Shane has pinpointed is Thomas Frank's well-known
description of Republican Party dominance in Kansas --
but in reverse. After decades of being hooked on the
values embodied by the Christian Coalition, values which
powered the Reagan Revolution, many voters in Bucks
County now seem understandably focused on bread-and-
butter concerns -- wages, health care, and the economy.
If this is the bellwether political battleground that so
many pundits and journalists make it out to be, then a
mass defection from the Republican Party is underway.
It's no longer a matter of a single candidate's
inability to connect with voters, but perhaps a
wholesale rejection of what the party has to offer.

"The economy is definitely the number one issue for
everyone here," Shane says. "I don't hear people talking
about gay marriage."

Being Undecided

Bruce Hellerick's 36-acre family farm is a short drive
from Obama headquarters. For six generations the
Hellerick family has been farming here, and for the last
35 years, they've been selling produce to passers-by.
This time of year, the farm becomes a quasi-amusement
park with a children's play area, where part-time
teenage workers entertain kids, and up the hill, three
corn mazes cut into a bounty of six-foot-high yellowing
stalks.

Bruce assures me he's a staunch Republican, but also
admits he remains undecided about November 4th. "Usually
I'm decided by now," he says, smiling congenially. "The
experience McCain has with the military and what-not
really brings a lot to the table." On the other hand, he
continues, "Obama's got a great vision, but I'm
concerned about the people he's been associated with."
As for McCain's running-mate: "Sarah's very charismatic,
but I don't know about the folksy thing."

During our conversation he manages to use the word
"family" and "tradition" so many times that I lose
count. How is it, I wonder, that Bruce, so inextricably
involved in ideas of family and tradition and so
concerned about Obama's associations with fiery black
pastors and Sixties radicals, can still remain on the
fence only two weeks before Election Day? Two days of
talking in Bucks County left me with the impression that
one blended "family," the Republican one, was certainly
disintegrating under the pressures of a new era.

Up the hill, two women are seated on a picnic bench by a
corn maze. Wendy Walters, a 45-year-old hair stylist,
is, like Bruce, a Republican and, as she quickly informs
me, a hearty supporter of school vouchers. Yet she seems
to have caught the virus of indecision too. She's just
not sure what she's going to do when she steps into that
polling booth. McCain's "issues seem to follow Bush,"
while Obama "is a book with a pretty cover and blank
pages." So she tells me either/or-ing away. Across the
table, her friend Tracy Northrop, 41 and a homemaker, is
also Republican - and also undecided. "I don't like
either one very much. I'm a Republican but I don't
always vote that way. I'm very undecided. I think McCain
is out of touch with the people. And Palin makes me
really afraid."

Earlier in the day, while driving to Sellersville, I
asked Shane about Bucks County's legions of undecided
voters. He thought they understood something had to
change, but haven't quite gotten to the point where they
can admit, even to themselves, that they will vote for
Obama. Bruce, Wendy, and Tracy give weight to Shane's
theory that Republican defectors may inch toward voting
for Obama. They could prove to be a reverse "Bradley
Effect" -- Republicans who won't tell pollsters, or even
maybe their friends, what they're going to do, but might
quietly opt Democrat in this election.

But will they? While the Republican Party's support
among voters here is visibly crumbling, there's also
deep skepticism about the Democrats, particularly Obama
himself. Do the concerns I repeatedly heard about
Obama's "associations" or his "experience" serve as
coded stand-ins for saying that he's black and will not
get my support? Regardless of what these voters decide,
though, dark days lie ahead for the GOP.

"Execute All of Them"

The Quakertown Farmers Market, deeded in 1764 by the
sole American-born son of Pennsylvania's founder William
Penn, sits just east of Route 309, a four-lane road that
connects Bucks County to Philadelphia. All along its
narrow corridors are signs on which a Quaker in buckled
shoes raises an auctioneer's gavel, a reminder that
farmer's used to gather here to sell their goods and
that this was once among the leading agricultural
counties in the country.

The market's once robust trade in livestock is now a
distant memory. An eclectic assortment of discount shops
and cheap food stalls lines the corridors that cut
through this quarter-mile-long structure with names like
The Teriyaki Chef, Latin Flavor, and As Seen On TV,
which offers, just as its name implies, cheap goods
advertised on late night television.

There's even a Kenyan restaurant, not to speak of shops
selling all the fake leather cell-phone covers anyone
could ever desire. It's a vision of the new Bucks County
and maybe even a new America. A community and a nation
increasingly inhabited by new immigrants and charmed by
cheap goods made by other underpaid workers halfway
around the world. It's a political universe that, this
year at least, the Republican Party seems not to have a
clue about how to tackle.

In aisles where classic Philly cheesesteaks are served
up next to lo mein noodles and discount plastics from
who knows where, Allie, a registered independent and a
strong supporter of Pennsylvania's senior senator,
Republican Arlen Specter, shows no Republican-style
either/or equivocation. She's going to vote for Obama,
even though, as she rushes to assure me, she's "not
crazy about either side." She actually expresses relief,
though, that someone "intellectual" might preside over
the country after eight years of George W.

At the opposite end of the mart, John Lewis becomes
irate the moment I utter Obama's name. "I don't believe
in Robin Hood," he says emphatically, "taking from the
rich in order to give to the poor. Obama, he's an
unknown quality. There's too much we don't know about
him." Then, in a sudden burst, John exclaims: "Execute
all of them for what they've done with this bailout!
Frank, Pelosi, and all those guys. They should get the
guillotine. Enron -- those guys did one one-hundredth
what they did and they all went to jail. My kids, my
grandkids are going to be paying for this. Those people
that took out those mortgages couldn't afford the houses
they bought."

Here he was -- the man I had expected to meet and who,
in abstract form, has been at the center of my
recollections of Bucks County since the day I left. But
I had been here for a weekend, talked to dozens of
people during a hotly contested election in a time of
widespread anxiety, yet only hours before I was to head
home did I finally meet the angry white man.

Everyone else I ran into seemed strangely subdued at the
very moment this nation is supposedly on the cusp of
historic change, if not at the precipice. Had all the
rest of the angry white guys of my youth taken momentary
shelter beneath rocks in the county's much diminished
hinterlands?

Leaving Home Again

It's always tough visiting home. On my last day, I
strolled with my mother around a shopping center nestled
in one of the county's more upscale areas near the
Delaware River. Perhaps it was a sign of bleak economic
times, but -- eerily enough -- the two of us were just
about the only ones there late on a Sunday morning. As
we walked by brand-name discount stores vacant of
customers, we began to talk about why I split all those
years ago. It was, of course, a private conversation,
but interlaced -- as I suspect so many are right now all
over the country -- with comments about the upcoming
election, about whether race will really matter, whether
those working-class white votes will go to Obama or not,
and whether any of it matters down the road, when it
comes to wages or the possibility that, someday, decent
health care will really be widely available.

Our private discussion was old hat for us. She insists I
left town because the big city beckoned. I insist my
flight represented a gut urge to find something more
than a job in a factory that would shutter sooner or
later and a desire to find a place where people weren't
always calling the few blacks or Asians in the area any
number of epithets, or simply pretending they didn't
exist.

She swore I was overplaying both the racism and the
economic distress -- that the problem was me, not where
I grew up.

By now, as mothers facing obdurate children are wont to
do, my mom was seething and so she began walking ever
faster, clutching tightly at the strap of the handbag
slung over her shoulder. Having outpaced me, she
suddenly turned and blurted out: "You know, not everyone
here is like that. Why do you want to focus on the bad
stuff when lots of things have changed since you left?"

It was, in truth, a good question. And then, uncoiling
from her anger, she gave me a brief personal history
lesson: "You know, when I was a kid, there were two
girls who dated black guys. People treated them like
hookers. Today, you see mixed couples walking around all
the time and nobody says anything." And who can deny it
-- except the Republican Party? We are in a different
world.

Still, I wasn't completely convinced, not by her, or
even by my weekend on the Obama trail. Still, as sons
are wont to do, I let it go. After all, I was back in
Bucks County and puzzled by what the undeniable recent
political shift there meant -- beyond an indictment of
the Republican Party. And, maybe, that's all I can say.

With the exception of the fellow who wanted to "execute"
them all, there was such a muted, tamped-down feel to my
encounters, made only more awkward by the fact that I
was walking around like the other journalists scouring
the county, pad and pen in hand. No longer a home-town
boy visiting mom and dad, I had morphed into a college-
educated thirty-something exploring anthropological
oddities from a by-gone era of manufacturing jobs and
Reagan conservativism. And yet that was hardly the way
it felt to me as I crisscrossed that haunted landscape.

Of course, the Obama supporters were pumped up on
canvassing day, while the air in the sparsely staffed
Republican offices I visited was filled with the
desperation of an animal caught in a trap. If Obama
doesn't take the county, judging by the number of new,
energized voters and the radioactivity of the Republican
Party, I'll be shocked. But, of one thing I'm sure,
that's only part -- maybe the least part -- of what's
going on here.

The rest, I don't know. And that includes myself. I no
longer feel at home here, if I ever did, among my people
-- the white working class -- at the very moment when I
probably should. After all, I know something no reporter
from elsewhere knows. I know that the past is always
buried in the present, and if I need a reminder, I only
have to look at my mom -- and then myself. For her,
however much Bucks County is changing, in basic ways it
hasn't changed very much at all. She still works six
days a week, often ten hours a day, at a job that may be
gone tomorrow and, as I did at age 17, I'm again hopping
on a train, leaving Bucks County behind.

[Robert S. Eshelman is an intern at the Nation magazine,
where he assists TomDispatch.com. After fleeing Bucks
County in 1991, he ended up in San Francisco, working as
a community organizer and later a legislative aide at
City Hall. In 2003, he traveled to the Middle East,
where he set out to be a journalist. Since then, he has
been published in the Brooklyn Rail, In These Times, and
the Nation. This is his first piece about his home
county. His email address is [EMAIL PROTECTED] ]

Copyright 2008 Robert S. Eshelman

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