White Men Hold Key for Democrats
Contest May Hinge
On Blue-Collar Vote;
Opening for McCain?
By JONATHAN KAUFMAN
February 19, 2008; Page A1

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio -- In a Democratic presidential nomination race that
pits a 
black man against a woman, the victor may well be determined by white
men.

The working-class white men who toil in the steel mills and auto plants
here 
are part of a volatile cohort that has long helped steer the nation's 
political course. Once, blue-collar males were the bedrock of Franklin

Roosevelt's New Deal coalition. They became "Reagan Democrats," helping
to 
propel Ronald Reagan into office in the 1980s. Bill Clinton won many of
them 
back to the Democratic Party in 1992. Two years later they were "angry
white 
males," resentful of affirmative action and the women's movement, who
helped 
Republicans capture Congress.

'It seems like someone else should be there,' says Dan Leihgeber, a
smelter 
in a Youngstown steel plant.
Now this group of voters is set to help determine the Democratic
nominee, 
and the next occupant of the White House. Working-class white men make
up 
nearly one-quarter of the electorate, outnumbering African-American and

Hispanic voters combined. As the Democratic primary race intensifies,
some 
of these white men are finding it hard to identify with the remaining
two 
candidates, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton and Sen. Barack Obama.

"It seems like someone else should be there," says Dan Leihgeber, a
smelter 
in a steel plant here, who is supporting Sen. Clinton. "It's like
there's 
someone missing."

As the Democratic race moves toward primaries in blue-collar
strongholds --  
today in Wisconsin, Ohio on March 4 and Pennsylvania on April 22 -- the

allegiance of blue-collar men is up for grabs. While Sen. Clinton runs

strongly among working-class women, she and Sen. Obama are perceived
equally 
favorably among working-class men, according to a January Wall Street 
Journal/NBC News poll. The two candidates have seesawed among
blue-collar 
men in the primaries: Sen. Clinton won them in Georgia, Missouri and
New 
York, while Sen. Obama captured the working-class male vote in New 
Hampshire, California, Maryland and Virginia.

Blue-collar men could also emerge as an important swing constituency in

November -- either backing the Democrats' eventual nominee, or shifting
to 
some degree toward Sen. John McCain, the presumptive Republican
nominee, 
whose war record and straight-talking approach could make him appealing
to 
many working-class men.

Marc Dann, Ohio's Democratic attorney general, frets about the
reluctance of 
some of these blue-collar Democrats to embrace either of his party's 
candidates. "I worry about [the appeal of] McCain," says Mr. Dann, who
lives 
in Youngstown. "It's not like watching an episode of Archie Bunker --
but 
there are real issues" that white male voters here have with Sen.
Clinton 
and Sen. Obama.

Working-class men are generally defined as those without a college
degree, 
including union members and workers with service and technical jobs, 
typically making less than $50,000 a year. They are especially crucial
in 
Ohio, where they make up about 28% of the vote, as well as other 
battleground states including Michigan (about 27%), West Virginia
(33%), 
Missouri (27%), Minnesota (27%), Pennsylvania (27%), Wisconsin (29%)
and 
Iowa (34%).

In Youngstown, many working-class men say they will vote according to 
issues, especially economic ones including health care, free trade and
the 
loss of manufacturing jobs. But in conversations in union halls, bars
and 
factories, race and gender are never far from the surface.

"I don't think the country is ready for a woman president yet," says
Duane 
Tkac, a burly vocational instructor at a prison here and a member of
the 
local branch of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters union. "The

country is in too much turmoil. I don't think she can handle the
pressure, 
the terrorists." He plans to vote for Sen. Obama.

Don Pompelia, retired from the Air Force, supports Sen. Clinton. "I'm
hoping 
Hillary gets the nomination. But if she doesn't, I'm not voting for
that 
guy. I'm going Republican," he booms as he picks up his morning coffee
at 
McDonald's. "There are going to be a lot of people crossing over to the

Republicans because he's black."

Back Into the Fold

After decades in which Republicans often successfully wooed blue-collar
men, 
many Democrats see 2008 as a chance to bring them back into the fold, 
motivated by the worsening economy and their disaffection with
President 
Bush. In the 2006 midterm election, union members and other
working-class 
men voted for Democratic candidates by a margin of almost two to one, 
helping the Democrats win control of Congress.

Youngstown has been battered over the past 30 years by job losses and
plant 
closings. Buoyed by unionized steel jobs that paid as much as $20 an
hour, 
the city once had one of the country's highest per-capita incomes. But
as 
companies have shuttered steel and auto plants, outsourcing jobs to
nonunion 
parts of the country and overseas, the city's population has fallen by
50% 
since 1960, to about 80,000.

Few young people stay here; the average age at one steel plant is 55. 
Families survive because women have poured into the work force out of 
necessity, changing the dynamic within traditionally conservative
families 
where women used to stay at home.

'Poster Child'

"For a lot of blue-collar guys over 40, Hillary Clinton is a poster
child 
for everything about the women's movement that they don't like -- their
wife 
going back to work, their daughters rebelling, the rise of women in the

workplace," says Gerald Austin, an Ohio political strategist.

Mr. Leihgeber, the steelworker, says he supports Sen. Clinton for her 
experience and positions. He carries a book bag to work every day with
his 
lunch and a newspaper inside and a Clinton button pinned to the
outside. 
Some days, he says, he turns the bag around so the Clinton button
doesn't 
show; he says he doesn't like dealing with his co-workers' derogatory 
comments. Mr. Leihgeber says he wouldn't be heckled so much for an
Obama 
pin.

"People don't want to speak out against Obama because of the fear of
being 
seen as racist," he says. "It's easier to say you want to keep a woman

barefoot and pregnant....You can call a woman anything."

In national polls, white men overall have been more favorable than
white 
women toward Sen. Obama. In a survey done in September by Pew Research,

white men overall gave Sen. Obama more positive ratings than did white

women, in categories including whether he was tough, smart, friendly
and 
honest. In the same categories, white males gave Sen. Clinton
consistently 
lower marks than white women did.

For some women, that confirms that sexism runs deeper than racism among
many 
men. "My mother, who was the first woman lawyer in a big D.C. firm,
always 
said that blacks got in before women," says Caryl Rivers, a professor
at 
Boston University who supports Sen. Clinton. "Then the white guys
figured 
everything had gone to hell anyway, so they might as well let the women
in."

In Youngstown, Sen. Obama is seen through the prism of the city's
changing 
racial makeup. Over the years, as Youngstown has become poorer, many
whites 
have moved to surrounding towns and the minority population has
increased. 
The Youngstown area is now one of the most segregated communities in
the 
country, according to the 2000 U.S. Census.

Everyday racial tensions and animosity run high. A white cook at a
local bar 
says he won't bother voting in this election. "What's the point," he
says, 
rubbing his skin. "We're already a minority."

But for some white men here, Sen. Obama's appeal is that he is
different 
from many black leaders they have seen in the past. "The guys I work
with, 
they know Jesse Jackson and they know Al Sharpton. They call them all
sorts 
of terrible things," says Robert Hagan, a locomotive engineer and a
state 
representative, referring to these politicians' sometimes-inflammatory

rhetoric and focus on black causes. "They don't talk about Obama like
that."

Those here who dislike Sen. Obama tend to criticize what they call his
empty 
rhetoric, his lack of experience and the fear that he would favor
blacks and 
other minorities.

Many working-class men here say they are being lobbied by their teenage
and 
young adult children to vote for Sen. Obama. And some of the area's
newer 
businesses, such as its growing hospitals and the privately run prison,

break down some of the racial and gender barriers found in the mills
and 
auto plants that are still overwhelmingly white and male.

At a Teamsters hall here, a dozen burly men in gabardine jackets and 
baseball caps gather over coffee and overstuffed donuts for a union
meeting 
of prison workers. "There is a misunderstanding that older white guys
aren't 
going to vote for a black man," says Jim Marcum, a job counselor at the

prison. "That's not true." Mr. Marcum says he voted for Ronald Reagan
and 
George H.W. Bush. This time he plans to vote for Sen. Obama. "He's a
breath 
of fresh air."

Natalie Grant, a black woman who works with Mr. Marcum at the prison,
walks 
in and grabs some coffee.

"You really voting for Obama?" she says.

"Yes," says Mr. Marcum.

Ms. Grant laughs. "I knew there was some brother in you," she says. Mr.

Marcum smiles.

Three years ago, Youngstown elected its first African-American mayor,
Jay 
Williams, a 36-year-old with little political experience who ran as an

independent promising to unite the city. Mr. Williams won with the
heavy 
support of the city's black community -- about 40% of the vote -- but
also 
drew white votes from working-class and college neighborhoods.

"A lot of people thought Youngstown was 20 or 30 years away from this
kind 
of change," says Mr. Williams, who has endorsed Sen. Obama.

Women, too, have made inroads in local politics. In 1994, there were no

women elected at the county level, where real power lies. Today, women
serve 
as county commissioner and treasurer, and hold several elected judicial

seats.

"We deal with women at work," says John Lesicko, a teamster official.
"We 
deal with HR people. She might be a" -- he raises his hands to form 
imaginary quote marks and silently mouths a slur -- "but we deal with
her."

Leaning Toward Clinton

Across town, 14 steelworkers brought together to talk about the
election say 
they predominantly supported Sen. John Edwards before he dropped out of
the 
race. Now 13 of them say they are leaning toward Sen. Clinton. They
praise 
her experience and toughness in withstanding the Monica Lewinsky
scandal. 
Former President Bill Clinton remains enormously popular here, with
many 
blue-collar men saying that they like the fact that he would be in the
White 
House as well.

"I think she has the right person in the bedroom with her," says Joe
Marion, 
who works at the local prison.

Betty Ingramn doesn't buy it. The lone African-American in the room
full of 
steelworkers, she works as a secretary in the steel mill and is the
head of 
the clerical workers union.

"It's a race thing," she says of her colleagues' support for Sen.
Clinton. 
"They can't handle it, an African-American being over them." As an 
African-American union official, Ms. Ingramn says she has battled
constantly 
to be included in meetings and decisions.

Both Sen. Clinton's and Sen. Obama's campaigns say race and gender
shouldn't 
be a consideration, and that they are targeting blue-collar voters with

appeals to economic issues that hit working-class families.

"Some may call this the 'rust belt,' but that's not what I see," Sen. 
Clinton said in a visit to the General Motors plant here last week. "I
see 
some of the hardest workers in the world. I see great universities and

strong communities. I see a 21st-century manufacturing belt. An
innovation 
belt. An opportunity belt."

Sen. Obama, in a visit to a GM plant in Wisconsin, similarly laid out
plans 
to help workers and create jobs. "I won't stand here and tell you that
we 
can -- or should -- stop free trade. We can't stop every job from going

overseas," he said. "But I also won't stand here and accept an America
where 
we do nothing to help American workers who have lost jobs and
opportunities 
because of these trade agreements."

The real test will come in November.

"I think if we nominate one of these two, we are talking about McCain
as 
president," says Bob Rodkey, a firefighter who doesn't like either
candidate 
but plans to vote for Sen. Clinton in the primary. "I talk to a lot of
my 
Democratic friends and they are going to cross over in November or not
vote 
at all. We don't have a viable candidate. Neither of them is one of
us."

Mr. Rodkey says he will vote for a Democrat in the fall. He plans to
urge 
his friends to do the same. "Hopefully they will listen to the message,
and 
not who's delivering it," he says.


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