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We understand the political reasoning behind President Joe Biden joining the United Auto Workers picket line in Michigan on Tuesday: Michigan will be a key swing state in the next presidential election, as it was in the prior election, and Democrats need to shore up support.
Biden's poll numbers over the weekend were not exactly inspiring confidence, and the dispute between the UAW and Detroit's auto giants clearly represented a golden opportunity for Biden to shore up support among a key yet politically wobbly constituency: blue-collar workers. The Democrats know they have can count on the loyalty of coastal elites, but the folks who work the line in Detroit and then head "up north" to fish on the weekend are a less secure constituency. Donald Trump, also headed to Michigan this week, is paying them plenty of attention, and even the UAW's president, Shawn Fain, has not exactly been on Team Biden to date. Tuesday, we suspect, was much about securing his loyalty.
Still, we believe Biden should not have been there.
The main problem when the president of the United States stands on a picket line is that he loses the subsequent ability to act as an honest broker, to be able to pick up the phone and tell both sides to compromise for the sake of the American economy.
If, at this juncture, Biden is standing so visibly with the union, the automakers could hardly be expected to see the president as neutral and acting not for one side or the other but for the good of the nation. And given the centrality of General Motors, Ford and Stellantis to the economic health of the country, the good of the nation may well come into play in the event of a prolonged strike.
By joining picketers, Biden is tacitly supporting the current demands of the union. Yet, as we have noted before, an outsider looking without political prejudice at those requests would conclude they will damage Detroit and offer a serious boost to the likes of nonunionized Tesla, as well as Rivian, the electric trucks manufacturer in Normal, Ill. Tesla and Rivian, to name but two of the global players in the EV market, would have a big cost advantage if the UAW were to get all it is asking for. Why would a president take sides like that?