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Kamala Harris Is Losing Support With This Key Demographic. It Could Cost Her Georgia.

From useapen <yourdime@outlook.com>
Newsgroups alt.politics.elections, alt.politics.trump, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, talk.politics.guns, sac.politics, sci.stat.math
Subject Kamala Harris Is Losing Support With This Key Demographic. It Could Cost Her Georgia.
Date 2024-10-09 07:32 +0000
Organization A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID <XnsB20658AE3320BX@135.181.20.170> (permalink)

Cross-posted to 6 groups.

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DULUTH, Georgia — Drive through the downtown of this Atlanta suburb and 
it will immediately transport you to South Korea in the 2000s, when 
faded store signs in retro sans serif font lined the streets. Strip 
malls are filled with shops that mark their names boldly in Korean. 
Restaurant owners greet their customers in Korean, and by 7 p.m., 
tables are filled with gaggles of locals discussing their latest trip 
back to the homeland. The owners refill your banchan before you even 
ask. Hot cups of barley tea are served upon request.

The Korean community built here in Duluth is unlike anywhere else in 
the U.S. — even New York City or Los Angeles. It is a place created 
solely by Koreans for Koreans, an empire of small businesses, where 
Korean comes before English on any menu you’ll receive. Although it’s 
only been around for about 30 years, making it far younger than most 
Korean American communities in the country, the arrival of this 
particular community has brought more culture, more workers and more 
investment to Georgia. And luckily for Democrats, they’ve also brought 
more blue votes for the state.

That might be changing, however, as many here are now reconsidering 
their support for the Democratic Party.

Asian Americans have become a political force as their numbers 
multiply, and that phenomenon has never been more evident than here in 
Gwinnett County — a once-conservative stronghold that now votes blue 
with the help of a massive influx of Korean immigrants. From 2010 to 
2020, the number of Korean Americans in Georgia nearly doubled. During 
that period, Gwinnett voted for the Democratic presidential candidate 
for the first time since 1980 — first in 2016, then again in 2020.

But that support for Democrats has since faltered, unraveled by an 
uncertain economy, inflation and high cost of living. It’s a major red 
flag for Vice President Kamala Harris, who will need every vote she can 
scrape together to win Georgia, a state President Joe Biden won by less 
than 12,000 votes in 2020. Nationally, Korean Americans’ Democratic 
party identification has dropped from 51 percent to 38 percent in the 
span of four years from 2020 to 2024, according to the 2024 Asian 
American Voter Survey. A separate poll conducted by NORC at the 
University of Chicago found Donald Trump’s support among Korean 
Americans grew by 8 percentage points between April/May and September.


The economy has always been a top priority for Korean Americans — the 
2024 Asian American Voter Survey found that 90 percent marked it as an 
issue that is extremely or very important to them — and their 
evaluation of the Democratic Party’s performance has been poor. It’s 
why, even as support for Harris among AAPI voters far surpasses Biden’s 
numbers, I saw dampened political support in Gwinnett County for 
Democrats, where inflation has weighed heavily on the community.

“The price of ingredients has just risen so much — almost 80 percent 
for certain items,” says Lee Sung Yong, who owns traditional KBBQ and 
noodle restaurants in the area. He’ll be voting for Trump, he says, and 
points to one main reason: “The yearly costs of my operation have been 
so different under the two administrations.”

He pauses for a second, looking at his workers wiping glossy wooden 
tables as they wait for the lunch rush to hit. Behind the open counter, 
his employees are laying out empty trays that have yet to be filled. 
Only a handful of customers are seated in the vast hall.

“Eating out has become such a financial burden these days,” he says. 
“That first and foremost needs to be fixed for us to survive.”

The best way to understand the Korean American vote in Georgia and its 
large percentage of independent voters — despite the conventional 
knowledge that Asian Americans skew Democratic — is to recognize the 
history of the community. It’s marked by its relative newness: Korean 
immigrants started to move to Gwinnett County en masse around the late 
1980s and early ’90s. A large portion of the population still consists 
of first-generation immigrants with limited English proficiency and 
deep ties to their home country. There isn’t much of a culture of 
robust civic participation, let alone established party loyalty.

There wasn’t much outreach from either party until 2020, when the 
turnout increase among Asian American voters was identified as a key 
factor to Biden’s win in Georgia. Since then, both parties have poured 
more money into ads in ethnic media outlets or phone banking in the 
voters’ native language. Yet there’s still more outreach work to be 
done: 27 percent of Asian Americans across the nation have said that 
neither party has contacted them.

“Korean people, they are involuntarily independent because they are not 
informed by either party,” says Lee Jongwon, a lawyer and columnist for 
local Korean newspaper, Atlanta Joongang Daily News. Party loyalty 
can’t be established when Korean Americans don’t even have enough 
information to differentiate the two parties to begin with, he adds.

The lack of party connection means that the bloc often behaves like 
single-issue voters: In 2020 and 2022, racism and public safety was 
top-of-mind following a wave of hate crimes against Asians during the 
peak of the pandemic, including the 2021 spa shootings in the Atlanta 
area that killed eight people — six of whom were of Asian descent. For 
some, like Clara Lee, a small banchan shop owner in Gwinnett County, 
Trump’s rhetoric against immigrants still serves as a reason to vote 
against him: “When Trump was in power, hidden racists were given the 
opportunity to start revealing themselves,” she says. “So I started 
thinking there can never be a candidate like him again, especially 
since I’m a minority.”

But for most this year, concern over the economy is the dominant issue.

Restaurateur Lee Sung Yong’s woes over rising costs and a dwindling 
number of customers is a sentiment widely echoed throughout the tight-
knit small business community in Gwinnett County — in spa shops, Korean 
restaurants and grocery stores.

“I think it is a bad economy right now. For us, we have 50 percent 
fewer customers,” says Shin Kyung Ok, who owns a hair salon in Duluth. 
On a recent weekday afternoon, when her shop should be filled with 
Korean housewives trying out the latest trending perm style while their 
children are at school, the salon is completely empty, only the sound 
of a local news report filling the space. “A little,” she says when I 
ask her if she blames the Biden administration. For now, she’s 
undecided on whom to vote for but is leaning against the current party 
in power. In the coming weeks, she says she’ll be keeping her eye on 
two things: the economy and immigration.

It’s the same issue in the cosmetics store next door: “Our sales have 
dropped, and I’ve heard that from other places too,” says May Kim, a 
store employee. The shop is a South Korean haven — a place with rows of 
the latest K-beauty products and shelves dedicated to Korean versions 
of over-the-counter medications — but there’s only one other customer 
roaming around. Kim is leaning toward voting for Harris but says that 
isn’t the case for many of her friends: “Those around me who aren’t 
wealthy, ordinary people, say that times have gotten tough.” The 
reason? Biden, she hears.

If it sounds like Biden is a punching bag for those who are discontent 
with the cost of living and dwindling profits, that’s not far from the 
truth. Most merchants I talked to couldn’t name specific economic 
policies implemented by Biden other than pandemic stimulus payments — 
also sent under the Trump administration — which they believed to have 
helped drive prices up. When asked about Harris’ economic policies, 
including tax breaks for small businesses, few could answer what they 
were and characterized her as an extension of Biden. In part, it’s a 
reflection of a significant information disconnect in the Korean 
American community because of a language barrier — and it’s hurting 
Harris’ standing as a presidential candidate. The Harris campaign 
hasn’t done enough to address the issue, Lee Jongwon says.

Rather than exclusively deliver messaging on the economy to Korean 
American communities in Georgia, the Harris campaign has also focused 
on the issue of Donald Trump’s racism. Its first targeted ads to Asian 
Americans in swing states solely focus on Trump, referencing the moment 
he called Covid-19 the “Kung Flu” and saying “he unleashed a wave of 
hate.” Several business owners in Gwinnett understand why Trump is 
called a racist — and yet the reality is that many of them say his 
rhetoric isn’t top of mind when people are living paycheck to paycheck.

“The problem is either party is not addressing Asian-specific issues — 
rice and noodle issues,” Lee Jongwon says, nodding to the local 
equivalent of “bread and butter” issues. And for Georgia Koreans, the 
ultimate rice and noodle issue is the cost of living. “Literally the 
price of rice is increasing now. A couple of years ago, a $5.99 lunch 
menu was available everywhere. Not anymore,” he says. Like most of the 
people I talked to in Gwinnett County, he remains undecided.

Even if national Democrats are making inroads in addressing racism, 
healthcare costs and immigration — commonly perceived policy priorities 
of the group — they appear to be missing the mark on the primary reason 
behind the decline in Korean American support. Like most voters, Korean 
Americans want to hear about the economy.

“The economy … is always kind of the number one concern for a lot of 
the Asian American population. And they’re not happy with what’s 
happened in the last four years. They want change,” says Rep. Soo Hong, 
a Republican state legislator who represents parts of Gwinnett. “And so 
I think that’s kind of why we’re seeing a little bit more of a shift of 
the Asian American community voting more on the conservative side than 
on the Democrat side.”

Local Democrats appear to be doing a better job of communicating an 
economic vision to Korean Americans with stump speeches about creating 
jobs and lowering the cost of living. One of them is Michelle Kang, a 
Democratic candidate for state House and a first-generation Korean 
immigrant. Kang’s involvement with both the Korean American Chamber of 
Commerce of Atlanta and Gwinnett Chamber of Commerce has helped her 
witness the struggles of Korean small business owners, she says. 
Despite her work in addressing Asian hate crimes and organizing 
cultural events, her top talking points are about the economy: economic 
mobility, lowering housing costs and pushing Congress to pass the 
Partner With Korea Act, which would help introduce jobs and visas to 
Koreans.

Kang recognizes that democratic principles are important, but says this 
year the economy is the overarching issue. “But what about the time 
that I have to pay my bill, pay my grocery bill?” Kang says. “So 
economy is one thing people [ask] if the Harris administration is going 
to benefit me literally. That’s the top thing.”

Kang thinks a focus on lowering costs is the best way to connect with 
local Korean Americans, many of whom have only been told to vote 
against Trump for his racism, rather than for Harris for her economic 
plan. To date, the campaign has put most of its efforts into phone 
banking and canvassing in Korean — and plans to add more dedicated 
Asian American voter engagement staff in Georgia — but Kang believes 
more ads in Korean in ethnic media outlets would prove productive since 
they would also reach recent immigrants with low English proficiency.

One thing Democrats are getting right is their use of local Korean 
American politicians, such as Georgia state Rep. Sam Park, who was 
first elected in 2016, to campaign for Harris on the ground: “Being 
present for the past eight years as a Democrat has helped kind of 
effectuate that open-mindedness [to Democrats],” said Park.

There may be a window of opportunity since the GOP’s outreach efforts 
here have been downsized: A Republican National Committee Asian 
American outreach center that opened in Gwinnett in 2021 shut down and 
was partially replaced by a sex shop in 2023. (The Trump campaign has 
also chosen a more unorthodox method of advertising this time that has 
caught the eye of some Korean American voters: driving a Trump bus — 
decorated with the American flag and Trump posing with a thumb up — 
around Gwinnett.)

But Lee Sung Yong, the restaurateur, says there isn’t much Harris can 
do to change his mind, even as he concedes that her economic policies 
are unclear to him. What he does know is that he remembers his business 
being better under Trump, he says, who for now has his vote.

“I was disappointed with the economy under Biden,” he says with pursed 
lips. In the background a bell chimes, indicating that a bowl of cold 
noodles are ready for pickup. “I don’t know Harris’ economic policies, 
but won’t the same pattern of rising prices and higher taxes repeat 
under her, since she was the vice president?

https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2024/10/07/korean-asian-
americans-georgia-economy-00182370

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Kamala Harris Is Losing Support With This Key Demographic. It Could Cost Her Georgia. useapen <yourdime@outlook.com> - 2024-10-09 07:32 +0000

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