Few people attended Joe Biden’s rally in Philadelphia on Wednesday, spelling trouble for the 81-year-old Democrat in the critical swing state of Pennsylvania. Photographs from New York Post reporter Steven Nelson showed large empty sections of the school gymnasium where the event was held. Nelson noted on X, formerly Twitter, that the space was only about half full, with part of it occupied by the press.
Pennsylvania is critical to Biden’s reelection prospects, but his support in the Keystone State has slipped significantly. A New York Times/Siena College/Philadelphia Inquirer poll this month showed his support among demographics that had been solidly behind him in 2020 has plummeted: youth support is down from 62 percent in 2020 to 47 percent and black and Hispanic support is down from 71 percent to 57 percent.
Photos from President Biden's Philadelphia rally: the school's gym is only about half full of supporters
A good amount of space is empty and spacious press workspace takes up the rest pic.twitter.com/et70d2lpCD
— Steven Nelson (@stevennelson10) May 29, 2024
Biden generated similarly low levels of support at another swing state outing in Atlanta, Georgia, earlier this month. Mere tens of people turned out to see the Democrat at a Mary Mac’s Tea Room event geared towards shoring up his support among black voters. Footage from the sparsely attended gathering shows him shuffling around in a confused state, eliciting a mixture of sympathy and laughter from attendees.
Donald Trump, in contrast, has held rallies attended by tens of thousands of people in the Democratic strongholds of New Jersey and New York in recent weeks, even as he is being dragged through a Manhattan court by a Democratic District Attorney.
Trump’s support in these states — potentially in play despite not having been won by a Republican presidential candidate since 1988 and 1984, respectively — may force the Biden campaign to reallocate resources from its already lackluster swing state efforts.