America Can't Afford a Harris Presidency

New research from Jim Rickards - former advisor to the CIA - reveals shocking predictions about an "Election Meltdown" coming this November. Jim's showing all American patriots why an "Election Meltdown" could crash stocks by 50%, lead to the final demise of the dollar, even cause violent riots in the streets.

American despair: In Arizona, high home prices and limited prospects shape voters' presidential pick

AAMER MADHANI and JOSH BOAK
October 19, 2024

MESA, Ariz. (AP) -- Karl Peterson has been living the cruel inverse of the American dream. His rent keeps getting higher, but his apartments keep getting smaller.

Peterson left the Midwest nine years ago for the epicenter of an economic boom, only to gradually learn that endless sunshine and desert views are increasingly among the few bargains left in Arizona. Peterson married his wife, Tani, and they struggled to save for a home, moving through four apartments as their rent nearly tripled from $625 to $1,800 a month.

He does not believe that either presidential nominee, Democrat Kamala Harris or Republican Donald Trump, is addressing the paradox of a country that has never been this wealthy even as so many people see themselves left behind. His trust in government is running low. The negatives of inflation and national division are easier to glimpse than are signs of hope.

Voters like Peterson are at the fulcrum of the electorate in Arizona and the handful of other key states that will decide which candidate wins the White House and which party controls Congress.

"I don't think they're addressing what's really going on with me, with my family," said Peterson, who figures he will need to leave Mesa, east of Phoenix and the state's third-largest city, for Indiana or Wisconsin if he ever hopes to attain the middle-class promise of owning his own home.

Promises by both parties to "help the middle class" ring hollow to many voters who have heard those commitments before, only to see the pressures on housing, education, career, parenthood and the tending of their own aging parents mount.

Harris has pledged $25,000 for first-time homebuyers and tax breaks for new parents. The Trump campaign says mass deportations of migrants living in the U.S. without permanent legal permission will free up housing and that higher tariffs will create job opportunities. Voters are focused on the inflation of the past three years, but Federal Reserve data reveal a deeper gap in which the United States has so much wealth that it can be easy for anyone to feel worse off than their neighbors.

Being -- and staying -- middle class in a nation of millionaires

Fed data released late last year point toward this complicated reality.

In 2022, when many voters felt inflation was strangling the economy, for the first time the average U.S. household was worth more than $1 million. Yet there is a difference between meeting that average and being the typical household, despite gains since 2019. The median household had a net worth of just $192,900. That's the level at which half are above and half are below.

Plenty of Americans can look at their personal finances and see reasons for comfort, even if they mostly register despair when asked about the health of the country as a whole. Nearly 6 in 10 described their own economic situation as good, even as 7 in 10 said the nation was on the wrong track, according to a September poll by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs.

John Akers, 34, is one who feels lucky with how the economy has treated him, but worries too many of his family and friends are being left behind.

He and his wife have seen their fortunes improve over the past several years as their high-end audio-visual business has thrived, and the fixer-upper they bought in 2015 in Phoenix has proved to be a wise investment.

At the same time, some of their aging relatives have struggled with rising costs, and a few close friends are thinking about ditching Arizona to find cheaper housing. It's left him wondering if Washington is too focused on hot-button cultural issues.

"No matter what, we're going to have polarization at the end of this election," said Akers, who plans to vote for Trump. "The political conversation is too often pitting the middle class against each other, and there's been too little focus on the issues that matter, like inflation and housing costs."

Arizona's economic gains make it a swing state

In some ways, Arizona's Maricopa County is proof of America's vitality and ability to generate wealth out of seemingly nothing but grit, hard work and applied intelligence.

The state's 11 electoral votes could make the difference in who wins the presidency, yet the area's success is overshadowed by fierce political hostilities and a sense that in a warming, costlier world, things are bound to get harder.

The county was once nothing but desert, so vast and with so few people before World War II. But the land was cheap and once water and air conditioning arrived, the cities of Phoenix, Scottsdale, Chandler, Glendale, Tempe and Mesa spread across the once dry sandstone.

Tech companies like Intel, TSMC, Google and others arrived, as developers said the time it took to get approval for a new housing development in the county increased. Out of the biggest counties nationwide, Maricopa posted the largest percentage job gains so far this year, according to the Labor Department. Home prices have nearly doubled since 2016, according to Zillow.

The population surge -- Phoenix is now the fifth largest U.S. city -- also has fostered competing political beliefs in which the one source of unity is a mutual frustration with government leadership.

A little more than half of Arizona voters said the government should do more to solve people's problems, according to AP VoteCast, a sweeping survey of the electorate, while less than half said the government was already doing too much. That year, about one-third of the state's voters identified as "moderates" -- a group whose votes could be critical to the outcome of the Nov. 5 election.

Voters see reasons to doubt both candidates' commitment to help

Abel Ramirez, 32, is an assistant pastor at the Baptist church where Karl Peterson worships. Ramirez voted for Trump in 2020, firmly opposes abortion, questions the credibility of the 2020 election that Democrat Joe Biden won, and believes Biden's administration is too supportive of LGBTQ+ rights.

His family lives in a manufactured home in a mobile home park and he figures that once all his kids are in school, his wife can work full time and he can take on a second job so they can buy a house. But he's dismayed by a politics geared toward hurting rivals instead of helping voters.

"When it comes to helping the citizen, helping a guy that's got to go to work every day to provide for their family, I'm not hearing too much about it," Ramirez said. He is considering not voting in this election.

Samantha Lopez, who voted for Biden in 2020, believes the federal government needs to spend more on education, secure abortion rights and do more to expand Americans' access to health care.

A student at Arizona State University, Lopez recently moved back to her parents' home about 15 miles from campus after it became clear to her that it would be too difficult to keep up with rent and groceries while paying for school.

"The future feels really unpredictable right now," said Lopez, who is uncertain how she will vote, between serving customers earlier this year at her part-time job at a downtown Phoenix doughnut shop.

It's all about the housing market

Maricopa County is a microcosm of the boom that has driven American prosperity over the past two presidencies, powering through the Great Recession's housing bust and pandemic era shutdowns. But that boom also destabilized people's confidence in the real estate market that helped drive the growth

More people moved into the area than its cities and neighborhoods could absorb, pushing prices up in ways that made mortgage rates of 6%-plus troubling. Homeowners felt they could not afford to sell and buy a new property. Renters felt that the promise of middle-class stability was increasingly out of reach.

"Many voters see home prices and 30-year mortgage rates and compare that to the experience of their parents and grandparents and say 'I'm never going to own a home,'" said Glenn Farley, director of policy and research at the nonprofit Common Sense Institute Arizona. "Until those things are brought back under control, voters are going to continue to be sour."

Other worries also overshadow progress. The country is more educated and more diverse, yet there are persistent worries about mass shootings, crime, personal liberties, illegal immigration, climate change and the capacity of the government to fix any of it.

Why do so many Americans feel bad about the economy? Blame our politics

Americans are finding firsthand that prosperity is not the same as opportunity.

The University of Michigan's consumer sentiment index, a well-regarded barometer of confidence in the economy, is lower now than during the height of the 2020 pandemic. The index, with Biden in power, shows that people also think about the economy based on their political identity. with Democrats comparatively optimistic and Republicans decidedly bleak.

When Republican John Giles was elected mayor of Mesa in 2014, his goal was to have a place where his children and grandchildren could live.

It's easy to overlook the city in the shadow of Phoenix, but Mesa's population of 511,648 makes it larger than Atlanta, Miami or Minneapolis. The closing of Williams Air Force Base three decades ago led Mesa to recruit leading companies and Giles treats his state of the city addresses like a CEO at a tech rollout, recreating scenes from the time-travel movie "Back to the Future" and hanging out with shock rocker Alice Cooper.

But Giles made headlines by endorsing Harris and speaking at the Democratic National Convention in August, saying that her policies would be more helpful for his city than would Trump's. Giles sees the negativity swirling around the population as a byproduct of the politics in which ideologically driven media elevates conspiracy theories and consistently seeks to perpetuate division instead of rewarding problem-solving.

"I always used to think the political spectrum was a pendulum," he said. "There were these forces that would bring us back to seeing the flaws of extremism. But now there's a lot of people making a lot of money promoting extreme political thought. To be successful at that, you have to fan people's fears and tell them that they're unhappy."

He looks at the economic data -- 4.1% unemployment, new computer chips plants opening in Arizona, record levels of factory construction spending, a higher stock market and inflation easing -- and confesses that he's never been one who could overlook the facts and toe the Republican Party line.

"President Biden should be hoisted on our shoulders and walked to the top of the mountain," he said.

Plenty of new wealth, but a great sense of uncertainty

As economist Farley, who once worked for former Republican Gov. Doug Ducey, sees it, Arizona packed in generations of wealth creation in less than a decade. Its chief virtue was always its proximity to California and ability to capture both people and employers who found that state's taxes and cost of living to be too high.

Farley said Arizona had a reliable climate and affordable electricity costs, adding 20,000 businesses in under eight years as posh steak houses opened in Paradise Valley, the small Phoenix suburb that is the state's richest city, and Waymo had driverless Jaguar sedans ferrying people through Scottsdale. But that growth also came with the need for a larger services sector with more people working for lower wages and inequality became clearer.

"We're not the growth state anymore, but we're not the mature state," he said.

The pandemic also changed Arizona's economy.

After the Great Recession, it was adding roughly 40,000 people a year on average from other states. But when the pandemic hit, the prospect of bigger homes brought in roughly 100,000 people in 2020, more than what the housing market could absorb. Median home prices in Maricopa County jumped to a peak of $500,767 in July 2022, leaving many renters unable to buy a home.

Trevor Cowling, the assistant pastor at the Baptist church in Mesa, bought his 1,500 square foot home in 2020 for $225,000 with a 3.1% mortgage rate. Mortgage rates more than doubled, until easing recently, as have the prices in his neighborhood.

"The Lord has taken care of us," said Cowling, who said he could not afford his home at current mortgage rates.

But housing is just one problem.

People in the middle class also feel they're no longer able to afford schooling or groceries as before.

Juvi Arvizu, 31, with a 5-year-old son in Phoenix, said shopping that used to cost her about $120 a week now often costs $200. After her divorce and with crime rising after pandemic, she moved to a smaller home in a safer neighborhood and decided to enroll her son in a public kindergarten, after having him in a private preschool.

Arvizu voted for Democrat Hillary Clinton for president in 2016. Frustrated by the tenor of the 2020 race, Arvizu she skipped voting. She said she plans on voting in November, but is uncertain for whom.

Regardless who wins, she is skeptical that Washington will be delivering relief to working people like her anytime soon.

"It feels like things are only going to get a lot harder," Arvizu said.

___

Boak reported from Washington.

Continue Reading...

Popular

Average rate on a 30-year mortgage in the US rises to the highest level in 8 weeks

The average rate on a 30-year mortgage in the U.S. rose for the third week in a row, reaching its highest level in eight weeks.

A failed mic leaves Donald Trump pacing the stage in silence for nearly 20 minutes

DETROIT (AP) — paced his rally stage in silence for nearly 20 minutes Friday night in Detroit after his microphone cut out.

Single Stock Blueprint Available Now - Ad

Market Wizard Larry Benedict is one of the most successful traders you'll ever meet...But he doesn't make money the traditional way. In short: It's a way to trade just one stock...And potentially make all the money you need to fast-track your retirement -- no matter what happens in the stock market.

This Chipmaker Jumps Over 16% After Nvidia Rival Signs $750M Deal Under Biden's CHIPS And Science Act

The funding aims to support Wolfspeed's long-term growth and enhance domestic production of silicon carbide, a critical component for electric vehicles, AI data centers, and battery storage systems.

Silicon Valley Insider Reveals AI Retirement Playbook - Ad

Jeff Brown, who recommended Nvidia in 2016, is sharing his full blueprint to help you retire comfortably using AI investments. Follow his strategy for a secure financial future.

US fines Lufthansa $4 million for treatment of Orthodox Jewish passengers on a 2022 flight

WASHINGTON (AP) — The United States fined German airline Lufthansa $4 million for its treatment of a group of Jewish passengers who were denied boarding a 2022 flight in Frankfurt after they had flown to Germany from New York.

Musk offers voters $1 million to sign PAC petition backing the Constitution. Can that be legal?

, the billionaire founder of Tesla and Space X and owner of X who's gone all-in on Republican candidacy for the White House, has already committed at least . Now he's pledging to give away $1 million to voters for signing his political action committee's petition backing the Constitution.

My TOP Altcoin for Right Now Is... - Ad

Searching for the top investment opportunity in crypto? Look no further. Our $3 report gives you the full scoop. You'll get this exciting token's name, our recommended investment strategy, and growth projections. Time is of the essence with this one...

Kamala Harris Defends Immigration Policy At Latino Town Hall, Criticizes Trump's Border Stance

Kamala Harris defends immigration policy at town hall, citing bipartisan bill and Trump's sabotage. Critics falsely blame her for drug smuggling.

Trump Falls 3 Points Behind Harris In New Poll, Economic Worries Dominate Voter Concerns: Report

In the upcoming U.S. presidential election, Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris maintains a narrow lead over Republican Donald Trump, according to the latest Reuters/Ipsos poll.

Market Wizard Predicts "Three Years of Famine" - Ad

Hedge fund vet Larry Benedict shares his urgent forecast and reveals the one ticker to protect your portfolio.

Biden admin to provide $750 million to North Carolina-based Wolfspeed for advanced computer chips

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Biden-Harris administration announced plans Tuesday to provide up to $750 million in direct funding to Wolfspeed, with the money supporting its new silicon carbide factory in North Carolina that makes the wafers used in advanced computer chips and its factory in Marcy, New York.

Man Who Picked 27 "Ten-Baggers" Now Makes Shocking New Prediction... - Ad

Across his storied career, Matt McCall has picked 27 stocks that have skyrocketed over 1,000%. Now, his next pick could blow every one of those out of the water. Because Matt's next prediction is all about the convergence of the two biggest tech trends we've ever seen. As these tech trends collide, $24 trillion hangs in the balance.

Edmunds: The most reliable used vehicles under $15,000

Buying a reliable used car, truck or SUV on a $15,000 budget is easy if you know what to look for. Edmunds’ experts have done that homework for you so you can start your search with the five recommended models listed below. RepairPal, a network of automotive repair shops, gives each one a high score for overall reliability. The vehicles also have favorable consumer reviews on Edmunds.

Stellantis CEO says company is on pace to fix sales problems after poor performance this year

DETROIT (AP) — Stellantis is fixing its slowing U.S. sales at the right pace after fumbling a marketing plan earlier this year, CEO Carlos Tavares told reporters Monday.

Prepare for President Kamala - Ad

I won't be voting for her. Even so, I'm worried VP Kamala Harris could pull off a victory and become our next president. And it would be much worse than anything you might expect--especially when it comes to your money. Because likely WON'T get a second chance at recovering the money you stand to lose if she takes power.

Pierre Ferragu Notes The Disconnect Between Media And Crypto-Based Polymarket On Trump-Harris Election Outcome: 'I Love The Dissonance'

Pierre Ferragu, an analyst at New Street Research, recently expressed his views on the disconnect between prediction markets and the press regarding the 2024 U.S. presidential elections

Financial Nightmare Coming After Election - Ad

In 2018, one independent research predicted Kamala Harris was on her way to becoming the president of the United States. "Frankly, she scares us to death... and she should scare you," they wrote. Which is why you need to check out their newest Kamala prediction immediately.

Hundreds of Hedge Funds Are Fleeing This Stock - Ad

A strange force has seized control of Wall Street. Hedge funds are already moving their money... and preparing for even stranger days ahead. Over 320 hedge funds have quietly sold THIS famous stock -- to prepare for a dramatic market shift Get the strange truth from a 50-year Wall Street insider... including the name and ticker of the stock hedge funds are selling hand-over-first.

Mark Cuban Drunkenly Bought A $125,000 Lifetime Flight Pass And Turned It Into A Profitable Investment

Business mogul Mark Cuban once made a spontaneous purchase of a lifetime flight pass from American Airlines during a celebratory spree, later upgrading it.Business mogul Mark Cuban once made a spontaneous purchase of a lifetime flight pass from American Airlines during a celebratory spree,

For migrant women who land in Colorado looking for jobs, a common answer emerges: No

AURORA, Colo. (AP) — East Colfax Avenue was the best place to find a job. That's what everyone told Sofia Roca.

Is Gold Headed Above $3,000 per Ounce? Here's How to Play It... - Ad

With so many strange events happening across the economy (the longest bear market for bonds since the Civil War... unprecedented bank closures... and soaring prices), it's no wonder the richest investors are loading up on gold. But what you might not realize is there's a much better way to profit from rising gold prices -- WITHOUT ever touching an ETF, mining stock, or even bullion.

Russia's Latest 'Time Bomb' Sparks Fear, But It's Not What You Think

Economist Konstantin Sonin says that the ongoing conflict in Ukraine is setting the stage for a major economic crisis in Russia.

Bigger Returns With Less Capital? The Multiplier Strategy Explained - Ad

Instead of paying thousands for an ounce of gold, why not multiply your returns by investing in the companies that mine it? As gold prices climb, their profit margins can skyrocket - and so can their stock price. The gold multiplier effect means bigger profits with lower investment. This young company, with prime land in one of America's richest gold districts, is ready to take full advantage of rising gold prices.

Jamie Dimon Warns Of Global Risks To Economy: 'Treacherous And Getting Worse'

Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan Chase & Co. (NYSE: JPM), has issued a stark warning about key challenges that could affect the U.S. economy.

A chemical cloud moving around Atlanta's suburbs prompts a new shelter-in-place alert

ATLANTA (AP) — Residents east of Atlanta were again warned to take shelter where they are on Tuesday if a chemical cloud moves over their neighborhood, as winds shifted the plume from .

Gold: Now Legal Tender - Ad

Most Americans missed this big story, but 1 in 5 states have now made gold and silver coins legal tender. It's just one reason why so many predict gold will soon hit $5,000. And why you need to check out this $6 strategy for gold immediately.

Tesla CEO Elon Musk To Campaign For Trump In Pennsylvania, Asks Attendees To Support Free Speech: 'There's No Attendance Fee'

Billionaire Elon Musk said on Tuesday that he would give "a series of talks" through Pennsylvania starting from Wednesday night through Monday, as part of his campaigning for Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump.

Don't Tell ANYONE About This Altcoin (Until It Pops)... - Ad

Quiet now! This governance token could be the sleeping giant of the crypto world... In the next bull market, this "DeFi 2.0" powerhouse might soar 10x... 50x... perhaps even 100x.

US Stocks Could Open Narrowly Mixed After Tuesday's Chip Sell-Off, Bitcoin Heads To $68K, Oil Slips

U.S. stock futures point to a flattish start on Wednesday after the S&P 500 Index and the Dow Jones Industrial Average retreated from record highs in the previous session.

PPG will lay off 1,800 employees as paints and coatings maker aims to cut costs

NEW YORK (AP) — PPG Industries plans to lay off about 1,800 employees amid efforts to cut costs, with the paints and coatings maker also inking a deal to sell a sizeable chunk of its architectural business.

Elon: Tesla Is a Robotics Company Now - Ad

Elon Musk's new plan for Tesla's future has nothing to do with electric cars... TechRadar reports it "will blow your mind..." & McKinsey says it "will shape the coming decade." We recently got our hands on a video clip detailing this breakthrough.

Trending Now

Information, charts or examples are for illustration and educational purposes only and not for individualized investment management This message contains commercial elements, such as advertising. We only send these offers to those who have opted in to our newsletter. Past performance is not indicative of future results. For these reasons we strongly suggest trading in a DEMO/Simulated account. The information provided by us is for educational and informational purposes only. We make no representations or warranties concerning the products, practices or procedures of any company or entity mentioned or recommended and have not determined if the statements and opinions of the advertiser are accurate, correct or truthful. If you use, act upon or make decisions in reliance on information contained or any external source linked within it, you do so at your own peril and agree to hold us, our officers, directors, shareholders, affiliates and agents without fault.

Copyright systemtrading.ca
Privacy Policy | Terms of Service