Some of America’s most significant challenges are the least likely to register in the upcoming midterm elections. Amid historic clashes over the Jan. 6 insurrection, democracy and women’s rights, there are signs the midterms will still ultimately turn most on the economy.
Specifically, on inflation and the pandemic’s aftermath.
While the very rich don’t “feel” inflation — and elites may talk about it less in the Beltway — most people do.
Inflation now tops 9%, the highest annual rate in four decades. Savings are declining in real value, and people on fixed budgets can’t keep up. While the very rich don’t “feel” inflation — and elites may talk about it less in the Beltway — most people do.
The median income in America is around $1,100 a week right now, which does not leave much room for hundreds of dollars to just evaporate. While politicos scour election polls, asking people about their spending may be more relevant to this particular election.
NBC News did just that in May and found a whopping 65% of respondents said their family’s income is now “falling behind the cost of living.”
More broadly, about 40% of voters said the economy is now the most important issue, and 75% said the U.S. is going in the wrong direction. That may reflect many ills, from the pandemic’s disruptions to the fierce rancor in politics, but President Joe Biden has yet to change the mood. While he won more votes than Donald Trump did in either 2016 or 2020, Biden is now as unpopular as Trump was at this point in his term — around 40%.
The pandemic hangs over all of this.
Biden ran more against Trump — and for a “return to normalcy” — than any particular sweeping agenda. The recent poll numbers, however, suggest most people feel things are far from normal — or “good normal,” anyway.









