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Comparing Tether on Ethereum vs Tron Blockchains – BTC Peers

Tether (USDT) has become one of the most widely used stablecoins in crypto. As a staple trading pair and hedge against volatility, USDT provides utility for millions of users across various blockchains. But not all Tether implementations are created equal. In this article, we'll compare USDT on the two most popular networks - Ethereum and Tron.

Ethereum is where Tether originated in 2014 (as Realcoin). Ethereum's adoption, developer community, and decentralized architecture made it an ideal blockchain for Tether in the early days.

For many, Ethereum is still synonymous with USDT. Tether took advantage of ERC-20 token standards to launch on Ethereum in 2017. Since then, Ethereum has facilitated the majority of USDT transactions and use cases. From trading on centralized and decentralized exchanges to lending protocols and yield generation, Ethereum powers critical Tether functions.

However, high fees and network congestion on Ethereum have pushed Tether to explore alternatives. The average Ethereum gas fee reached nearly $60 in 2021. These volatile fees create significant friction and uncertainty when moving USDT around.

In response to Ethereum's limitations, Tether launched on the Tron blockchain under the USDT-TRON ticker in early 2019. TRON offered much lower and consistent transaction fees compared to Ethereum.

By Q1 2022, over $55 billion worth of USDT had been issued on Tron. This growth demonstrates the demand for a more efficient USDT environment. Tether also benefits from TRON's high throughput for scalability.

Here are some key advantages USDT on Tron provides:

However, Tron is still considered more centralized than Ethereum. The lower decentralization introduces trust issues around Tether reserves and token minting.

While both chains have advantages, Ethereum remains the most trusted and decentralized Tether environment overall. But Tron provides faster and cheaper transactions for large USDT transfers and active trading.

This diversification brings more flexibility in how users can leverage Tether based on their priorities. And interoperability between the two networks grants broader access to USDT liquidity across the crypto ecosystem.

For smaller payments and transfers, Tron offers faster and almost free transactions. But for larger holdings and long-term storage, Ethereum may provide more decentralized security.

Ethereum is the most trusted and time-tested network for Tether. But the high gas fees create usability issues at times. Tron provides a compelling alternative for active trading and transactions under $10,000.

However, for long-term savings or holdings over $10,000, we recommend the extra security of Ethereum. The decentralization makes it much harder for reserves to be manipulated or compromised. And large institutional investors tend to prefer the battle-tested status of ETH.

So consider using Tron for active usage and transfers below $10k. But for significant savings or inactive holdings, the Ethereum blockchain remains the recommended home for your Tether.

While Tron has seen impressive growth, Ethereum 2.0 upgrades will likely ensure Ethereum remains the dominant Tether environment long-term.

It's tempting to assume Tron will eclipse Ethereum as the top Tether platform. After all, its growth has been astronomical since launching USDT in 2019. Tron already accounts for over one-third of all Tether activity. And the cost savings over Ethereum are undeniable.

However, Ethereum has major upgrades coming that should shore up its advantages over Tron:

These changes should allow Ethereum to match Tron's speed, fees, and scalability, while exceeding its decentralization and security. Ethereum will likely retain most DeFi protocols, developers, and institutional adoption.

Of course, Tron will remain an appealing alternative. But it's unlikely to seriously challenge Ethereum's dominance in the long run. Expect the majority of new innovation and infrastructure to continue materializing on Ethereum.

In summary, Tron makes USDT more accessible for smaller use cases today. But upcoming Ethereum upgrades should secure its status as the pre-eminent Tether environment for the foreseeable future.

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Comparing Tether on Ethereum vs Tron Blockchains - BTC Peers

Governance system for local governments – Part 1 – Profit by Pakistan Today

Why local government? The World Bank in its 1997 report asserts that governments are more effective when they listen to businesses and citizens, and work in partnership with them in deciding and implementing policy. Where governments lack mechanisms to listen, they are not responsive to peoples interests.

The devolution of authority to local tiers of government and decentralization can bring in representation of local business and citizens interests. The visibility of the results achieved by the resources deployed in a specific geographic area maintains pressure on government functionaries. Publicprivate partnerships. including NGOpublic partnerships have proved to be effective tools in fostering good governance.

The World Development Report (WDR 2004) has argued that the accountability of governments to local communities and marginalized social groups will increase by assigning service delivery functions to politicians who are closer to the people and make them electorally accountable.

The 1973 constitution did specify only two tiers of government federal and provincial. It is only after the 18th Amendment in 2010 that a new clause Article 140A was introduced which states that Each province shall, by law, establish a local government system and devolve political, administrative and financial responsibility and authority to the elected representatives of the local governments.

The Supreme court has asserted and directed the holding of elections of local governments on several occasions. Unfortunately, unlike the detailed distribution of powers between the federal and the provincial governments clearly defined in the constitution, there is no such provision for local governments. This vagueness and ambiguity has been used by the provincial governments which have been struggling to come to some reasonable piece of legislation since 2010 on the functions and powers of this tier.

Logically, once the provincial governments were devolved, adequate powers accompanied by sufficient financial allocations out of the divisible tax pool and grants from the federal government there should have been similar decentralization and delegation to the local governments. How is it possible for Punjab, with a population of 110 million people and 36 districts covering an area of 205000 sq km, to respond to the disparate needs of citizens in the delivery of essential services? DG Khan and Faisalabad, for example, have very different requirements and a uniform one-shoe-fits-all approach that is the characteristic of an overcentralized system wont simply work.

The present culture of concentrating authority in power centres at Islamabad, Lahore, Karachi, Peshawar and Quetta has not only alienated the population living in the peripheries, but reduced its productive potential also and to no small extent. It is little surprise then that our research found 80 districts whose ordinary citizens are living in miserable conditions, according to the Deprivation Index, and remain almost criminally starved of their most basic needs.

The political parties that introduced this article in the constitution do not realize that meaningful empowerment of communities through decentralization and delegation of authority, in which the local government system plays a crucial role would in the long run promote greater trust, cohesion and harmony in our society and ensure access to basic public services in an efficient and equitable manner. These outcomes will not only help mobilize additional resources at the local level but also improve the efficiency of resource utilization.

The present state of disaffection and discontentment with the government would also be mitigated if public goods and services of everyday use to the citizens become available to them at the grassroots level. Local communities know their problems and their solutions much better than anybody else. It has also been found that for direct delivery by the government, the transfer of responsibility for these services to lower tiers of governance improves access by the poor.

Local government management of schools and hospitals involving communities and demand-side subsidies to the poor, monitored and under the oversight of government result in a favourable outcome in education and health. As these political parties will also contest elections, they will be represented at that tier of government too. Thus, the credit for citizen satisfaction, efficient allocation of resources and better access to essential services would go to the political parties themselves.

However, the myopic and self-centred approach adopted by all major political parties and resistance to empowerment and strengthening local governments is highly incomprehensible as in actual fact it simply entails the transfer of power from the provincial and national legislators and the ministers to the locally elected nazims or mayors of the districts. Those seeking to preserve their status, clout and influence should opt for local nazim positions rather than becoming MPAs or MNAs.

The 2001-2009 period: It would be useful to make an objective assessment of the local government system that existed in Pakistan between 2001 and 2009. There were many flaws in the 2001 system, including the fact that the functions of law and order, revenue records, and land administration and disaster management should have remained with neutral civil servants and not transferred to the nazims. In that event, the offices of the deputy/assistant commissioner should not have been abolished, thereby diluting the writ of the state.

The executive authority of the newly created post of district coordination officer DCO was diluted as magisterial powers were taken away from him or her although s/he was expected to perform duties relating to maintenance of law and order, removal of encroachments, price controls, and the like. As the powers of recruitment, transfers, postings, and disciplinary actions continued to remain vested in the provincial departments, the diarchy proved to be fatal for the effective functioning of the devolved departments.

The gap between law and actual practice remained wide to the detriment of the public at large. Corruption at the district government level could not be contained given the inadequate supervisory arrangements evolved by the provincial governments. The provincial secretaries retained considerable administrative authority over the district bureaucrats and used these powers to undercut the efficacy of the elective nazims. A tripartite confrontational mode in which the provincial ministers and secretaries aligned themselves against the district nazims was responsible for most of the practical difficulties faced by the citizens in access to services.

The degree of fiscal decentralization remained limited because the districts continued to depend upon the province for resources, didnt have the powers to collect new taxes, and didnt have the capacity to levy service or user charges. On the expenditure side, the fixed and growing expense of salaries, wages, and allowances paid to the staff devolved to the district governments (although they continue to be provincial servants) did not leave much surplus for either maintenance, operational, and development expenditure.

Over 90 per cent of expenditure of local governments was financed by transfers from the provincial governments. Lack of enhancement in local fiscal powers was a major weakness in the process of fiscal decentralization.

The share of local governments in the provincial allocable pool was about 40 per cent but their share in total public expenditure was only 13 per cent. Resource mobilization at the provincial and local levels remained substantially under-exploited. Land revenue accounted for less than one per cent of the agricultural income while the effective rate of property taxation of rental incomes was about five per cent as opposed to the statutory rate of 20 per cent or more.

The fragmentation of development projects into small schemes catered to the narrow interests of the local communities without any sense of priority, linkages, or widespread coverage.

Ideally, the transfer of resources from urban to rural areas should be a welcome move but such a transfer in the absence of a district-wide plan without specifying the goals to be achieved and assessing the cost-benefit of the approved schemes can be counterproductive. Urban-rural integration did not recognize or cater to the needs of growing urbanization.

Hasnain concludes on the basis of his study that in order to keep his voters happy, the district nazim would have very little choice but to acquiesce to the pressures exerted by the union and tehsil Nazims to allocate resources equally. The difference between equal and equitable distribution of resources should be understood as it is at the crux of the problem.

Under an equal distribution scheme there is no clear relationship between the needs of the community and the intended interventions. Rich and poor communities will receive the same amount irrespective of the intensity of their need. Equitable distribution takes into account the differences in the initial endowments and conditions of the intended beneficiaries. Those who are poor, marginalized, live in remote or geographically disadvantaged areas and cannot earn decent incomes on their own should receive higher allocations than those who are better off. Public resources thus supplement the private incomes of the poor to help out of poverty.

Two innovative features of the 2001 system are worth mentioning. The reservation of one-third seats for women and others for peasants, workers, minorities, the marginalized classes of our society, was an extremely commendable step. Similarly, the integration of the rural and urban administrative units at the tehsil level would have allowed the rural areas to benefit equally from the larger envelope of pooled resources available to the Tehsil Council. Even if the underlying patron-client relationship persists, the scope for inclusion of clients who were traditionally denied access under a MNA/MPA centred system, will be much wider under a decentralized and devolved system.

However, despite these flaws, empirical studies and surveys point to the net positive achievements of the local government system. The Social Audit Survey 2009-10 of 12,000 households drawn from 21 districts in all four provinces found that 56 per cent favoured the continuation of the local government system with high proportions in Punjab and Sindh. The level of satisfaction with the union councils was 33.8 per cent but the situation regarding support and social acceptability of womens participation seemed to have improved. Sixty per cent of female union councilors were of the view that people in their constituencies were happy with them.

The satisfaction levels of households with various public services varied but by 2009-10 satisfaction with roads, sewerage and sanitation, garbage disposal, water supply, health and education had improved although in percentage terms only less than half of the households expressed satisfaction with the services. Public education, at 58 per cent, showed the highest level of satisfaction.

The Social Policy Development Centre (SPDC) carried out a survey of 12 districts in the four provinces and found that the rate of enhancement in literacy of the population and access to water supply and sanitation had perceptibly increased during the post-devolution period. However, there were no indications of any impact of devolution on health indicators. The process of devolution was beginning to contribute to a quicker improvement in enrolment at the primary level and literacy in Pakistan.

At a micro level, Cheema and Mohmand analyzed a dataset of 364 households in the rural tehsil of Jaranwala in Faisalabad District to gain some insights regarding the types of households which gain and lose through electoral decentralization and whether the change in the post-reform provision between different household types is equitable. The empirical results of their study showed that increased access to development funds and heightened mandates for union nazims have resulted in a significant increase in union level provisions within a short span of time. They further found that the increase in the post-reform provision in nazim villages is less elite-based as it encompasses small peasants, minority peasant biradaris, and non-agricultural castes.

Hasnain reports on the basis of a survey carried out in 2005 that over 60 per cent of the households stated that they would approach a union councilor or Nazim to resolve their problems in comparison to only 10 per cent who said they would approach members of the provincial or national assembly. This reflects the increase in accessibility of policymakers after devolution. A system in which bureaucrats control the development departments provides neither access nor accountability. Having a system of elected nazims and councilors who remain responsive to the needs of their citizens is better because these officials are liable to lose their offices if they do not fulfil their responsibilities and duties. The best one can do with a recalcitrant bureaucrat is to transfer him out of a particular district but that does not resolve the inherent problem of access to the poor.

Cheema, Khawaja and Qadir in their study found that three types of changes were brought about by the 2001 devolution. One, changes in the decision-making level of the service from provincial bureaucrats to district level bureaucracy. Two, changes in the decision-makers accountability from bureaucrats to elected representatives at the district level; and three, changes in the fiscal resources available to the service.

The education department, primary healthcare and the management of district and tehsil hospitals experienced a change of the first type, where the decisions previously made by the provincial secretariat and the provincial cabinet were transferred to the district nazim and executive district officers.

The municipal services provided by the local government, the rural development department, and the public health engineering departments of the provincial government became the sole functional responsibility of the tehsil municipal administration. This was a fundamental change because the power to allocate resources, prioritize projects, and deliver results moved away from 48 provincial departments to 6000 units of local government whereas prior to devolution, the deconcentrated provincial bureaucracy at the district level was accountable to their non-elected provincial secretariat. The 2001 devolution made them accountable to the elected heads of districts and tehsil governments. Under the previous system, the de-facto head of the district administration was the district commissioner who would report to the non-elected commissioner while after devolution he reported to the elected district nazim (mayor).

Their study also found that a rule-based fiscal transfer system between the provinces and the local governments was established under the 2001 Devolution Plan. Approximately 40 per cent of the provincial consolidated fund was distributed among local governments with due weightage given to backwardness in order to ensure some form of equity across districts in the allocation of development funds. The other innovation was that these budgetary transfers did not lapse at the end of the year but continued to be retained by the relevant local governments, providing for flexibility and presumably some improvement in the efficiency of resource allocation

Proposed governance system for local governments: In light of the experience of the 2001 LGO, let us now examine what needs to be done to avoid the weaknesses of the previous system and implement the spirit of Article 140A using political, administrative and financial dimensions of devolution.

The remainder of this piece will be published in next weeks issue.

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Governance system for local governments - Part 1 - Profit by Pakistan Today

Bitcoin Spark’s ICO promises rewarding returns for Early Investors – Captain Altcoin

Home Journal Bitcoin Sparks ICO promises rewarding returns for Early Investors

Bitcoin Spark (BTCS), with its Initial Coin Offering (ICO) in full throttle, offers early investors the chance to be part of a promising venture. Bitcoin Sparks ICO is in the last stages of phase three at affordable pricing and enticing bonus, before rolling out phase four at an increased value but declined bonus offer. BTCS provides enticing returns for those who recognize its potential early on, and the phase three holders will realize a 560% ROI.

BTCS, a ticker for Bitcoin Spark, is a decentralized cryptocurrency project that seeks to revolutionize crypto mining and rewards distribution. This Bitcoin fork, built on Ethereum, is driven by an innovative concept, the Proof-Of-Process (PoP) consensus mechanism, aimed at enhancing security and scalability while maintaining decentralization. The project emphasizes decentralization by encouraging more validators to participate, bolstering network security. By combining unique approaches like the non-linear rewards system, BTCS plans to create a self-sustaining mining ecosystem that offers consistent profitability to miners.

Bitcoin Spark uses a smart combination of proof-of-work and proof-of-stake mechanisms, and a special algorithm, to ensure stability and fairness in distributing rewards. Miners need to solve hexadecimal hashes to earn rewards. While solving hexadecimal hashes wont be the primary way to earn, users need to stake on the network, similar to how Proof-Of-Stake blockchains work. However, the relationship between stake and earnings isnt linear. Unlike traditional systems that solely favor high computing power or large stakes, Bitcoin Sparks approach prevents imbalanced rewards based purely on monetary worth.

The network also requires users to contribute processing power to Bitcoin Sparks clients for remote computing tasks that demand high CPU or GPU usage. An exciting feature is that users can contribute processing power through an app in a secure virtual environment, setting Bitcoin Spark apart. BTCS provides miners with a user-friendly Bitcoin Spark application, enabling them to contribute their device processing power to the network and earn rewards.

Rewards are calculated based on a combination of the individual stake and the work performed as remote computing. The more work and stake provided, the higher the rewards but this relationship isnt linear. Higher emphasis is placed on work done to prioritize the revenue-generating product.

Bitcoin Spark caps users to contribute around 5 Teraflops of processing power before experiencing rewards reduction. This estimation may change over time based on total network output, client demand, remaining mining rewards, and total BTCS staked. The system will adapt with technological advancements to stay relevant.

Through its ICO and advanced technologies, Bitcoin Spark envisions a balanced and profitable environment for miners while contributing to the broader cryptocurrency landscape. BTCS rolled out phase one of its ICO at $1.50 and a 20% bonus, with phase one holders expecting an 800% ROI.

Phase two featured one BTCS at $1.75 and a 15% bonus, for an ROI of 657%. Imagine acquiring Bitcoin when its value was $1. The current phase three, which is running out fast, has one BTCS at $2.00 and a 12% bonus. Phase three holders expect 560% in ROI gains.

As evidenced above, Bitcoin Spark implements high rewards in the early ICO stages, rewarding in a big way the early investors. Early adopters enjoy an affordable BTCS price, which keeps increasing after each phase, and bonuses which diminish as phases progress. After the project launch in November, the early adopters will enjoy higher margins and will have earned impressive amounts in bonuses.

Bitcoin Sparks profitability is driven by a thoughtful blend of mechanisms that value both stake and active contribution, fostering a fair and lucrative environment for its participants. The reward structure is designed to prioritize revenue generation. The more work a user performs and the higher their stake, the greater their rewards, but this relationship follows a non-linear pattern.

This approach encourages participation by both large and small stakeholders, enhancing network security and decentralization. Apart from processing power rental, the BTCS ecosystem also introduces a new advertising concept where users can vote out adverts if inappropriate.

Read more on BTCS here:

Website|Buy BTCS

Disclaimer: We advise readers to do their own research before interacting with any featured companies. The information provided is not financial or legal advice. Neither CaptainAltcoin nor any third party recommends buying or selling any financial products. Investing in cryptoassets is high-risk; consider the potential for loss. CaptainAltcoin is not liable for any damages or losses from using or relying on this content.

CaptainAltcoin's writers and guest post authors may or may not have a vested interest in any of the mentioned projects and businesses. None of the content on CaptainAltcoin is investment advice nor is it a replacement for advice from a certified financial planner. The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of CaptainAltcoin.com

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Bitcoin Spark's ICO promises rewarding returns for Early Investors - Captain Altcoin

Labor Day is now a key to Election Day for Democrats and Republicans alike – NPR

Members of the International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union are seen on a Labor Day parade float, Sept. 4, 1961. While many may associate the holiday with major retail sales and end-of summer barbecues, Labor Day's roots are in worker-driven organizing. Hans Von Nolde/AP hide caption

Members of the International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union are seen on a Labor Day parade float, Sept. 4, 1961. While many may associate the holiday with major retail sales and end-of summer barbecues, Labor Day's roots are in worker-driven organizing.

"Labor Day" is one of those holiday names we repeat so often we stop thinking about what the words originally meant. Some people set aside time to remember the human price of war on Memorial Day. Most of us give some kind of thanks on Thanksgiving. But the only ritual for Labor Day is taking the day off, and many see it only as the three-day weekend that marks the end of summer.

Yet Labor Day is as political in its history as the Fourth of July or the birthday of Martin Luther King Jr. The first Labor Day celebration on the first Monday of September was in New York City in 1882, an era when labor activism was often illegal and always dangerous. Workers and police alike were killed when a labor protest near near Chicago's Haymarket Square turned violet in 1886, and federal troops fired on strikers in that city's Pullman Strike of 1894. Later that year, in a bid to calm a rising storm, Congress made Labor Day a legal holiday, and President Grover Cleveland signed it into law.

Over time, Labor Day became the American version of May Day or International Labor Day, an occasion to celebrate working people and their causes, often associated with the political left. For the major U.S. political parties, it also became the unofficial starting gate for fall election campaigns of the old-fashioned kind largely done outdoors in person with no screens of any kind.

For generations, Labor Day activities organized by unions were seen primarily as Democratic affairs. Working-class voters were the heart of the coalition Franklin Roosevelt rode to four presidential victories (1932-1944). FDR rewarded them with the National Labor Relations Act of 1935, enshrining in law the right to collective bargaining and giving labor unions a new level of recognition and clout.

President Franklin Roosevelt reads to his guests as he and first lady Eleanor Roosevelt, at table, host a Labor Day picnic at their residence in Hyde Park, N.Y., Sept. 3, 1934. AP hide caption

President Franklin Roosevelt reads to his guests as he and first lady Eleanor Roosevelt, at table, host a Labor Day picnic at their residence in Hyde Park, N.Y., Sept. 3, 1934.

But many of FDR voters or their descendants began drifting away from the Democrats in the economic expansion and relative affluence of the postwar era. The trend strengthened in the late 1960s as many grew disillusioned with the promises of President Lyndon Johnson's Vietnam War and his "Great Society" programs.

Many working-class voters turned to Richard Nixon, who built his "Silent Majority" around them in 1968 and 1972. Even more joined the ranks of "Reagan Democrats" carrying Ronald Reagan to a pair of landslide wins in the 1980s. And the demographic category provided the surprising surge that elected Donald Trump in 2016 (and came close to doing it again in 2020).

This is all part of the long postwar pattern by which the Democratic Party has departed from its traditional geographic and demographic bases. It is no longer surprising that elements of the Republican Party have eagerly embraced voters in those bases who felt the Democrats had simply abandoned them. Reagan was perhaps the most famous former Democrat who made a habit of saying: "I did not leave my party, my party left me."

The most obvious driver of this was the Democrats' move away from their historic roots as a Southern, rural party committed to states' rights. After a century of struggle among its factions, Democrats gradually followed the direction of a young speaker at the 1948 Democratic Convention. That was when Hubert Humphrey, later to be a senator and vice president and presidential nominee, called on the party to "get out of the shadow of states' and to walk forthrightly into the bright sunshine of human rights."

Sixteen years later, Humphrey, together with other Northern and Western Democrats and some Republicans, pieced together the two-thirds majority in the Senate to overcome a filibuster by Southern Democrats and pass the Civil Rights Act of 1964. The deep loyalty felt by many white Southerners for the party of Thomas Jefferson and Andrew Jackson and also the party of the Lost Cause and the Stars and Bars of the Confederacy began to erode.

The trend was slowed by the election of two Southern Democratic presidents, Jimmy Carter of Georgia (1976) and Bill Clinton of Arkansas (1992). But even with Clinton in office in 1994, the full consequences of Dixie's defection to the GOP erupted in a single day. That November, Republicans won the majority of Southern governorships, Senate seats and congressional seats the first time that had happened since Reconstruction after the Civil War. Republican domination of Southern state legislatures was not far behind. And from the 1990s on, every Republican nominee for president has relied on Southern states for most of his Electoral College vote.

Local 361 iron worker Robert Farula marches up Fifth Avenue carrying an American flag during the Labor Day parade on Sept. 8, 2012, in New York. Mary Altaffer/AP hide caption

Local 361 iron worker Robert Farula marches up Fifth Avenue carrying an American flag during the Labor Day parade on Sept. 8, 2012, in New York.

That history has its parallel with regard to the votes and political loyalties of white workers who do not have college degrees. Call this voting demographic what you will, it has become the battleground in our presidential elections and in many down-ballot races as well.

That Democrats long ago lost their prior claim to this political territory is no longer surprising. Just as our political geography has changed, so have our partisan demographics. According to the source most political scientists use (the American National Election Studies Cumulative File), Republicans had an average advantage of 5 percentage points in party identification among college graduates in the 1980s. But a generation later, in the elections of 2016, 2018 and 2020, party identification among college graduates favored Democrats by an average of 14 points.

Still, with all the elements of shifting patterns in recent decades of American political life, the disconnect from the broad working class is the loss that has cost the Democrats most dearly and the one that threatens them most in the years ahead.

It has been some time since the Democrats could simply call themselves "the party of the working man." For one thing, women's share of the total workforce is now approaching 50%. For another, increasing numbers of working people do not regard the Democrats as their party. Donald Trump won the support of workers with less than a college degree in both 2016 and 2020 by 7 percentage points in 2016 and by 8 in 2020. Among those in the category who were white, Trump's margins were 36 points in 2016 and 32 four years later.

But gaudy as Trump's advantage was in the white subcategory, Biden got 5 percentage points more than Hillary Clinton had in 2016. And that improvement was critical in the swing states of Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin, the pivot on which the Electoral College turned.

That is just an illustration of how the wage-earning sector, variously defined, has become the principal battlefield in presidential elections and for many down ballot races as well. One measure of the category has always been "union households," meaning voters who report having at least one union member in their home. But as the membership in labor unions has fallen to the low teens in percentage terms,

For example, network exit polls found Biden winning 57% of union households, even as he lost the category of workers without college degrees to Trump.

It is hard to find an observer who thinks Biden could be reelected without doing at least as well among working people as he did in 2020. And he has shown keen awareness of this from the outset of his term with his open embrace of unions, support for their leadership, bargaining positions and legislative agenda. He regularly promotes his claim that 90% of the jobs created by his massive infrastructure bill (the misnamed Inflation Reduction Act) would not need a college degree.

Just this past week Biden's Labor secretary proposed a new rule by which 3.6 million more U.S. workers would be eligible for overtime pay. He has also restocked the National Labor Relations Board with appointees confirmed by the Senate, where a Republican majority had blocked three appointees of former President Obama. That board, the powerful arbiter of labor-management disputes, now has a Democratic majority.

At the same time, the GOP shows no sign of backing off its pursuit of the blue collar motherlode of winnable votes even if Trump is not the party's nominee a third time in 2024. The in-migration of former Democrats has, in fact, transformed the GOP and recast the competitions we know as campaigns.

A Gallup Poll in late August showed public approval of labor unions as an institution at 67%, with even support among Republicans at 52%. Other recent surveys have shown public support for unions as high as it has ever been since polling began in the 1930s. And that reflects a renewed courtship by both parties.

Much of the contemporary GOP has long since shed its air of country club superiority. Some Republican events have taken on the populist tone of Trump's raucous rallies, which have been media magnets of great power in the last two election cycles.

When the Republican National Committee held its first presidential debate of the 2024 campaign in August, the broadcast began with a video of country singer Oliver Anthony, whanging a banjo and singing his Billboard No. 1 hit "Rich Men North of Richmond" a blast at America's elite on behalf of its working poor. Immediately thereafter, the first question of the night from the Fox News moderator was: "Why is this song striking such a nerve in this country right now?"

The candidates that night all seemed to know the song was a hit because it targeted Democrats such as President Biden. But the singer-songwriter posted a video of his own two days later with a very different take, saying "that song was written about the people on that stage." He said his real target was "the haves" who want "the have nots" to feel helpless. Populist, yes, to be sure. But was it Republican?

It might be said that, at 80, Biden has survived long enough to be the man of the hour. He won his first race for the Senate more than half a century ago with 50.5% of the vote and the backing of the Delaware AFL-CIO. He won the nomination for president he had sought three times when labor unions swung his way in 2020. Labor leaders and other traditional party people woke up after Super Tuesday to Biden as the de facto nominee and felt relatively comfortable with him. Not so much passion perhaps, but what the Democrats needed to defeat Trump that year.

The question going forward is whether there remains enough faith in the 80-year-old version of Biden physically and enough confidence in Biden as a candidate to beat back another assault from Trump. Or, alternatively, enough freshness and energy in him to match up against a fresh Republican face, if Trump is not the GOP nominee.

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Labor Day is now a key to Election Day for Democrats and Republicans alike - NPR

Maine, Niles Township Democrats Holding Campaign, Petition … – Journal & Topics Newspapers Online

Candidates may begin circulating nominating petitions for the Tuesday, March 19, 2024 Primary Election on Tuesday, Sept. 5.

State Sen. Laura Murphy (D-28th), who serves as Maine Township Democratic committeeperson, will host a petition and campaign kickoff at 12:30 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 9 at Kappys American Grill, 7200 W. Dempster St., Morton Grove. The restaurant is owned by Niles Mayor George Alpogianis.

Murphy is expected to be joined at the kickoff by candidates running in Maine Township including U.S. Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-9th), State Reps. Marty Moylan (D-55th) and Michelle Mussman (*D-56th) along with judicial candidates and others.

Niles Township Democrats United will hold a petition launch event at 12:30 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 10 at Laramie Park in Skokie off Touhy Avenue, hosted by Niles Township Democratic Committeeperson Josina Morita, and Skokie School Dist. 73.5 board member Bushra Amiwala. Schakowsky is also expected to attend.

The 2024 election will include the race for president. Although the Republican field is packed, only three Democrats have announced their runs: President Joe Biden, Robert Kennedy, Jr., and Marianne Williamson. Kennedy and Williamson are seen as longshots to secure the Democratic nomination.

Murphy said the Biden campaign is expected to work with local congressional representatives to name delegates to the Democratic National Convention for Biden in October. Murphy said she hopes to see Park Ridge resident Aurora Austriaco on the ballot as a Biden delegate. Austriaco is an attorney and former member of the Maine High School Dist. 207 Board of Education.

The Cook County Democratic Party has released its list of endorsed candidates, including Biden for president along with Clayton Harris for Cook County states attorney (Kim Foxx is not seeking reelection), and Mariyana Spyropoulos for clerk of the Circuit Court of Cook County, along with numerous supreme, appellate and circuit court judge candidates.

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Maine, Niles Township Democrats Holding Campaign, Petition ... - Journal & Topics Newspapers Online