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Biden Makes It All About Trump. Will That Be Enough? Oliver Wiseman

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Is Joe Biden going to be the Democratic nominee? (Photo by Kyle Mazza/Anadolu via Getty Images)

For the first three years of his presidency, Biden tried to avoid saying the words Donald Trump. On Friday night, he mentioned the man 44 times.

In a speech at Valley Forge, Pennsylvania, on the eve of the third anniversary of the January 6 riot, Joe Biden made the case for his reelection by castigating his predecessor.

“Today we’re here to answer the most important of questions,” said Biden. “Is democracy still America’s sacred cause?. . . . [It’s] the most urgent question of our time, and it’s what the 2024 election is all about.” 

He went on: “Donald Trump’s campaign is about him, not America, not you.”

The same can be said of Biden’s own campaign. 

Faced with an unenthusiastic Democratic base, three in four Americans who say they are “seriously concerned” that his age might affect his mental and physical competence, and poll after poll showing him losing to Trump in a head-to-head matchup, Biden is betting on his opponent’s shortcomings rather than his own strengths. 

Over the weekend, I spoke to journalist Salena Zito about the opening pitch Biden made in her home state as well as the dynamics of a Biden-Trump rematch. (Salena is one of the great explainers of the Trump phenomenon. If you’ve heard the phrase that voters take Donald Trump “seriously, not literally,” that’s her.) 

As Salena sees it, Biden’s campaign is doubling down on the democracy rhetoric because they believe this is the key to their stronger-than-expected showing in the 2022 midterms. But his team is making a mistake if they fail to make a positive case for their own candidate, Salena told me. “They’ve got to address Biden’s own problems, and if he wants to win over voters, he’s got to address the issues.”  

Salena added that it’d be a mistake to assume Biden will definitely be his party’s nominee. “I’m old enough to remember Lyndon Johnson dropping out, so I am of the belief that anything can happen,” she said. “We’re all operating under the assumption that it’s Trump and Biden. But I think we should expect the unexpected—if the past four years haven’t taught us that, then we haven’t been paying attention.” 

Could He Really Drop Out?

Just last week, Republican pollster Frank Luntz told Bari and me on Honestly that it’s still possible Biden could drop out of the race. 

“There has to be a chance because, in the end, if he loses to Donald Trump, that will be his legacy for the rest of time. I don’t believe he will want to be known as that individual,” he said. 

Democratic elites are worried about whether Biden is up to the job—and are increasingly saying the quiet part out loud. 

On Saturday, The Washington Post reported that Barack Obama grew “animated” in a conversation with Biden when voicing concerns about the reelection campaign during a recent visit to the White House. 

One person saying what lots of other Democrats are thinking is Dean Phillips. He’s the moderate congressman running against Biden in the primary who hopes an embarrassing showing for the president in New Hampshire (where a debate over the primary calendar means Biden won’t appear on the ballot and needs voters to write him in) would force more in the party to consider dumping Biden. (Bari sat down with Phillips late last week for Honestly. . . stay tuned for that episode.) 

It was only last September that Jim Messina, Obama’s former campaign manager, likened those worrying about Biden’s reelection chances to “fucking bedwetters.” But with every new poll and public Biden appearance—infrequent though they may be—the “bedwetting” looks rational, and Messina’s comment looks more foolish. The question is whether anxiety among Democratic elites ever tips over into a decision to do something about it. (J.P. Morgan listed Biden dropping out of the race on health grounds as one of its “top ten surprises of 2024” predictions in a report published January 1.)

In any decision about Biden’s future, one person will be central: Jill Biden. “The only person who could talk him out of it is his wife,” as Luntz noted on the podcast. “Nobody is looking Joe Biden straight in the eye and saying to him, ‘You’re going to lose this thing.’ It doesn’t happen in the White House. It doesn’t happen in politics. She’s the only one who could do this. And clearly, she’s not doing it.”

For now, Biden is very much in the race—and his campaign is all about Trump. Whether or not that is good politics, it is what motivates the 81-year-old. Biden has said Trump’s behavior in office sparked his initial run for president. He then painted 2020 as a “battle for the soul of America,” promising to turn the page on the divisiveness of the Trump years. This year, he is gearing up for an even darker version of that pitch. And if he loses in November, that’s all he will be remembered as: the man who failed to vanquish Trump. 

The State of the Race 

With the Iowa caucus just eight days away, here’s a reminder of where things stand in the polls, according to the Real Clear Politics averages.

Iowa Republican Caucus

Trump: 51.3

DeSantis: 18.6

Haley: 16.1

Ramaswamy: 5.9 

Christie: 3.7 

New Hampshire Republican Primary

Trump: 46.3

Haley: 24.8

Christie: 10.5

DeSantis: 9.5

Ramaswamy: 6.0

New Hampshire Democratic Primary

Biden (write-in): 47.3

Phillips: 11.7

Williamson: 8.7

All eyes are on New Hampshire, which holds its primary on January 23: that’s where someone not named Trump or Biden has the best chance of coming out on top. Granite Staters, save us from the rematch no one wants! 

If we do end up with the same two candidates as four years ago, that continuity will belie some profound changes happening beneath the surface of American politics at the moment. Stay tuned for a big new piece on exactly that by my colleague Peter Savodnik later today.

Hi, Barbie! America Ferrera, Greta Gerwig, and Margot Robbie at the Golden Globes. (Photo by Michael Buckner/Golden Globes 2024/Golden Globes 2024 via Getty Images)

The Big Schmooze: Free Press writer Olivia Reingold reports on the Golden Globes. . . 

Last night, I did what 99.9 percent of America did not do: I watched the 2024 Golden Globes.

Partly because I’m a masochist, and partly because I wanted to see the Hollywood elites emerge from their Ozempic dens (I like what you’ve done, Oprah.)

But the night was a bore, right from the “what are you wearing” chatter, when various TV “personalities” fawned over the celebrities they purport to cover. 

A typical interview went like this:

“Journalist”: Congratulations on your new child. How is motherhood?

Shiny actress: Just the best ever.

(That was almost verbatim an interview between Entertainment Tonight correspondent Rachel Smith and Sarah Snook, who plays the bitchy sister in HBO’s Succession.)

Then there was the actual awards show. 

The host, little-known comedian Jo Koy, reminded me of a t-shirt cannon man trying to pump up a Little League game (he often followed up jokes by questioning the amount of applause he received: “Really?”). There were the bored and facially refreshed actors reading off teleprompters. Special mention to Jared Leto, who came dressed as a cat burglar in black leather gloves.

This is an awards show, so in theory it’s supposed to tell you what the audience thinks of the films. But all I learned is what Hollywood thinks of itself: And it’s amazing, darling!

Robert Downey Jr. called Oppenheimera goddamn masterpiece” in his acceptance speech for his role in the film. Steven Yeun, who won Best Actor in a Limited Series for Beef, made the ultimate humblebrag, claiming he was “just the recipient of a long line of compassion and love and protection and goodwill.”

Someone needed to do a Will Smith and slap Hollywood with the truth—you look tired, sweetie. And dare I say, irrelevant. 

I have newfound respect for the celebrities that, instead of attending, sent in outdated headshots instead (shout-out to Ricky Gervais and Steve Martin).

Many of America’s most watched shows weren’t even nominated, like Yellowstone, which averaged three times the number of viewers than the series finale of critical darling Succession. The Globes even created a new category to throw a bone to the hoi polloi, called the “Cinematic and Box Office Achievement” category, which went to Barbie

In her acceptance speech, Margot Robbie said, “We would like to dedicate this to every single person on the planet who dressed up and went to the greatest place on Earth—the movie theater.”

The problem is that only 39 percent of Americans have been to “the greatest place on Earth” in the past year.  

If the Golden Globes were a movie, it wouldn’t even win an award. 

Better luck next year.

(Oh yeah, Oppenheimer won Best Drama. You can find the other winners here.)

Where’d You Go, Lloyd? 

In the latest indicator that the republic is in rude health, three and a half days went by before the White House was informed that Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin was in the hospital. 

Austin had suffered complications after an elective procedure on January 1, but the White House didn’t know he was in the hospital, including a stint in the ICU, until January 4. 

Don’t worry, though—it’s just because Austin is a soldier’s soldier, according to Politico. The outlet’s Playbook newsletter notes that “The folks that we talked to leaned into Occam’s Razor as an explanation for how this happened. [Austin] is an intensely private man, a 70-year-old four-star general who is set in his ways and dislikes to ‘bother’ people (including, apparently, some of his staff) with his problems—a tough, ‘stiff upper lip’ bearing that will be immediately familiar to those of us who grew up in military families.”

Is that really the most likely explanation? I asked Free Press columnist and former Pentagon reporter Eli Lake for his take. Here’s what he said: 

There is something that doesn’t add up about the latest turn in the story of Lloyd Austin’s hospitalization. How is it possible the White House did not know he was laid up in a hospital between January 1 and January 4? His deputy, Kathleen Hicks, had already taken over day-to-day responsibilities at the Pentagon. And the whereabouts of the secretary of defense, like the secretary of state and the national security adviser, are allegedly known at all times by the White House Situation Room. As Jeremy Bash, who served as chief of staff to Defense Secretary Leon Panetta, told Politico, a secretary of defense is never truly off the grid. 

So how could it be that Austin’s hospitalization was a mystery to the White House? The explanation that Austin is an “intensely private man” does not account for the protocols that exist. 

The other explanation is that people are lying. 

Biden still has confidence in his defense secretary, officials said Sunday. But Austin is still in the hospital and may have more questions to answer if he is to keep his job. 

A Widening War?

Hezbollah missiles damaged an important air base in the north of the country, the IDF admitted Sunday. The attack, which happened Saturday, underscores the possibility of a widening war between Israel and its enemies. “We prefer the path of an agreed-upon diplomatic settlement,” Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant said Friday, “but we are getting close to the point where the hourglass will turn over.” 

Biden has dispatched Tony Blinken to the region in an effort to lower the temperature, and the administration has reportedly cautioned Israel against a significant escalation in Lebanon.

From our newsroom. . .  

→ The Case of the Kidnapped Imam: The son of Mohammaed Mushtaha, an imam in Gaza, wrote in The Free Press last week that Hamas had kidnapped his father for refusing to toe the party line: “My father knows the difference between right and wrong. He knew that refusing to act as a megaphone for Hamas could lead to his death, and yet he refused. He has a clear conscience. So does everyone who knows what really happened to him, and why.” 

The response to the story from readers has been extraordinary. And now there is evidence that other Palestinians are demanding his release. Moumen al-Natour, a lawyer and an anti-Hamas activist in Gaza, wrote on X: “It is highly disturbing that Shaikh Mohamad Mushtaha was arrested in the midst of this conflict. I demand that the government of Gaza free him right away and without any conditions.” 

Mr. Mushtaha shared his story with The Free Press as part of the ongoing series Voices from Gaza, our partnership with the Center for Peace Communications.

→ Fergie’s back: Readers will surely remember Fergie Chambers. The Free Press’s Suzy Weiss recently profiled the Marxist multimillionaire blowing his $250 million fortune on some of the worst causes imaginable (communism, Hamas, China propaganda). I regret to inform you that Chambers is back. On Friday, he posted this on X: 

For Fergie, this kind of thing is nothing new. In the past he has donated to Samidoun, an organization that has ties to the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, and which is designated as a terrorist organization by the United States, Japan, Canada, and the European Union. 

The Free Press goes 2–0 in predictions: Abracadabra! Already, two of the forecasts made on our World in 2024 episode of Honestly last week have come true. First, our own Suzy Weiss declared that Catholicism was “in” in 2024 and—hey, presto—actor Shia LaBeouf converts. Second, Leandra Medine declared pants “out” in 2024—and days later, Kanye West agrees. “No pants this year,” he wrote in an Instagram post alongside a risqué photograph of his rumored wife Bianca Censori.

Oliver Wiseman is an editor and writer at The Free Press. Follow him on X @ollywiseman

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December 10, 2024 Heather Cox Richardson

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The Explosion of Jew-Hate in Canada Terry Glavin

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The Explosion of Jew-Hate in Canada

(Illustration by The Free Press)

We rarely run pieces this long. But today’s investigation—the story of how antisemitism became deeply embedded in Justin Trudeau’s Canada—called for it. This is a piece worth reading carefully. It is relevant not just to our many Canadian readers, but to anyone invested in the future of the West. —Bari Weiss

‘The Denial Is What’s Painful’

For Sarah Rugheimer, a professor of astronomy at York University in Toronto, the first sign of the virulent strain of antisemitism now embedded in Justin Trudeau’s Canada appeared on a lamppost.

It was a few weeks after the Hamas massacre of last October 7. Rugheimer, 41, was walking in a park near her home in the city’s quiet Cedarvale neighborhood when she saw a poster of the Israeli hostage Elad Katzir, a 47-year-old farmer from Kibbutz Nir Oz, covered with swastikas.

In the days that followed, as the war raged in Gaza, swastikas turned up all over Cedarvale. They also started appearing on the York campus, where Rugheimer serves as the Allan I. Carswell Chair for the Public Understanding of Astronomy. As fall turned to winter, a swastika showed up in the snow outside the campus building where she works.

An astrophysicist with a particular interest in the origins of life on Earth and the possibility of life on other planets, Rugheimer tended to confine her worldly concerns to scientific matters. So the swastikas came as a shock. But worse was to come.

She grew up in Montana, and her academic career took her around the world—from a PhD in astronomy and astrophysics at Harvard University to Scotland, England, and now Canada. But until taking up her post at York University two years ago, Rugheimer said she’d never encountered any overt antisemitism. Nor had she given much thought to her identity as a Zionist: Like the vast majority of Jews around the world, Rugenheimer believes in Israel’s right to exist.

The Explosion of Jew-Hate in Canada

A broken window at the Kehillat Shaarei Torah synagogue in Toronto on May 17, 2024. It was vandalized again last week. (via David Jacobs/X)

Jew-hatred was a phenomenon of the fringes, she reckoned. “It wasn’t on my radar,” she told me. Now, it’s everywhere. “Every week there is a major incident in Canada, and multiple minor ones every day in my neighborhood.”

It was what was happening inside her university that disturbed her the most.

York’s student unions issued a declaration just after the attack calling the barbarism of October 7 a “justified and necessary” act of resistance against settler colonialism, genocide, and apartheid. The student groups found widespread support among York’s professors—some of whom Rugheimer considered friends.

A politics department faculty committee demanded the university enforce a definition of “anti-Palestinian racism” that encompassed any expression of sympathy for the right of Israelis to exist within their own state: “Zionism is a settler colonial project and ethno-religious ideology in service of a system of Western imperialism that upholds global white supremacy.”

She was shocked by the declarations, and the defaced posters, and the swastikas. But for Rugheimer there was something worse. “The denial is what’s painful,” Rugheimer said. The denial of the rapes and savagery of October 7, 2023. The denial of the pervasive antisemitism in “anti-Zionist” polemics. The denial of Jewish history itself. “Reasonable people can disagree about what to do in an intractable conflict, but the denying of what should be uncontroversial facts makes it impossible to have hope.”

This sort of despair has become a feature of everyday life for Jews across Canada who are experiencing open hatred—and yet are living under a government that appears either blind to it, paralyzed by it, or indifferent to it. Law enforcement in Canada is not blind. Quite the opposite. Officers want to do their jobs. What they say is that they lack the moral support from the political class to enforce the law. And that they cannot keep up with the volume of hate crimes—crimes that arise from a widespread ideology that has normalized the idea that “Zionists” anywhere are a fair target for attack.

The Explosion of Jew-Hate in Canada

Police at Bais Chaya Mushka elementary school in Toronto on May 25, 2024 after two people fired shots outside. (Andrew Francis Wallace via Getty Images)

Perhaps nothing captured Canada’s dark new reality better than a split-screen story from late last month.

On November 22 in Montreal, at the 70th annual session of the NATO parliamentary assembly, rioters organized by the organizations Divest for Palestine and the Convergence of Anti-Capitalist Struggles wreaked havoc on the city. They ignited smoke bombs, threw metal barriers into the street, and smashed windows of businesses and the convention center where the NATO delegates were meeting. The rioters torched cars. They also burned an effigy of Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

While Montreal burned, Trudeau was dancing and handing out friendship bracelets at a Taylor Swift concert in Toronto. It took 24 hours for him to weigh in with a single tweet.

‘It Was Like a Dam Burst’

The impression that the violence unfolding around them is somehow invisible to the state responsible for their protection has overwhelmed not only relative newcomers to Canada like Rugheimer, but also Jews who have lived in Canada for decades. People like Robert Krell, 84, the former director of postgraduate education in the Department of Psychiatry at the University of British Columbia.

A pioneer of Holocaust education in Canada and a specialist in survivor trauma, Krell immigrated to Canada at the age of 11, after having been hidden by a Catholic family during the Nazi occupation of Holland. Krell was not as shocked by the unspeakable barbarism of the Hamas massacre of October 7 last year as by the jubilation the atrocities elicited from within the “progressive” milieu across Canada—and by the total silence from the “social justice” scene.

The Explosion of Jew-Hate in Canada

Police respond to a dispute between an Israel supporter and pro-Palestinian supporters in Toronto on June 9, 2024. (Nick Lachance via Getty Images)

On Sunday, October 8, activists affiliated with the terrorist-designated Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine were already shouting their happiness into megaphones to a crowd at the steps of the Vancouver Art Gallery, only a few minutes’ drive from Krell’s home. “We are calling on those in so-called Vancouver to uplift and honor the resistance,” they said. “Show solidarity and celebrate the steps towards liberation!”

Scenes like these repeated themselves in cities across Canada—all the way to St. John’s, Newfoundland.

“On October 7 I was horrified,” Krell told me. “I was shocked to the core by the cruelty, the rapes, the mutilations, the killing of children, the gouging of eyes . . . but I could believe it.”

What he found impossible to fathom was what he saw on October 8, and in all the days that followed.

“It was like a dam burst. I can’t describe the emotional blow. I guess I thought there would be a cry of outrage about what happened, you know, from the human rights people, Black Lives Matter people, the MeToo people. I shouldn’t have been surprised, but I just couldn’t grasp the concept, that when people heard and saw what had been done to those Jews, there was nothing except celebrations of Hamas as liberators.”

Americans are familiar with the pattern that has been repeated at dozens of Canadian university and college campuses—the “pro-Palestinian” occupations, encampments, manifestos, disturbances, and explicit celebrations of the October 7 “resistance.” In Canada, however, the sociopathology that shocked Rugheimer and Krell is by no means confined to the extremes of campus politics or the rantings of far-left activist groups.

Rather than discovering how torn the fabric of their society has become, Canadian Jews are being forced to come to terms with just how deeply antisemitism has been woven into it.

This is not a matter of anecdote or impression.

The Explosion of Jew-Hate in Canada

Police arrive at Talmud Torah Elementary School after the building was hit by gunfire overnight in Montreal on November 9, 2023. (Mathiew Leiser via Getty Images)

Last month, a report by Israel’s Ministry for Diaspora Affairs and Combating Antisemitism found a 670 percent increase in antisemitic incidents in Canada since October 7, 2023, including “violent attacks such as shootings targeting Jewish institutions and arson attacks targeting schools, synagogues, and other community institutions.” There are about 40 million Canadians and roughly 350,000 of them are Jewish—representing less than 1 percent of the country’s population.

“Most Canadian Jews feel unsafe and victimized,” the University of Toronto sociologist Robert Brym concluded in an in-depth attitudinal survey of Canadians, undertaken in collaboration with EKOS Research, published earlier this year. “They perceive a rise in negative attitudes toward Jews in recent months and years. Most doubt the situation will improve.”


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5 facts Elon Musk should learn about homelessness Judd Legum

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Elon Musk attends the 2024 Breakthrough Prize Ceremony on April 13, 2024 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Taylor Hill/Getty Images)

Elon Musk, the world’s richest man, has been appointed by President-elect Donald Trump as the co-chair of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). Despite its name, DOGE is not a department or part of the federal government. But it appears that Trump will look to Musk and DOGE to determine what government programs are essential and what should be eliminated as unnecessary.

So it is notable that, on Tuesday, Musk posted on X that homelessness is a “lie” and a “propaganda word.” He suggested that most unhoused people are “violent drug addicts” who cannot be helped.

Musk was commenting favorably on a post that claimed providing shelter to unhoused people was counterproductive. The post ostensibly cited a San Francisco Chronicle article published in April 2022. The article does not support the contention that providing shelter to people who need it is fruitless or that all unhoused people are criminals. Rather, the article details how the converted hotels in San Francisco were “underfunded and understaffed,” leading to substandard living conditions. The city outsourced the management of the buildings to non-profit groups, but failed to provide any oversight. The safety issues resulted from inadequate maintenance and “a small group of tenants who do not receive the support they need.”

If Musk is going to advise the president on government spending, he should educate himself on the reality of homelessness. These are five key facts to get started.

Popular Information is an independent newsletter dedicated to accountability journalism since 2018. It is made possible by readers who upgrade to a paid subscription.

17% of unhoused people are children

A reality that Musk did not mention in his post is that a significant percentage of unhoused people are children. According to the 2023 report by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), on a single night in 2023, “roughly 186,100 people” or almost “three of every 10 people experiencing homelessness” was “part of a family with children.” The same report found that in a single night in 2023, 17 percent of unhoused people were children under the age of 18, amounting to 111,620 unhoused children.

According to data from the National Center for Homeless Education, during the 2021-22 school year, “[n]early 1.2 million children were either literally homeless (living in a shelter, or in unsheltered locations such as a car or tent) or doubled-up (sharing housing with friends or family beyond a unit’s designated capacity)” nationwide. Studies have found that unhoused children are at greater risk for health conditions, including respiratory infections and asthma, and developmental delays.

Tens of thousands of unhoused people are veterans

Veterans also make up a significant portion of unhoused people. According to the HUD’s 2023 report, on a single night in 2023, “35,574 veterans were experiencing homelessness,” or “22 of every 10,000 veterans in the United States.” But, according to the report, the “actual number of veterans experiencing unsheltered homelessness could be larger than reported.” Black veterans were disproportionately affected, and “comprised 36 percent of veterans experiencing sheltered homelessness and 25 percent of veterans experiencing unsheltered homelessness,” despite making up “only 12 percent of all U.S. veterans.”

Veterans experience homelessness at a higher rate due to multiple factors. Frequent and extended deployment can make finding and maintaining stable, affordable housing more difficult. A large number of veterans also live with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and struggle with substance abuse. According to the National Coalition for Homeless Veterans, 70 percent of unhoused veterans have problems with substance abuse. Veterans can also be “at a disadvantage when competing for employment,” as specific military work and training do not always translate to civilian employment.

Unhoused people are much more likely to be crime victims than perpetrators

In Musk’s post, he calls unhoused people “violent.” But, in reality, unhoused people are more likely to be a victim of a violent crime than to commit a violent crime. According to the Washington State Department of Commerce, an unhoused person “is no more likely to be a criminal than a housed person,” with the exception of camping ordinances, as unhoused people “break that law merely by being homeless.” In 2023, the New York Times reported that it is “relatively rare” for “homeless, mentally ill people” to commit a violent attack.

According to the Washington State Department of Commerce, unhoused people are in fact “more likely to be the victim of a violent crime,” especially unhoused women, teens, and children. Research found that approximately “14% to 21% of unhoused people are estimated to have been the victim of violence, compared with around 2% of the general population,” ABC News reported.

The false perception pushed by Musk that unhoused people are more violent can lead to stereotyping and dehumanizing of unhoused people, contribute to violence against unhoused people, and hurt efforts to help the unhoused.

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Many people lose housing to escape domestic violence

While Musk implies that homelessness is the result of a moral failure by people with a mental illness or substance abuse disorder, the facts show that there are many factors contributing to homelessness that can affect anyone.

One of those factors is domestic violence. Each year, more than 7 million people in the U.S. experience domestic violence and among those people, 500,000 need to find new housing as a result. It can be difficult to accurately track how many victims of domestic violence end up experiencing sheltered homelessness because shelters that exclusively house domestic violence victims do not report information about their clients.

According to HUD, 11 percent of all beds in shelters that do track client information were designated for domestic violence victims in 2022.

Affordable housing is scarce, even for people with jobs

Another factor driving homelessness in the U.S. is a severe shortage of affordable housing.

For people making extremely low wages (either at or below the federal poverty line or 30 percent of their area’s median income), there are only 34 affordable rental options per 100 families in need of housing.

Working full-time, even for higher than minimum wage, is no guarantee that permanent housing will be attainable. In fact, according to a report by the National Low Income Housing Coalition, the average full-time worker would need to make over $32 per hour to afford to rent a modest two-bedroom home or over $26 per hour to afford a one-bedroom.

There is nowhere in the country where a full-time minimum wage worker can afford to rent a two-bedroom home at a regular market rate. Even accounting for states and localities that have set their minimum wage above the federal level, the average minimum wage worker would have to work 113 hours per week to afford a two-bedroom home or 95 hours to afford a one-bedroom home.

A 2021 study from researchers at the University of Chicago found that 53 percent of people experiencing sheltered homelessness (meaning people living in shelters or transitional housing) had some kind of formal employment and 40 percent of people experiencing unsheltered homelessness were employed.

 

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