The ramifications of the US dockworkers strike that began Tuesday could inject uncertainty into the 2024 presidential campaign, create a new sense of unease around the US economy, and be directly felt in key swing states from Georgia to Michigan.
Much of the unease hinges on how much — and how long — any effects will be felt now that port workers on the East and Gulf coasts have walked out.
"If it lasts for more than a few days or more than a week, you're going to get massive cascading effects," Flexport founder and CEO Ryan Petersen said in a recent Yahoo Finance appearance, noting that 15% of the world's container ships could be caught up in a stoppage.
"That's a huge reduction in capacity," he added.
But a prolonged shutdown in Georgia, North Carolina, and in other major ports in the East and Gulf coasts could increase Americans’ sense of economic unease after negotiations stalled over a complex series of wages and automation issues.
There are also significant question marks about how Kamala Harris and Donald Trump will approach the strike — with much of the campaign trail focus in recent days on other topics such as the aftermath of Hurricane Helene. The back-and-forth plays into complex politics around unions in the 2024 race amid a concerted effort by Donald Trump to gain labor support.
Economic problems could also quickly spread to other parts of the country that will also have a say in the November election, like Michigan, if shipments of autos and auto parts are held up.
But shipping experts said that President Joe Biden could be drawn directly into the standoff and be forced to step in to keep workers temporarily on the job.
"We strongly suspect that, this close to the election and despite denials ahead of time, President Biden would have little choice but to step in and invoke back-to-work legislation," Bradley Saunders of Capital Economics wrote in a recent note.
Such a move could trigger an 80-day "cooling off period" and largely — but not completely — shelve the issue until after Election Day.
The White House said such a move isn't on the table, but it is increasingly being drawn into the standoff.
Last Friday, Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, Acting Labor Secretary Julie Su, and Director of the National Economic Council Lael Brainard met with the port operator, the United States Maritime Alliance, to convey a message "that they need to be at the table and negotiating in good faith fairly and quickly."
That same message had been delivered to the union, a White House official added.
Will Biden step in?
Perhaps the key question at the moment — outside of what happens next between the International Longshoremen's Association and the United States Maritime Alliance — is what role the Biden-Harris administration will ultimately play.
The White House has taken a wait-and-see approach in recent weeks but has maintained that exercising executive power to delay the strike is not on the table;
"We’ve never invoked Taft-Hartley to break a strike and are not considering doing so now," a White House official said on Friday, in a reference to a 1947 law that gave the US government more power to intervene in labor disputes.
Changing course is an option that would risk angering union leaders, but multiple experts say the White House could quickly have little choice.
"My base case would be we would get a couple of days in, and I find it difficult to believe that the Biden administration will not invoke the Taft-Hartley Act," added Michigan State University supply chain management professor Jason Miller in a recent Yahoo Finance interview.
But even if the workers are forced back onto a job without a deal, there is no guarantee that things will operate smoothly in that 80-day interim.
"We would expect some slowdowns over that period," Miller added.
Cascading economic effects
Ports from Massachusetts to Texas could be impacted by the strike, but the most in focus politically are those in Savannah, Ga., and Wilmington, N.C., that move significant cargo and sit in key swing states.
Tobin Marcus of Wolfe Research listed the strike as a possible "October surprise" in a recent note to clients, adding that it "could become a major problem for Harris if it drags out."
But so far, it has largely yet to break through on the campaign trail, even with candidates regularly traveling close to these ports.
Donald Trump traveled to Savannah last week; he commented on the city's port but didn't weigh in on the labor unrest.
"With a world-class port and a world-class workforce, this city will soon become one of the premier export hubs anywhere on earth," Trump said as part of his manufacturing pitch.
Likewise, the Harris campaign and national Democrats have said little about the strike so far.
But that could change quickly if disruptions are seen and as Democrats try to convince voters they will be good stewards of the economy. The Oct. 1 start of the strike also has auspicious timing, coming the same day as a vice presidential debate.
Another wild card is an ongoing battle for union votes between Harris and Trump, with the former president making a concerted pitch to union workers and leaders to cut into the traditional Democratic strength.