California has seen an exodus primarily due to high housing costs, partially due to zoning, but also due to geography, 40 million people, most of whom would like to live near the coast. Houses are cheap in central Alabama for some reason, even though they have low taxes, no one seems to be running there.
The stock market is a lagging indicator and it doesn't really reflect the economy, as Keynes pointed out:
"It is not a case of choosing those [faces] that, to the best of one's judgment, are really the prettiest, nor even those that average opinion genuinely thinks the prettiest. We have reached the third degree where we devote our intelligences to anticipating what average opinion expects the average opinion to be. And there are some, I believe, who practice the fourth, fifth and higher degrees."
It is currently dominated by a small group of "sexy", mostly internet based, companies.
Actual economic performance is measured by GNP, GDP and GDP per capita.
The economy was overstimulated during COVID b/c of fears of a repeat of 2008, when millions of people were thrown out of work and the economy didn't recover until about 2014-16. Trump inherited a booming economy, his tax cuts were a mistake, overheating an economy at full capacity. COVID crashed the world economy, the stimulus (started under Trump and accelerated under Biden) cushioned the blow.
Inflation was a combination of too much money and worldwide supply chain disruption. It was acerbated by a 40 year trend of consolidation of American business (blame Michael Porter) which lead to oligopoly power and the ability to maintain excessive price increases (one reason Biden administration has toughened antitrust enforcement). Inflation, after a brief peak of 9% is slowly declining to the "long-term" norms of 2-3%. Fed doesn't want inflation below 2% b/c deflation can become a perpetual cycle and sticky prices means a little inflation makes the economy more efficient - look for a 0.5% cut in the discount rate in September as the economy cools (Biden added jobs at a faster rate than Trump pre-COVID, but the economy is now at full employment, growth will inevitably slow down).
Crime was higher under Trump, but to be fair, Presidents have little impact on crime, which is a state and local issue.
Housing starts are up, apartments have been overbuilt and rents are declining, and as the Fed drops rates look for more housing starts.
The President has no control over the Federal Reserve, other than jawboning, as it's set up to be independent to keep politics from influencing macroeconomic decision making.
Oil production has peaked under Biden, but again, Presidents have little impact other than taxation reducing demand, b/c what drives oil production is availability of economic reserves (Permian basin) and world oil market.
Climate change is very real, I've been following this since the 1990s - the evidence is overwhelming and only the corrupt (those in the fossil fuel industry and the politicians they've "bought") or fools think otherwise. World temperatures are almost 2 degrees F above the historical norm and will continue to rise. Flooding is now commonplace in Florida and Texas, and those states will see an exodus as home insurance becomes impossible to obtain as companies pull out of those states. California has the same issue due to wildfires, as does much of the West.
The only ones trying to subvert the Constitution are the Trump people, who don't believe in the rule of law.
There was no election fraud, even Bill Barr, not exactly a flaming liberal, said so. They lost 62 court cases, many with judges appointed by Trump. Trump is just a sore loser who cheats at golf and would steal elections if he could.
Vance wasn't a "successful business owner." He went from Yale Law School to venture capital, became a protege of Thiel. His track record as a VC was meh, but soon left to run for office, bankrolled by Thiel, Not exactly a "man of the people."
Facts aren't that hard to find if you stay away from Fox News (Pravda, paid $780M for lying about the election and is being sued for billions more), Newsmax, etc.