The National - News

Small town voters want to ‘give prez a chance’

Overwhelmi­ng support for Donald Trump in Warrenton, Virginia, where voters are baffled as to why people are so upset

- Thomas Seibert Foreign Correspond­ent foreign.desk@thenationa­l.ae

WARRENTON, UNITED STATES // When a group of demonstrat­ors gathered in the small town of Warrenton, Virginia, for a protest march against president Donald Trump one recent Saturday, Kelly Anne Finn felt she had to take a stand. Ms Finn, 58, took her dog Jack and a sign she made to the march to show support for the president. “There’s a new sheriff in town and his name is Prez Donald J Trump,” her sign read. The protesters were unimpresse­d, and one of them called Mr Trump a “fascist”, Ms Finn, a retired lawyer, said after the march. “They should at least give him a chance.”

For Ms Finn, there is no doubt that Mr Trump is right for the country. She said she had watched the real-estate mogul ever since she read his bestseller The Art of the Deal in the 1980s. “I waited 30 years for him to run” for president.

But the president is facing an uphill struggle, she said.

“He is being attacked every day,” she said.

“I thought the country would be more united after the election, but it’s got worse.”

A solid majority of voters in Warrenton, a town of 10,000 people about 80 kilometres south-west of Washington, DC, supported Mr Trump in the November election.

He took 59 per cent of the vote in Fauquier county, of which Warrenton is the biggest town, more than his 46 per cent share of the popular vote countrywid­e.

His rival Hillary Clinton, who raked in more than 48 per cent of the vote nationally, was a distant second in Warrenton with just under 35 per cent.

But despite the result, Trump voters in Warrenton said they felt under pressure from his opponents in the big cities along the east and the west coasts, from the political elite in Washington and from the media.

Several people in the town agreed to talk about their political views only on condition of anonymity, saying they were concerned about reprisals at work or socially.

A local journalist spoke of an “incredible amount of support” for Mr Trump in the region. “But people are not willing to talk about it.”

In a restaurant on Main Street, a waitress said some Trump supporters feared for their jobs.

“A friend of mine says she does not mention that she voted for Trump at work because she is afraid she’ll get fired,” she said. “There is a disconnect between the real America and the coasts,” said Jim, a waiter in a wine shop in Culpeper, a town south of Warrenton where support for Mr Trump was also about 60 per cent in November.

“People are like: ‘ I am trying to get by here but they’re talking about which bathroom to use’,” Jim said, in reference to a political debate about the use of public toilets by transgende­r people. Mr Trump was carried to the White House by a wave of public anger against the political establishm­ent and the hope that he would create more manufactur­ing jobs.

He has also promised to provide protection from Islamic extremism and from illegal immigrants. Opponents say he is encouragin­g xenophobia and Islamophob­ia.

Some of Mr Trump’s political rivals say the president won because his opponents failed to connect with the middle class.

“Look, you can’t simply go around to wealthy people’s homes raising money and expect to win elections,” said senator Bernie Sanders, who was defeated by Mrs Clinton in the Democratic primaries. “You’ve got to go out and mix it up and be with ordinary people.”

The New York Times executive editor Dean Baquet admitted that his newspaper “did not have a handle on just how much anxiety there was in the country” before the election.

“We want law and order,” said Wally Hudson, a baker in Culpeper. “We haven’t had that for eight years.” Mr Hudson said people like him were reluctant to speak out about problems such as illegal immigratio­n for fear of getting “a smack on the head”. Back in Warrenton, a shop worker in the Highflyer Arms weapons shop was bitter about what he saw as a refusal by Mr Trump’s opponents to accept defeat.

“It’s hysteria,” the man said about the nationwide protests against the president. “If the Left loses, there is revolution.” He said Mr Trump was promising a new beginning very much like his predecesso­r Barack Obama did when he came to power in 2009. “Obama wanted a fundamenta­l change, but when Trump says the same thing he is compared to Hitler.”

‘ There is a disconnect between the real America and the coasts Jim wine shop waiter

 ?? Thomas Seibert / The National ?? Kelly Anne Finn took her dog Jack and a sign she made showing her support for president Donald Trump to a protest march against the new American leader.
Thomas Seibert / The National Kelly Anne Finn took her dog Jack and a sign she made showing her support for president Donald Trump to a protest march against the new American leader.

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