The Record (Troy, NY)

Rural/urban divisions split the suburbs

- By Nicholas Riccardi and Hannah Fingerhut

DENVER >> America’s suburbs are today’s great political battlegrou­nd, long seen as an independen­t pivot between the country’s liberal cities and conservati­ve small towns and rural expanse. But it’s not that simple. It turns out that these places in-between may be the most politicall­y polarized of all — and when figuring out the partisan leanings of people living in the suburbs, where they came from makes a difference. Fewer suburbanit­es describe themselves as politicall­y independen­t than do residents of the nation’s urban and rural areas, according to a survey released Tuesday by the University of Chicago Harris School for Public Policy and The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research. The poll also found that the partisan leanings of suburban residents are closely linked to whether they have previously lived in a city. “In the last decade, particular­ly in the past five years, I’ve felt a shift in having some liberal neighbors,” said Nancy Wieman, 63, a registered Republican and staunch conservati­ve who has lived in suburban Jefferson County outside of Denver her entire life. “The ones who are markedly liberal have moved from Denver or other cities.” Suburbanit­es who previously lived in a city are about as likely as city- dwellers to call themselves Democrats, the survey found. Similarly, Americans living in suburbs who have never resided in an urban area are about as likely as rural residents to say they are Republican. Just 15 percent of suburban Americans say they are independen­t and do not lean toward a party, compared with 25 percent of urban Americans and 30 percent of rural Americans who call themselves politicall­y independen­t. That divide extends to the White House: 72 percent of ex-urban suburbanit­es disapprove of President Donald Trump’s performanc­e in office, as do 77 percent of city residents. That compares with the 57 percent of suburbanit­es who have not previously lived in a city and 54 percent of rural Americans who say they disapprove of the president. Kevin Keelan moved from Denver to the sprawling suburbs of Jefferson County 16 years ago. Once a political independen­t, the 49-yearold registered as a Democrat a few years ago. “Now it’s not even an option. I’d vote Democratic or independen­t, but there’s no way I can

vote Republican anymore,” Keelan said. “It’s just being more open-minded, and I’d be that way if I was living here or in a loft downtown.”

Jefferson County is a cluster of subdivisio­ns and strip malls huddled under the Rocky Mountain foothills. Once a right- leaning county, it has been reshaped by an inf lux of transplant­s from coastal, urban states. It now leans Democratic: The party swept countywide offices and won most of the state legislativ­e districts there in 2018, and Hillary Clinton won the county by 7 percentage points in 2016.

Yet under that surface, election results from 2016 show it is a deeply polarized place. In 118 precincts in Jefferson County, one of the candidates won by more than 10 points. Clinton won 60 precincts and Trump 58.

“The chasm between the two sides is greater than ever,” said Libby Szabo, a Republican county commission­er. “It’s harder at this point, because the ide- als are so different, to even change parties.”

The UChicago Harris/APNORC poll points to how that split between urban and rural America echoes through the suburbs.

About two-thirds of city dwellers say that legal immigratio­n is a net benefit to the United States, much as the 7 in 10 former city residents now living in the suburbs who say the same. A smaller majority of suburbanit­es who have never lived in cities, 58 percent, and half of rural residents think the benefits of legal immigratio­n outweigh the risks.

Urban residents are somewhat more likely than rural residents to think the U. S. should be active in world affairs, 37 percent to 24 percent. That mirrors the split between suburbanit­es who used to live in cities and those who never have: 32 percent of the former favor an active U. S. role, compared with 23 percent of the latter.

About 6 in 10 urban residents and ex-urban suburbanit­es say that the way things are going in the U.S. will worsen this year, while less than half of rural resi- dents or suburbanit­es with no city experience believe the same.

S. A. Campbell is a general contractor who lives in the Kansas City suburbs of Johnson County, Kansas, which swung toward the Democrats in 2018 as it replaced a four-term Republican congressma­n with a Democratic womanwho is an openly gay Native American. It is often compared to Jefferson County, with its highly educated population, high- quality schools and influx of previous city dwellers.

Campbell, 60, said his childhood in Kansas City is part of what made him a supporter of Democrats; his parents were both teachers active in their union, and his mother was a supporter of Planned Parenthood.

“When you’ve been raised in a certain fashion, your view of the world is more open than if you grew up in a household that wasn’t that,” he said.

Greg Stern, the newly elected clerk in Jefferson County, has lived in New York City and spent parts of his childhood on a remote Colorado ranch. He sees partisan attitudes hardening in the suburbs much as they have in urban and ru- ral parts of the country.

But, he said, there’s a key difference: While there may be fewer independen­ts in the suburbs, the mixture of loyal Democrats and Republican­s found there means it’s still a place for both sides.

“You’re welcome regardless of your political beliefs,” said Stern, a Democrat and volunteer firefighte­r in a suburban department with a wide range of political views in the station. “It becomes harder to live in rural or urban areas if your political beliefs don’t match those of the majority of the people who live there.”

 ??  ?? In this March 6, 2018, file photo, people walk along a path in front of a row of homes in San Jose, Calif. The suburbs are usually seen as the great political swing area in the United States, toggling back and forth between the two parties. But a new poll shows the suburbs are as polarized along partisan lines as the rest of the nation. AP PHOTO/ MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ, FILE
In this March 6, 2018, file photo, people walk along a path in front of a row of homes in San Jose, Calif. The suburbs are usually seen as the great political swing area in the United States, toggling back and forth between the two parties. But a new poll shows the suburbs are as polarized along partisan lines as the rest of the nation. AP PHOTO/ MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ, FILE
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