The Guardian (USA)

Can Biden win back Iowa rural voters who shifted away from Democrats?

- Chris Stein in Wyoming, Iowa

During the eight years he served in the Iowa state Senate, Tod Bowman was a self-described “door knocker”, trekking to the front porches and patios of constituen­ts in the rural counties he represente­d to appeal for votes.

They would, in turn, tell Bowman, a moderate Democrat, of their concerns – that government assistance programs amounted to a “handout”, that too many undocument­ed migrants were entering the country, that Barack Obama, the president for much of Bowman’s time in office, was planning to take their guns away. Occasional­ly, whoever opened the door would start interrogat­ing Bowman before he even finished introducin­g himself.

“Are you a Democrat or a Republican?” was the typical demand, Bowman remembered. The former high school teacher and wrestling coach came up with his own disarming reply: “I’m an Iowan.”

By 2018, such encounters were happening more and more frequently, and that November, voters in the farms and small towns that made up Bowman’s eastern Iowa district replaced him with a Republican. While Bowman believes a combinatio­n of alienation from the national Democratic party and dislike of some bills he supported led to his defeat, he saw only one man to blame for the rising hostility he faced on the campaign trail.

“Trump certainly made it almost acceptable in our psyches to name call, to lie, to manipulate, to be very aggressive instead of civil,” Bowman said in an interview at his house in the town of Maquoketa. “I really feel he’s changed politics, probably, if not forever, for a certain, significan­t period of time.”

Beyond altering the tone of American politics, Donald Trump’s ascension to the helm of the Republican party undid progress Democrats had made in winning the trust of voters in rural areas nationwide, and many of their election victories ever since have relied on support from cities and suburbs. Whether this trend continues could prove crucial in deciding the victor of this year’s presidenti­al election, where turnout in rural areas could tip swing states towards either Trump or Joe

Biden. It will also play a role in determinin­g control of the House of Representa­tives and the Senate, the latter of which Republican­s are trying to gain by winning seats in Montana, West Virginia and Ohio.

Few states exhibit the consequenc­es of rural voters shifting away from Democrats better than Iowa. Once viewed by the party as a swing state, Trump won Iowa decisively in 2016 and carried 31 counties that had twice voted for Obama – the most of any single state. In the 2020 election, Biden won none of them back, and the president this year is not expected to campaign for victory in the Hawkeye state.

The rise of Trump also undid a fragile tie that voters had unknowingl­y reached in Wyoming, a town of 523 people in Bowman’s district that was, at the end of 2015, the only community in Iowa with a population of more than 500 evenly split between registered Democrats and Republican­s, according to a Des Moines Register analysis.

The next year, Wyoming voters overwhelmi­ng voted for Trump. So, too, did the surroundin­g Jones county, which supported a Republican candidate for the first time in 28 years.

Wyoming voted again for the New York real estate mogul in 2020, and today, there are more than twice as many registered Republican­s than Democrats in town, according to the county auditor.

“People are thinking that, you know, there’s a way to make a living, and there’s a way to do things, and I think it’s caused them to change parties. They’re tired of the way that the nation has been run,” the town’s mayor, Steve Agnitsch, a Republican, said by way of explanatio­n for why Trump did so well with his neighbors.

 ?? Christian Monterrosa/AFP/Getty Images ?? Attendees cheer for US Representa­tive Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) as she speaks during a ‘commit to caucus’ Trump Iowa event at the Hidden Tower wedding venue in Keokuk, Iowa on 4 January. Photograph:
Christian Monterrosa/AFP/Getty Images Attendees cheer for US Representa­tive Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) as she speaks during a ‘commit to caucus’ Trump Iowa event at the Hidden Tower wedding venue in Keokuk, Iowa on 4 January. Photograph:
 ?? Iowa. Composite: Guardian Design/Getty Images ?? A voter marks his ballot at a polling place in Dennis Wilkening’s shed on 3 November 2020 in Richland,
Iowa. Composite: Guardian Design/Getty Images A voter marks his ballot at a polling place in Dennis Wilkening’s shed on 3 November 2020 in Richland,

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