The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Dems swarm industrial Iowa to prove they can beat Trump

- By Alexandra Jaffe and Thomas Beaumont

MOUNT PLEASANT, IOWA » Since their surprise loss to Donald Trump in 2016, Democrats have struggled with how to regain territory that long supported the party before suddenly flipping to Republican­s. Their answer could lie with voters like Martie Boyd.

The 71-year-old retired insurance worker is a lifelong Republican who supported Trump for president in 2016 but says she won’t do it again. Even better for Democrats, she lives in Danville, a tiny town in Des Moines County, one of 31 Iowa counties that backed Barack Obama in 2012 before switching to Trump.

“I wish I hadn’t wasted my vote,” Boyd said Tuesday after watching Pete Buttigieg speak at Iowa Wesleyan University. “Not this time. I’m definitely caucusing for a Democrat and voting for one in the fall.”

As Buttigieg campaigned throughout this swath of southeast Iowa, voters like Boyd were at the front of his mind.

He and his fellow Democratic candidates are hoping to lure them not just to win the upcoming Iowa caucuses but to prove to voters in the states that follow that they have the unique ability to win in places that shifted from the Democrat Obama to the Republican Trump.

“I’m not only meeting fellow Democrats who have been working hard for that day here, but independen­ts who can’t wait for that day and an awful lot of what I like to call future former Republican­s who are more than welcome to join us,” Buttigieg said at Iowa Wesleyan.

Iowa is home to more counties that pivoted from Obama to Trump than any other state. And over the past month alone, White House hopefuls have made more than a dozen stops in these counties to prove they’re serious about defeating Trump.

“The No. 1 issue on caucus-goers’ minds is who is the best candidate to take on Trump, and campaignin­g in these counties that switched from Obama to Trump is a good way to show that you’re that candidate,” said Jeff Link, who advised Obama’s successful 2008 Iowa campaign.

The vast majority of these counties are in eastern Iowa and follow a pattern concentrat­ed throughout the upper Midwest, including southeast Minnesota, southwest Wisconsin and northwest Illinois. These regions cover either once-thriving industrial river counties or those whose economies fed and depended on them.

In Iowa, they hug the Mississipp­i River beginning north of Dubuque County and wind southward to include once-robust industrial river hubs where the big equipment manufactur­ing that fueled the economy has dwindled with the population.

The ensuing anxiety has been a major driver of the partisan shift, according to Norm Sterzenbac­h, a veteran Iowa strategist who is advising Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar’s campaign in the state.

“There’s a changing of demographi­cs in some of these counties, there’s a decline in population, there’s a loss in the manufactur­ing sector, the growing income disparity between blue-collar workers and CEOs and executives — so a number of those things led to voters feeling frustrated and wanting change,” he said.

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