We've seen lots of stories about how Democrats should seek and can win the rural vote in the past few weeks (see earlier posts here and here, along with late 2021 post), and a big one appeared a few days ago. It's from Morning Consult titled, "The Culture War Has Democrats Facing Electoral Demise in Rural America. Can They Stop the Bleeding?" The piece by Eli Yokley leads with these data points, which are sobering for the Democrats:
- 65% of rural voters view the Democratic Party unfavorably — including 48% who do so strongly.
- Among 21 issues tested, a rural voter’s desire for candidates to support securing the U.S.-Mexico border had the strongest correlation with negative views about the Democratic Party.
- Only 23% of rural voters say the Democratic Party “cares more about my community” than the GOP.
These are drawn from the results of Morning Consult's mid-January survey of 1,525 self-identified rural voters. This bit of the story explains why rural voters remain so important:
The Democratic Party’s attrition in America’s shrinking yet politically powerful rural communities was obscured during Donald Trump’s presidency, with the GOP’s suburban decline ultimately helping deliver Democrats a governing trifecta in Washington despite state-level losses.
But Democrats may no longer be able to rely on the suburbs given President Joe Biden’s mounting struggles that threaten to again highlight his party’s weaknesses in rural communities, where new Morning Consult research reveals culture-driven displeasure with the party in power. Some prominent Democrats believe an immediate course correction is required for the party to avoid perhaps decades in the political wilderness.
“The root issue is that rural voters are worth more in both the Senate and the Electoral College,” said Democratic data scientist David Shor, a 2012 campaign guru for President Barack Obama who has spent years warning his party that it faces extinction in the country’s more remote areas. “Either Democrats make these adjustments and do better with working-class voters, or they get locked out of the federal government for a very long time.”
This piece in The Hill by Hannah Trudo does not focus on rural voters only, but rather on Democrat messaging. Same regarding this piece from Politico. Jeff Greenfield offers his opinion under the headline, "Democrats are Losing the Culture War. A Messaging Shift Won't Change Them." This piece by Stanley Greenberg, the famed Democratic pollster, focuses on cross-racial coalition building among working-class voters.
Meanwhile, back specifically on the rural front, I follow U.S. Senator Jon Tester (D-Montana) on Twitter, and it strikes me that he does a brilliant job of reaching his rural constituents using social media. I'm pasting screenshots of some of his recent tweets below, where he has been touring Montana cities and towns, from mid-sized ones like those in the Flathead/Kalispell region and small ones like Havre, on the so-called Hi-Line, which is the strip along the Canadian border. I like the respectful way he listens to and communicates with his constituents--and the way in which he lets them know what he's doing for them. The recent infrastructure bill has given him lots of opportunities to talk specifics with particular communities. All of these screenshots were taken on February 23 and 24, which shows just how busy Tester stays when he goes home to Montana.
February 26, 2022 |
February 26, 2022 |
February 26, 2022 |
February 26, 2022 |
1 comment:
Post a Comment