Democrat struggles to keep hold on
teetering Minnesota district
Send a link to a friend
[November 02, 2018]
By Ginger Gibson
CHISHOLM, Minn. (Reuters) - Minnesota's
rural northeast has sent Democrats to the U.S. Congress for all but two
of the past 71 years, but its political shift can be seen in roadside
billboards thanking Republican President Donald Trump for imposing
tariffs on imported steel.
The state's 8th District has become a rare bright spot on the map for
congressional Republicans ahead of Tuesday's elections, made rosier
thanks to the decision by three-term Democratic incumbent Rick Nolan not
to run again after winning his last election in 2016 by less than 1
percentage point.
That has left Democrat Joe Radinovich trying to hold on to the region's
miners and farmers.
Forecasts show Republican St. Louis County Commissioner Pete Stauber
with a good shot of flipping the district to the Republicans in a year
Democrats are expected to easily pick up the additional 23 House of
Representative seats they would need for a majority. Republicans,
however, are favored to hold on to the Senate.
A former police officer, Stauber is running as a moderate Republican,
focusing on promoting economic growth, supporting gun rights and
expanding mining in the District's national parks. He has broken from
his party to say he would not repeal the Affordable Care Act, former
President Barack Obama's signature healthcare program, but praised
Trump's tariffs.
"The steel dumping in this country should have been stopped decades ago.
I'm happy the Trump administration has acted," Stauber, 52, said in a
Tuesday night debate. "I know that those steel tariffs were good for the
Iron Range and the families on the Iron Range."
A New York Times/Siena College poll taken Oct. 11 to 14 showed Stauber
ahead by 15 percentage points.
IRON RANGE
Minnesota's Iron Range has all the making of "Trump Country" - a rugged,
rural region studded with iron taconite mines that feed much of the
nation's steel production. Highway billboards thank Trump for imposing
25 percent tariffs on foreign steel.
Unhappy miners - including coal and iron ore workers - were a central
piece of Trump's electoral coalition. During his 2016 presidential
campaign, Trump's promises to revitalize the metals industry helped pave
the way for wins in the former industrial heartlands of Pennsylvania,
Ohio and West Virginia.
Trump failed to win Minnesota, but carried its 8th District by 15
percentage points - flipping a district that voted for Democrats in the
four previous presidential election cycles.
[to top of second column]
|
U.S. Democratic congressional candidate Dean Phillips arrives for an
Asian-American community event in Plymouth, Minnesota, U.S., October
27, 2018. Picture taken October 27, 2018. REUTERS/Brian Snyder
Brandy Fraser, 70, of Two Harbors, Minnesota, said she was raised a
Democrat but became a Republican after watching the party move to the
left.
Fraser said she liked Stauber's support of Trump's immigration platform,
including building a wall on the U.S.-Mexico border and ending
birthright citizenship.
"He's going to help do it," Fraser said.
'UNDERDOG'
Radinovich, 32, has raised $1.9 million, while Stauber had raised $1.6
million, as of Oct. 17. Super PACs and other outside groups have tipped
the balance for the Republican, pouring in about $6 million, compared
with about $670,000 by Democratic outside groups.
"They have spent enough money against me to make us the underdog in this
race," Radinovich told supporters on Tuesday night. "This isn't the
first time in my life I've been an underdog."
Democrat Hillary Clinton did strongly in parts of the Iron Range in 2016
and Radinovich aims to generate enough enthusiasm in those areas to keep
the district Democratic.
On Wednesday, two of his supporters, Cary Pershern, 40, and Dave Smith,
42, took a break from knocking on doors in Hibbing to grab lunch with
Radinovich.
Dressed in a United Steel Workers jacket, Pershern said he had faced an
uphill battle in persuading fellow miners who credit Trump for their
current economic prosperity.
"You get both sides - people who are pro-Trump and think he did
everything single-handedly, you also have people who know that these
tariffs that are being put in are against the wrong countries," he said.
(Reporting by Ginger Gibson; Editing by Scott Malone and Peter Cooney)
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |