As Trump policies deepen farmers' pain, Democrats see an opening in
rural America
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[August 27, 2019]
By Tim Reid and Joseph Ax
(Reuters) - Seizing on mounting Farm Belt
frustration with President Donald Trump's economic agenda, Democratic
rivals are stepping up their push to take back part of rural America,
whose overwhelming support for Trump helped propel his upset 2016
election victory.
The sparsely populated U.S. heartland has remained loyal to the
Republican president even as farmers from Iowa to Wisconsin to
Pennsylvania bear the brunt of his tariff war with China. His advisers
insist Trump's projection of toughness against China will only delight,
not alienate, his base.
Democrats seeking to face Trump in the November 2020 election challenge
that presumption, pointing to farmers reeling from plunging prices and
unsold crops during what is now more than a year-long trade war with
China. Farmers and ethanol producers are also upset with the
administration's latest decision to allow more oil refiners to skirt
biofuel laws and use less corn-based ethanol.
From front-runner Joe Biden to U.S. Senators Elizabeth Warren and Amy
Klobuchar, many of the more than 20 Democratic presidential candidates
have highlighted the economic damage caused by Trump's trade war and
biofuel waivers as the central plank of their pitches to rural America.
At various campaign stops in Iowa since June, Biden has said the trade
war was "crushing" American farmers. “How many farmers across this
state, across this nation, have to face the prospect of losing
everything, losing their farm because of these tariffs?” Biden said in
Warren County, Iowa, last week.
Biden's aides say he will make campaigning in rural areas a top
priority.
"Vice President Biden will work to expand the market for ethanol and the
next generation of biofuels, and will re-engage allies to negotiate
trade that benefits American farmers and other workers," TJ Ducklo, a
Biden spokesman, told Reuters.
In recent weeks, several other candidates, including Warren and Mayor
Pete Buttigieg of South Bend, Indiana, have rushed to roll out plans for
rural America, touching on everything from farm subsidies to rural
healthcare and broadband.
They have already been campaigning heavily in rural Iowa, the state that
kicks off the party’s nominating contest in February and is the largest
producer of corn and ethanol.
In the past, Democratic candidates often just paid lip service to rural
voters, said former U.S. Senator Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota, who
founded the One Country Project to help Democrats broaden their rural
appeal after she lost her re-election bid last year.
This year is different, she said in an interview.
“There’s an appreciation that we can’t continue to fail at the rate
we’re failing in rural America and be successful in presidential races
and Senate races," Heitkamp said.
She added: “We’re getting helped a lot by the president in this regard."
Roger Johnson, president of the National Farmers Union, said in a
statement last Friday: "Between burning bridges with all of our biggest
trading partners and undermining our domestic biofuels industry,
President Trump is making things worse, not better."
UPHILL BATTLE
Many rural voters helped former Democratic President Barack Obama win
the White House in 2008 and 2012. But they supported Trump over Democrat
Hillary Clinton in 2016 by more than 30 percentage points.
Next year is again expected to be an uphill battle for Democrats.
Officials worry the party's increasingly liberal direction on
immigration and other Trump-driven hot-button issues is socially and
culturally at odds with rural voters.
According to the latest Reuters/Ipsos poll conducted this month, five in
10 U.S. adults in rural areas approved of Trump's performance in office,
higher than his 41% approval nationwide.
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2020 Democratic U.S. presidential candidate and U.S. Senator Amy
Klobuchar (D-MN) speaks at the Iowa State Fair in Des Moines, Iowa,
U.S., August 10, 2019. REUTERS/Brian Snyder/File Photo
Tim Murtaugh, the Trump campaign’s communications director, said
farmers know the trade war is a "fight worth winning."
“Farmers are patriots ... and they know the long-term benefits are
going to be worth it for themselves and this nation," Murtaugh said.
The White House also unveiled a $16 billion aid package in July to
help farmers hurt by the trade war and bad weather.
But Democrats point to last year's congressional elections, where
the party increased its share of the vote from 2016 in at least 54
districts with large rural populations, as a sign that Trump's grip
on rural America may be loosening.
Even a small erosion in Trump’s support among rural voters could
make a difference in battleground states like Pennsylvania,
Wisconsin and Michigan, where Trump won by razor-thin margins in
2016, Democratic strategists say.
Trump won by a combined total of just 77,000 votes in the three
states.
Priorities USA, the largest Democratic Super PAC, is spending
hundreds of thousands of dollars a week to run digital ads in those
states as well as in Florida, aimed at tying Trump’s policies to
economic difficulties that many working-class people face.
'FOLDED TO BIG OIL'
A round of more bad news for farmers last week, including extra
tariffs Beijing announced on soybeans and other key U.S.
agricultural exports, gave Democrats a fresh opening to attack
Trump. [nL4N25J3C3]
After Reuters reported this month that Trump gave regulators the
green light to grant exemptions to more than 30 small refineries so
they can use less ethanol, Democratic candidates pounced on it as
evidence Trump favors the oil industry. [L2N255189]
Klobuchar, the Minnesota lawmaker who has centered her campaign
narrative on her ability to win over rural Midwestern voters, said
that if elected, she would block pending refinery waiver
applications and look to reverse any approved.
“He folded to Big Oil,” she told reporters on Thursday.
Murtaugh, the Trump campaign spokesman, rejected the accusation,
saying the president was concerned about some “small” refineries not
being able to cope with costly standards.
“As president, he must look out for the economic interests of
everyone involved,” he said.
The backlash from agricultural and biofuel trade groups has been
particularly strong in Iowa, a swing state won twice by Obama but
that Trump carried in 2016.
“Democrats have crisscrossed Iowa. They are speaking to ethanol
producers who have idled plants and talking to workers who are
losing their jobs," said Patty Judge, a former Democratic lieutenant
governor in Iowa and current chair of the Focus on Rural America,
which advocates progressive economic policies in rural areas.
"This is an opportunity for Democrats to win back the heartland and
the White House."
(Reporting by Tim Reid in Los Angeles and Joseph Ax in New York;
Additional reporting by Jarrett Renshaw and Chris Kahn in New York;
Editing by Soyoung Kim and Peter Cooney)
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