Biden farms for crucial votes in Trump Country
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[October 30, 2020]
By P.J. Huffstutter and Tom Polansek
(Reuters) - By planting a sign in early
October supporting Joe Biden on a country road near her Minnesota dairy
farm, Meg Stuedemann initially stood out from her neighbors.
The 54-year-old, who runs Derrydale Farm in Belle Plaine with her
husband, supports the former vice president, a Democrat, for president
because of his pledges to combat climate change and promote renewable
energy.
Signs for Biden's Republican rival, President Donald Trump, still
prevail in their part of rural south-central Minnesota. But as the Nov.
3 Election Day nears, more Biden signs have cropped up, Stuedemann said,
dotting the countryside with blue.
"Out here, you feel like you're alone in supporting Biden," said
Stuedemann, who doesn't recall seeing a single sign for Democratic
candidate Hillary Clinton four years ago. "But then you look around and
begin to realize, you're not. Each sign you see, you sit up a little
straighter and think, 'Maybe things are going to change.'"
Biden's campaign is making inroads in rural America, striving to peel
off voters in conservative communities that went heavily for Trump in
2016 over Clinton. That's one reason the former vice president is
stumping in Iowa and Wisconsin on Friday, and in Pennsylvania and
Georgia in the precious last days of the race.
Although Biden is unlikely to capture majorities of rural voters, who
surveys show strongly favor Trump, his campaign sees cutting into the
president's margins as essential in battleground states where the
candidates are polling even or are separated by single digits.
"You cannot win the presidential race if you ignore rural voters," Tom
Vilsack, a former Iowa governor and U.S. agriculture secretary who is
campaigning for Biden, told Reuters.
Trump's campaign is seeking to energize these and other voters in his
base, touching down this week in Wisconsin and Pennsylvania, where he
narrowly won in 2016, and visiting Iowa earlier in the month.
"We've had a permanent presence in key states around the country for
years that has allowed us and the president to connect with rural voters
on a personal level about the issues that matter," Samantha Zager,
deputy national press secretary for the Trump campaign, said in a
statement.
"As a result, the Trump campaign is confident that we'll win with rural
Americans, and we're not ceding any ground because we know Biden's
failed record on trade and his plans to destroy rural access to health
care would disproportionately hurt these hardworking families."
Polls point to some openings for Democrats. A recent Reuters/Ipsos poll,
for instance, reveals that the number of rural Americans who believe the
country is headed in the "right direction" dropped from 41% in March to
less than a third in mid-October.
In 2016, Clinton's campaign largely surrendered farm-state voters to
Republicans, helping to fuel Trump's White House win, as well as sweeps
of the House and Senate. Biden's team is determined not to make the same
mistake.
In Iowa and Wisconsin - where Trump beat Clinton in 2016 by nearly 10
percentage points and less than 1 point, respectively - Biden's campaign
has touted his support for corn-based biofuels for weeks on rural radio
and local television stations. [L1N29B1Q9]
Biofuel plants are an important source of demand for farmers' corn, used
to make ethanol. Trump's Environmental Protection Agency has angered
growers by exempting oil refiners from requirements to add ethanol to
their gasoline.
When the cash-strapped Trump campaign canceled millions of dollars in TV
advertisements in Iowa last month, the Biden campaign snapped up those
spots, according to Biden’s advisers. Among their goals: to reach
farmers spending long days inside their combines as they harvest their
corn and soybeans.
And as former President Barack Obama's campaign did in 2008, the Biden
campaign set up rural councils in six battleground states, dedicating
staff to work on rural messaging and voter outreach. By reviving the
councils abandoned by the Clinton campaign, Democrats hope to be
competitive in legislative and local races as well as the presidential
contest.
CRACKS IN THE FORTRESS
Rural America remains Trump country. Nationally, voters who identify as
living in rural areas support Trump over Biden by 19 percentage points,
up from a 14-point advantage in March, according to Reuters/Ipsos polls.
Perhaps bolstering that lead was China's move, following an interim
trade deal with Washington in January, to increase soy and corn
purchases this summer and fall. Commodity prices rose to multi-year
highs and brought some financial relief to the Midwest.
That was reassuring news to some rural Republicans, who had been rankled
by Trump's trade war with China, which cost U.S. grain farmers billions
of dollars in lost sales. Other farmers have never wavered in their
support for their president's policies, including the trade war, touting
their views in coffee shops, on Twitter and with flags on their trucks
and tractors.
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Organic farmer Meg Stuedemann poses for a portrait with her sign
supporting Democratic U.S. presidential nominee and former Vice
President Joe Biden and his running mate Senator Kamala Harris on
her organic farm in Belle Plaine, Minnesota, U.S., October 24, 2020.
Picture taken October 24, 2020. REUTERS/Bing Guan
"China was taking advantage of us forever," said Gary Vetter,60, who
raises cattle and grows corn, soybeans and alfalfa in Westside,
Iowa. "At least (Trump) is active and trying to do something."
But there are cracks in Trump's rural fortress, especially in areas
hit hard by the coronavirus.
In Wisconsin, for instance, where hundreds of people have been
recently hospitalized, Trump's lead among rural voters shrank to 2
points in polls conducted Oct. 20-26, from nine points a month
earlier, according to the Reuters/Ipsos polls.
In agrarian Winneshiek County, Iowa, where Trump beat Clinton by
just 90 votes in 2016, Democrats have become the largest bloc of
active registered voters for the first time since at least 2000,
said Nathan Thompson, chairman of the Winneshiek County Democrats.
Ahead of the 2016 election, Republicans and voters with no
affiliation each outnumbered Democrats.
Voters are focused on healthcare and the pandemic, Thompson said.
In a bad sign for the Trump campaign, rural voters appear less
inspired to cast ballots this year: According to the Oct. 14-20
Reuters/Ipsos data, 60% of them say they are "certain" to vote, down
six points from a similar poll in late September and early October.
UNLIKELY BATTLEGROUND
Republican leaders and many Democrats had assumed Iowa would be an
easy win for Trump. But a recent poll by Quinnipiac University shows
Trump and Biden running nearly even, with 47% and 46% of the vote
respectively.
Particularly in this top corn-growing state, farmers have fumed as
the Trump administration repeatedly granted oil refiners waivers
from mandates requiring them to use biofuels, saying that lowers
demand and prices for their crops.
In September, Republicans said the Trump administration supported
farmers by rejecting scores of requests from oil refiners for
waivers.
But for some Biden backers, the move was too little, too late.
The waivers "actually destroyed the demand for 4 billion gallons of
ethanol, which translates in the U.S. to 1.5 billion bushels of
corn," said Pam Johnson, an Iowa farmer and former National Corn
Growers Association president who is backing Biden. "It's gone.
There's no getting it back."
Mark Mueller, chair of the Iowa Corn Growers Association's political
action committee, said some of the group's members will vote for
Trump no matter what. Others will simply sit out the 2020 election.
"There are a lot of farmers who are disgruntled with our president
and saying, 'Screw it, I'm just not going to vote,'" Mueller said.
With urban and minority voters vastly favoring Biden, more farming
families moving to Biden or sitting out the election could tip
states like Iowa in his favor.
In Minnesota, Stuedemann, the dairy farmer, said Biden is simply
"better behaved." She also supports his climate plan.
"We depend on the natural resource base and climate is a part of
that," she said. "Cows don't like it hot."
Stuedemann explained that climate affects crop disease, animal
health and animal production. She said she was "embarrassed" Trump
withdrew from the Paris Agreement, a global pact to fight climate
change. Biden said he will recommit to the accord.
Supporting Biden can come at a price in rural areas, however.
In Ohio, soybean grower Christopher Gibbs said he and his family
were shunned by fellow-farmers after he began writing op-eds for
local newspapers criticizing Trump. Men ridiculed him at the local
diner. Gibbs, who voted for Trump in 2016, said he left the
Republican Party in part over the China trade war.
"I've had women walk up beside me and refuse to make eye contact,
because they don't want anyone to see them talking to me," Gibbs
said. "They'll say under their breath, 'Keep doing what you’re
doing,' and then quickly walk away."
(P.J. Huffstutter and Tom Polansek reported from Chicago. Additional
reporting by Chris Kahn in New York. Editing by Caroline Stauffer
and Julie Marquis)
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