Opinion Memo to the Left, If They Ever Want to Win Again: Rural America Deserves Better Than Sneering

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Several months after my unsuccessful run for Congress in 2018, I was in the waiting room of a car-repair shop in rural southwestern Virginia, when they called my name.

"Your car's ready," the fellow said. Then, "Flaccavento ... You that guy who ran for Congress?"

"That's me," I replied.

"Well," he said, "I really liked what you stand for and you seem like a good guy. But I just can't vote for a Democrat."

I understood. How could I not? I'd heard it more times than I could count.

The auto repair guy was like so many people I'd met during my campaign across Virginia's 9th Congressional district, and for that matter, whom I've come to know during my 40 years in the region. He was white. His hands got dirty at work. He didn't trust Democrats anymore. But he was not in a rage.

Is "white rural rage" a real thing? It surely is. But unlike the caricature being peddled by the authors of a just-released book by that name, it is only slightly more prevalent among rural whites than among white Americans in cities and suburbs. Millions of people in our country are pissed off, fed up with a system they believe to be rigged, racially resentful, and as a result of all that, in thrall with people like Trump. An alarmingly large subset of these folks say that violence might be necessary to "save" our nation. But these folks are not just in rural areas, and for that matter, they're not all white.

In 2020, eight out of 10 Trump voters were in cities or suburbs. 80 percent! The country's 11 biggest cities alone provided more Trump votes than all of rural America. Meanwhile, among the people who stormed the Capitol on January 6, just 12 percent were from rural places. That compares with a rural population of nearly 18 percent. In other words, rural folks were significantly under-represented on January 6.

In their 2021 and 2022 surveys of more than 10,000 rural people, The Rural Voter authors Dan Shea and Nick Jacobs identified a type of person who fit the mold presented by the "white rural rage" peddlers: Angry, vitriolic, obsessed with politics, raising a stink at public meetings and social media alike. In a word, scary. But these "rabble rousers" as Shea and Jacobs called them were the exception to the rule, only about 10 percent of all rural respondents.

The white rural rage narrative claims that, whatever the struggles rural people might face, their rage and their support for Trump has little to do with economics; it's all about racism. Yet those of us who actually live and work in rural communities know that racism and resentment among many rural people are not one in the same. Rather, as Kathy Cramer concludes in The Politics of Resentment, a deep study of mostly white rural Wisconsin residents," Racism is a part in this resentment, but we are failing to fully understand these perspectives when we assume that racism is more fundamental than calculations of injustice. The two elements are intertwined. The way these folks described the world to me, their basic concern was that people like them, in places like theirs, were overlooked and disrespected."

These "calculations of injustice" are the heart of the matter. And this is where organizations like the Rural Urban Bridge Initiative, of which I am a co-founder, focus our work. Our starting point is the reality that rural communities and small towns have been disproportionately hurt by low wages, extractive industries, investor-driven trade policies and an economic system that sucks wealth up rather than trickling it down.

Many folks characterize rural America as being "left behind", but that's misleading. We still raise the food, fiber, and materials people in towns, cities and suburbs use every day; still extract or harness the energy that powers millions of homes; still build, fix, and ship many of the things that make modern life comfortable for so many; and like our urban and suburban neighbors, teach our kids, tend to our sick, and govern our towns and counties.

We just get paid less for all of that, often much less.

And we get less public investment, in absolute terms and per capita, for building our economies and maintaining essential infrastructure. More than being "left behind" we've been taken for granted and worn down. That's where the calculations of injustice come from, and not just among white people: 41 percent of Latinos voted for Trump in 2020 and his support among working class voters of color is climbing.

Where have the liberal pundits, the Nobel laureate economists, and much of the Democratic Party establishment been through these four decades of decline? Sometimes driving the policies that made it happen, as when Bill Clinton championed NAFTA and other devastating trade deals. Other times as more passive enablers, including the Obama administration's hands-off approach to mergers and corporate concentration. And all-too-frequently, as glib commentators dismissing rural frustrations as nothing more than the last pangs of white privilege.

The issue is not whether Democrats show up every election cycle dressed in Carhardts, as one of the proponents of the white rural rage thesis has put it. It is whether or not we're there the other 23 months of the year, pushing for the policies, investment, and local actions that we know build prosperity.

The good news is that a growing number of people on the Left are coming to understand this, to see that hundreds of small towns and rural communities are bootstrapping their way to new and better economies, more sustainable farms and food systems, more effective ways to treat addiction and deliver health care. This is happening in rural areas with substantial populations of Black, Latino and indigenous populations as well as those that are predominantly white.

If we want to restore our democracy and diminish the appeal of Trump, nurturing this work to rebuild rural and small town America is one of the most important things liberals and progressives can do. As Alan Minksy, director of Progressive Democrats of America put it to me, "This has to be a priority for us, both because it's the right thing to do and because it is essential if we want to win politically."

That's one path we can take, one that shows real potential to build a racially and geographically diverse political movement that can build a fairer, better country for all.

The other path is to continue writing off tens of millions of rural Americans as deplorable racists, unwilling to help themselves. We know without a doubt where that road takes us.

 
I remember stories from the 2016 election, Hillary was more than happy to ignore traditionally Democratic voting areas of the country because they were mostly white and rural. Her pedo husband told her that was a mistake. She ignored him and listened to the trannies who ran her campaign instead of the man who had been elected twice.

They will never learn.
 
I remember stories from the 2016 election, Hillary was more than happy to ignore traditionally Democratic voting areas of the country because they were mostly white and rural. Her pedo husband told her that was a mistake. She ignored him and listened to the trannies who ran her campaign instead of the man who had been elected twice.

They will never learn.
Kept going back to California and New York again and again and again because she was addicted to the cheering "right side of history" crowds, ignored everything in-between......
 
Believe it or not, there used to be a time when Democrats were strongly against illegal immigration and wanted a secure border because those illegals were taking away blue collar jobs from Americans.
It really is crazy, scary might be a better word, how short people’s memories are, because this was true at least as recently as W’s reign. I remember the Dems blocking his nominee for Labor Secretary because it was revealed by them that she’d employed an “illegal alien”, (that’s what they called them back then), as a housekeeper. Of course, nowadays W’s a “good guy” and Dick Cheney’s daughter is stunning and brave. More examples of the American Public’s memory issues. Maybe having an Alzheimer’s patient as President IS representative Govt after all?
 
I don't live in the middle of nowhere and I support Trump. I'm too poor to vote for a Republican and too straight white and male to vote for a Democrat. Trump changed all that. I registered as a Republican in 2004. But living through the Bush administration made me realize I'm not a Republican. I can't be. I don't make 100,000 a year. But I can't vote for a Democrat because they hate white straight males. Other than Trump I don't have anyone I can vote for.
 
It's fucking depressing. I think of myself as a liberal: Unions have their place, universal healthcare can work, and big socialized projects like the US interstate system aren't necessarily evil.

But apparently I'm fucking Hitler because I think blacks should be able to read and write, and immigration should not be run by a retarded Jew.

Fucking Overton window. Shit it.
 
Exactly the same happened with brexit. The remain campaign should have focused on how much EU funding poorer UK areas get. ‘Hey, former mining area! Did you know that new leisure centre was built with EU cash?’ But no. They ran a completely negative campaign calling people white racist bigoted idiots.
The sheer astonishment when we voted leave. It was glorious. I had people crying, telling me it had to be fixed because nobody in my Facebook voted for it! I said exactly the same thing to each of them - ‘oh that’s odd. I had a mix in people I know. Strange how everyone you know thinks the same thing…’ one or two started to have a brief moment of awareness, and then the sh reaching started again.
Negative campaigning works against your opponents, not your voters
 
It's fucking depressing. I think of myself as a liberal: Unions have their place, universal healthcare can work, and big socialized projects like the US interstate system aren't necessarily evil.

But apparently I'm fucking Hitler because I think blacks should be able to read and write, and immigration should not be run by a retarded Jew.

Fucking Overton window. Shit it.
What the DNC refuses to admit to its voterbase is that you can't have open borders and universal healthcare for everyone, but they sure do give all the illegals free healthcare and welfare at the expense of Americans.
 
Show me the democrat that does not support putting men in women's prisons. The one that does not support unrestricted abortion up until the moment of birth and even then some. The one that doesn't support doctors prescribing puberty blockers or surgeries for mentally distressed minors. Or the one who doesn't support unrestricted open borders.

These aren't trivial issues you can just sweet talk away. Driving a pickup truck and saying y'all doesn't reconcile these policy differences.
 
Did I shift to a reality where rural america actually decides elections? And also isn't voting left by the usual crowd of women, "immigrants", californian expats and union members?
 
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