Iowa
Related: About this forumFarmers Sticking By Trump Even As Trade Wars Bite
Farmer Luke Ulrich says he works at least 12 hours a day, almost every day, tending his crops and cattle near Baldwin City, Kan. Ulrich anticipates a fairly decent corn and soybean crop this year. But his expenses are so high, and the prices he's getting for his crops and cattle are so low, he's budgeting less than $25,000 in income for the whole year. "We more or less live off my wife's income," says Ulrich, looking up from the combine he's fixing. "She carries the benefits. If it wasn't for her we'd probably be sunk."
"I'd probably be lying if I said some of us aren't scratching our heads every once in a while," Ulrich says. "I sometimes wonder if [Trump] didn't bite off a little more than he could chew."
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John Herath, the news director at Farm Journal, polls more than a thousand farmers monthly. He says Trump's popularity slumped a bit in the summer, but bounced back, to 76% favorable, the week the House launched its impeachment inquiry. "You see everyone circling their wagons now and the farm community is no different in that," Herath says.
And politics are deeply personal these days, according to Chris Larimer, a political science professor at the University of Northern Iowa. Larimer says farmers are having to square their economic differences with Trump, with their partisan allegiance to him.
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For now, political ideology seems to be winning. While there's a lot of grumbling about Trump among farmers, neither the trade wars nor the impeachment investigations seem to be driving them away from him, yet.
https://www.npr.org/sections/thesalt/2019/10/10/768635489/farmers-sticking-by-trump-even-as-trade-wars-bite
dlk
(12,365 posts)This is definitely a personality disorder that belongs in the DSM.
LakeArenal
(29,799 posts)Trump wants to make that more expensive to everyone too.
RainCaster
(11,543 posts)walkingman
(8,335 posts)kurtcagle
(2,308 posts)I think there are two factors at play here. First, farmers are not going to tell pollsters or news media that they don't support Trump, because they are nervous about being ostracized by their neighbors. Second, an income of $25K is poverty level for a farmer - you're not even covering your expenses at that point. That means that his wife is probably more than a little perturbed that she's become the family bread-winner. If things get worse into next year, his wife may very well decide enough is enough, and leave the idiot. He'll still follow Trump come hell or high water, but I suspect there are a lot of farm women who supported Trump who will be voting Democratic or not at all.