In God We Trust - Established 2008
(606) 638-0123606-624-9019 markgrayson@me.com
In God We Trust - Established 2008
  • News
    • Regional News
    • Announcements
    • Recollections
  • Sports News
    • Big Sandy Sportsman
  • Lifestyles
  • Courthouse
  • Obituaries
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Regional News
    • Announcements
    • Recollections
  • Sports News
    • Big Sandy Sportsman
  • Lifestyles
  • Courthouse
  • Obituaries
No Result
View All Result
TheLevisaLazer.com
No Result
View All Result
Advertisement
LADY BULLDOGS LOOK TO PICK UP THE PACE THIS SEASON; OPENER NEXT TUESDAY POPULAR 19 YEAR-OLD WOMAN FROM KERMIT AREA DIES IN CRASH WITH COAL TRUCK Lawrence Co. Cheer headed to Disney in February; 15th Region Runner-Up PAIR OF LCHS STUDENTS CHOSEN FOR ALL-STATE CHOIR Lawrence Co. local government offices will be **closed** on Thursday and Friday
Three Rivers HH digital ad-AAd-bannerfuneral1leader1joe_young_banneer
Levisa-Lazer-Banner-Ad-copyFoothills-Bundle
Home Content World News Today

WHY SO MANY LONGTIME BLUE RURAL MIDWESTERN COUNTIES VOTED FOR TRUMP

Admin by Admin
January 20, 2017
in World News Today
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

 

(FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 2017) Trempealeau County, Wisconsin home to 29,000, is a perfect example of how Donald Trump’s surprise presidential election was fueled by rural residents, Jenna Johnson reports for The Washington Post. The largely white summer tourist hub with a low unemployment rate has long voted blue—President Obama earned 56 percent of the vote in 2012 and 60 percent in 2008—but Trump won in November with 53 percent.

“The same flip happened in 50 other Midwestern counties clustered in western Wisconsin, southern Minnesota, eastern Iowa and northwest Illinois,” Johnson writes. In the village of Trempealeau, “die-hard Democrats are still trying to figure out which of their roughly 1,600 neighbors were the 482 people who voted for Trump. Several lifelong Republicans say they voted for him, often reluctantly, but they didn’t expect him to win.” Residents at a local bar, who were politically divided, “agreed that it will take at least another presidential election to see if this was a fluke or a lasting shift.”

Kurt Wood, who has been Trempealeau village president since 1993 and voted for Clinton, told Johnson, “I just think that people were not feeling the greatest about the direction of the country and thought: ‘Oh well, I’m just going to throw my vote to somebody that I think will change things.’ Still, with the idea: ‘Well, he wasn’t going to win.’ I think, in all honesty, people already realize what a mistake they made.”

Johnson writes, “The unemployment rate in Trempealeau County was 3 percent late last year, one of the lowest rates in the state. What’s missing are the higher-paying jobs for more-skilled workers, several residents said, and many feel as if their salaries or retirement savings haven’t kept up with their expenses, especially for health care. Trempealeau County is 97 percent white, but a growing number of Latinos have moved to the area for manufacturing and agriculture jobs.”

Clinton, who didn’t make a single visit to Wisconsin, was not popular in Trempealeau County, leading many Democrats to avoid voting for her, Johnson writes. Republican Treig Pronschinske, a technical-college graduate who worked in construction and unseated the Democratic state Assemblyman from the area, told Johnson of the Trump victory, “You could feel it coming. The comments were a lot of: ‘I agree with what Trump says, but I don’t really like how he acts.’ I saw right through that. They weren’t saying they wouldn’t vote for him. They just didn’t want to fight about it.”

Written by Tim Mandell
Posted at 1/20/2017 10:24:00 AM

ShareTweetPinShareScanSend
Next Post
Dora Lynn Wilks, 55, of Diamond Ridge Webbville, KY

Dora Lynn Wilks, 55, of Diamond Ridge Webbville, KY

   TheLevisaLazer.Com   
TheLevisaLazer.com

In God We Trust - Established 2008

Follow Us

Quick Links

  • News
  • Lifestyles
  • Stay Ahead with Lazer Sports News
  • Education
  • Obituaries
  • About Us
  • Business & Politics News
  • Addiction & Recovery

Quick Links

  • Courthouse
  • Top Recollections News – The Levisa Lazer
  • Big Sandy Sportsman
  • Lazer ad prices and sizes
  • Editorials
  • Lazer announcments, bids and notices
  • Health News

Recent News

LADY BULLDOGS LOOK TO PICK UP THE PACE THIS SEASON; OPENER NEXT TUESDAY

LADY BULLDOGS LOOK TO PICK UP THE PACE THIS SEASON; OPENER NEXT TUESDAY

November 29, 2024

© 2024 thelevisalazer.com, All Rights Reserved. Designed and Managing by BizNex Web.

No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Stay Ahead with Lazer Sports News
  • Lifestyles
  • Courthouse
  • Top Recollections News – The Levisa Lazer
  • Obituaries
  • Regional News
  • Announcements

© 2024 thelevisalazer.com, All Rights Reserved. Designed and Managing by BizNex Web.