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DonViejo

(60,536 posts)
Tue Jan 2, 2018, 10:14 AM Jan 2018

Iowa went big for Trump, but there are signs its voters are souring on the president

By David Weigel January 1 at 6:39 PM

DES MOINES — As Republicans celebrated their tax bill passing Congress late last month, Iowa Democrats raised a toast of their own. Candidates for Congress and governor, gathered at the annual Progress Iowa holiday party, took turns recapping a year of sinking GOP poll numbers and Democratic ­special-election wins — the “waking of a sleeping bear,” they said.

“If Trump were to run again, he’d be in deep trouble,” said Janet Petersen, the leader of Iowa’s Senate Democrats. “A dog bites you the first time, it’s not your fault. The second time it bites you, it’s your own damn fault.”

Iowa, the epicenter of the Republicans’ 2014 and 2016 surge, is not an obvious place for a Democratic comeback. Unemployment, sinking under 4 percent when Donald Trump won the state, has fallen to 3 percent. Iowa’s Republican delegation to Washington voted for the tax cut bill with no qualms or protests. Iowans can also subtract their federal income taxes from their state income taxes, a bonus enjoyed in only five other states.

Despite it all, Iowa has seemingly soured on the president and his party. The end-of-year Iowa Poll, an industry standard conducted by Des Moines-based Selzer and Co., found Trump with just 35 percent approval in the state. Only 34 percent of Iowans said they would back Republicans for Congress in 2018, and 61 percent said they were turned off by politics altogether.

The discrepancy between the rosy economic picture and the public’s distaste for Trump in Iowa has confounded both parties and complicated one of the major political stories of the decade — the Republican romp through the Midwest.

more
https://www.washingtonpost.com/powerpost/iowa-went-big-for-trump-but-there-are-signs-its-voters-are-souring-on-the-president/2018/01/01/e84cc764-e73c-11e7-833f-155031558ff4_story.html

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Iowa went big for Trump, but there are signs its voters are souring on the president (Original Post) DonViejo Jan 2018 OP
Seems to me that everywhere you looked there were giant "BEWARE OF DOG!" signs, but OK. tanyev Jan 2018 #1
Flip it blue crazycatlady Jan 2018 #2
Wait until their rural hospitals start closing dalton99a Jan 2018 #3
+1 uponit7771 Jan 2018 #4
Wait a minute. If 35% would still vote for him and 61% are turned off politics altogether ... hedda_foil Jan 2018 #5
Yeah, that set of stats worries me... Wounded Bear Jan 2018 #6

crazycatlady

(4,492 posts)
2. Flip it blue
Tue Jan 2, 2018, 10:23 AM
Jan 2018

THey also have the chance to elect what would be the youngest member of Congress-- Abby Finkenauer (b 1989). I hope she pulls a new generation of leadership.

hedda_foil

(16,372 posts)
5. Wait a minute. If 35% would still vote for him and 61% are turned off politics altogether ...
Tue Jan 2, 2018, 12:05 PM
Jan 2018

That doesn't really leave any room for Democrats, does it?

Wounded Bear

(58,647 posts)
6. Yeah, that set of stats worries me...
Tue Jan 2, 2018, 12:08 PM
Jan 2018

Repubs win when their policies are bad enough to turn people off, but not so bad as to energize the opposition.

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