A Democratic stronghold in Minnesota is shifting to support President Donald Trump, according to some voters there.
“We’re two brothers who are staunch union Democrats for years and they’re not anymore,” Jeff Foreseen, a resident of Mountain Iron, told CNN.
The area is heavily involved in mining taconite, a mineral used in making steel.
Eveleth Mayor Robert Vlaisavljevich said that thousands of people are switching from supporting Democrats to supporting Trump.
He himself votes Democrat in state races but is openly supportive of Trump.
“Economics. He’s our guy. He supports mining, he’s our guy,” Vlaisavljecivh said.
Voters told CNN they support Trump’s tariffs on imported steel, his easing of environmental laws, and his crackdown on illegal immigration.
Melissa Axelson, an Eveleth resident whose husband works for a mining company, said that Democrats have changed over her lifetime.
“Conservative candidates seem to be more for the working person,” she said.
“The Democrats kind of shifted more to the left and the Republicans are kinda taking over the party for jobs,” said Mik Volker, another Eveleth resident.
Cindy Forseen of Mountain Iron said rural areas in the state could help Trump flip Minnesota red and Cindy Rugeley, associate professor of political science at the University of Minnesota, Duluth, told CNN: “I don’t think by any means this is a lockdown Democratic state and it used to be.”
The trend towards rural areas supporting conservatives has happened in conjunction with some suburban areas flipping blue, as highlighted in “Why Cities Lose: The Deep Roots of the Urban-Rural Political Divide.”
The book’s author, Jonathan Rodden, argues that the left-right political dichotomy has shifted to an urban-rural divide that’s seen most of the large cities in the United States exclusively vote for Democratic city, state, and national candidates and rural areas do the same for Republicans.
“I think there’s more Trump supporters,” 31-year-old Casie Steeves said. “I have a lot of friends that were on the line, or even very the opposite of me, that have kind of gotten a little bit closer.”
Some expressed optimism about the midterm elections. Republicans ended up losing the majority in the House of Representatives but gained two seats in the Senate.
Trump and his campaign have spoken about winning Minnesota since last year.