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Montana

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(49,454 posts)
Wed Sep 16, 2020, 12:22 PM Sep 2020

Jon Tester Wants Democrats to Fight for Rural America [View all]

Cross posting form GD: https://www.democraticunderground.com/100214082211

Sen. Jon Tester has bragging rights. The Montana Democrat not only runs his own organic farm but also sports what may well be the Senate’s cheapest haircut (his trademark flat-top costs $11, including tip). A childhood accident with a meat grinder took three of his fingers, but he can still play a decent trumpet and is unexpectedly agile with a basketball. More impressively, Mr. Tester, 64, kept his seat in 2018 in a state that President Trump won two years earlier by 20 points—even though the president railed against Mr. Tester on Twitter (“Very dishonest and sick!”) and stumped for the senator’s rival in a record four trips to the state before the election. In a tough year for Senate Democrats, Mr. Tester won by four points, having swayed not only Democrats but also most independents and 7% of Republicans.

Montana, a huge, sparsely populated, largely rural state, nurses a populist mistrust of big government, which makes voters partial to straight-shooting politicians with deep local roots and a knack for listening. Montanans have elected Republicans in nearly every presidential election since the 1960s, but they have chosen Democrats in the past four gubernatorial races and in five of the past six U.S. Senate campaigns.

(snip)

In his new book, “Grounded: A Senator’s Lessons on Winning Back Rural America,” Mr. Tester argues that more Democrats should try to learn from his successes, instead of ceding the country’s prairies and exurbs to Republicans. “I don’t think we’ve done a good enough job talking about our vision for rural America,” he says of his party. “To listen, you have to show up, and oftentimes we don’t go to places where we think we’ll get an opinion that we may not want to hear.” Visiting the Iowa State Fair once every four years doesn’t cut it, he says.

Nor does paying attention only to swing states. By clinging mainly to cities and coasts, Democrats not only alienate valuable voters, Mr. Tester warns, but also fail to grasp that many rural Americans care deeply about progressive issues such as affordable education and accessible health care. “The interests of rural Americans line up much more with Democrats than they do with Republicans, but they’re better at messaging,” he says. This is partly why he believes Montana will go for Mr. Trump again in November. “He talks to farmers, he talks to rural America,” Mr. Tester says. “He’s the only game in town.”

He is a Democrat, he says, mainly because his family would have lost the farm had it not been for the New Deal policies of President Franklin Roosevelt. Like many Montanans, he shoots guns, but he has voted to expand background checks for gun-buyers and condemns the National Rifle Association’s “stubborn zero-tolerance policy for common sense.” Although Mr. Tester began his political career opposed to abortion and same-sex marriage, his views on both issues have become more libertarian. When his own son came out as gay, “it opened my eyes,” the senator says.

(snip)

For Democrats looking to make inroads in rural America, Mr. Tester notes that health care was Montana’s “number-one issue” during the 2018 election. Back in 2012, the Affordable Care Act, which he supports, was a political liability for him to overcome. Now, his constituents, many of whom are elderly or have pre-existing conditions, are suddenly worried that federal efforts to undermine the act will compromise their access to health care. Such fears have only sharpened during the pandemic, when many people have lost their jobs and their employer-sponsored health insurance. Rural hospitals, such as the one in the town of Big Sandy, near Mr. Tester’s farm, are also losing too much money to stay open. “When you lose your hospital or your bank or your school, you’ve got nothing. Nobody’s going to live there,” he says.

More..

https://www.wsj.com/articles/jon-tester-wants-democrats-to-fight-for-rural-america-11599839845 (subscription)

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