Rural Rage

hobie1616

Super Anarchist
6,010
2,791
West Maui
Can Anything Be Done to Assuage Rural Rage?

Rural resentment has become a central fact of American politics — in particular, a pillar of support for the rise of right-wing extremism. As the Republican Party has moved ever further into MAGAland, it has lost votes among educated suburban voters; but this has been offset by a drastic rightward shift in rural areas, which in some places has gone so far that the Democrats who remain face intimidation and are afraid to reveal their party affiliation.

But is this shift permanent? Can anything be done to assuage rural rage?

The answer will depend on two things: whether it’s possible to improve rural lives and restore rural communities, and whether the voters in these communities will give politicians credit for any improvements that do take place.

This week my colleague Thomas B. Edsall surveyed research on the rural Republican shift. I was struck by his summary of work by Katherine J. Cramer, who attributes rural resentment to perceptions that rural areas are ignored by policymakers, don’t get their fair share of resources and are disrespected by “city folks.”

As it happens, all three perceptions are largely wrong. I’m sure that my saying this will generate a tidal wave of hate mail, and lecturing rural Americans about policy reality isn’t going to move their votes. Nonetheless, it’s important to get our facts straight.

The truth is that ever since the New Deal rural America has received special treatment from policymakers. It’s not just farm subsidies, which ballooned under Donald Trump to the point where they accounted for around 40 percent of total farm income. Rural America also benefits from special programs that support housing, utilities and business in general.

In terms of resources, major federal programs disproportionately benefit rural areas, in part because such areas have a disproportionate number of seniors receiving Social Security and Medicare. But even means-tested programs — programs that Republicans often disparage as “welfare” — tilt rural. Notably, at this point rural Americans are more likely than urban Americans to be on Medicaid and receive food stamps.

And because rural America is poorer than urban America, it pays much less per person in federal taxes, so in practice major metropolitan areas hugely subsidize the countryside. These subsidies don’t just support incomes, they support economies: Government and the so-called health care and social assistance sector each employ more people in rural America than agriculture, and what do you think pays for those jobs?

What about rural perceptions of being disrespected? Well, many people have negative views about people with different lifestyles; that’s human nature. There is, however, an unwritten rule in American politics that it’s OK for politicians to seek rural votes by insulting big cities and their residents, but it would be unforgivable for urban politicians to return the favor. “I have to go to New York City soon,” tweeted J.D. Vance during his senatorial campaign. “I have heard it’s disgusting and violent there.” Can you imagine, say, Chuck Schumer saying something similar about rural Ohio, even as a joke?

So the ostensible justifications for rural resentment don’t withstand scrutiny — but that doesn’t mean things are fine. A changing economy has increasingly favored metropolitan areas with large college-educated work forces over small towns. The rural working-age population has been declining, leaving seniors behind. Rural men in their prime working years are much more likely than their metropolitan counterparts to not be working. Rural woes are real.

Ironically, however, the policy agenda of the party most rural voters support would make things even worse, slashing the safety-net programs these voters depend on. And Democrats shouldn’t be afraid to point this out.

But can they also have a positive agenda for rural renewal? As The Washington Post’s Greg Sargent recently pointed out, the infrastructure spending bills enacted under President Biden, while primarily intended to address climate change, will also create large numbers of blue-collar jobs in rural areas and small cities. They are, in practice, a form of the “place-based industrial policy” some economists have urged to fight America’s growing geographic disparities.

Will they work? The economic forces that have been hollowing out rural America are deep and not easily countered. But it’s certainly worth trying.

But even if these policies improve rural fortunes, will Democrats get any credit? It’s easy to be cynical. Sarah Huckabee Sanders, the new governor of Arkansas, has pledged to get the “bureaucratic tyrants” of Washington “out of your wallets”; in 2019 the federal government spent almost twice as much in Arkansas as it collected in taxes, de facto providing the average Arkansas resident with $5,500 in aid. So even if Democratic policies greatly improve rural lives, will rural voters notice?

Still, anything that helps reverse rural America’s decline would be a good thing in itself. And maybe, just maybe, reducing the heartland’s economic desperation will also help reverse its political radicalization.
 

d'ranger

Super Anarchist
30,204
5,184
Kind of hard to educate people when the Tucker Carlson's of the world are working to keep them angry. Yesterday I saw that Direct TV is dropping NewsMax. Win, right? Nope another RW talking head channel is taking it's place.

Those same aholes get tons of airtime on AM radio. Propaganda is very effective as demonstrated by all those people who firmly believe so many things that aren't true. It's much easier to motivate people with hate than truth.

I have tried discussing these issues with people I know and it is a hopeless cause since they know they are right and I am wrong. The End.
 

phillysailor

Super Anarchist
9,692
4,438
I think it’s politicians, social commentators and news anchors calling them the heartland or “the soul of the nation”. Bending over backwards to afford them outsize importance in the Electoral College and the Senate.

They now feel they deserve their special farm bills and subsidies, and shouldn’t have to pay their fair share yet receive government largesse at rates that surpass the rest of their nation.

They resent the entitlements they take for granted.

We should help them feel more equal members of society by applying Republicans’ famous attitude and policies regarding welfare queens.

And make it clear we don’t want Sharia Law OR Bible-belt morals of hate and dominion.
 

Snaggletooth

SA's Morrelle Compasse
35,833
6,477
I think it’s politicians, social commentators and news anchors calling them the heartland or “the soul of the nation”. Bending over backwards to afford them outsize importance in the Electoral College and the Senate.
Issente EC juste baste on numberes and notte neccessarrilley whearre they live ruralle/urban?
 

Olsonist

Disgusting Liberal Elitist
30,980
5,274
New Oak City
Looks like a NYT pitchbot proposal.

"Ten tips to keep your abuser from hitting you today"

Yeah, that title might have been written by a headline editor. But in the article, Krugman points out that rural Karens and their Walmart parking lot cowboys don't know how good they've got it.

Jeff brings up rural 'Murica and tends to get all

1674843569204.png


I drove through the Malheur Wilderness Refuge on the way to camping to watch the eclipse back in 2017. I was stunned how good the infrastructure was, this where a bunch of gun nuts had occupied the headquarters because ... liberals. My reaction was the same as Krugman's.

Who all is paying for this stuff?
 

Steam Flyer

Sophisticated Yet Humble
48,165
11,786
Eastern NC
Addressed to whom??
Hard to tell with D'Ranger. DirectTV, I guess? Maybe the "AM Radio" folks. He's got enough outrage to go around.

Maybe so, but his outrage is based on easily observable fact. My attitude is, if you're not outraged then you're either not paying attention or you're one of the 0.1%er greedy assholes intent on stealing everything possible in this country.
 

SloopJonB

Super Anarchist
72,162
14,560
Great Wet North
I think it’s politicians, social commentators and news anchors calling them the heartland or “the soul of the nation”. Bending over backwards to afford them outsize importance in the Electoral College and the Senate.

They now feel they deserve their special farm bills and subsidies, and shouldn’t have to pay their fair share yet receive government largesse at rates that surpass the rest of their nation.

They resent the entitlements they take for granted.
1674844793895.png


There's a lot of stupid that needs fixing out there.
 

phillysailor

Super Anarchist
9,692
4,438
Issente EC juste baste on numberes and notte neccessarrilley whearre they live ruralle/urban?
If the EC reflected numbers of voters per state, then a Republican would literally never win an election again given their current agenda.

From NPR: in 2008, on average a state is awarded one electoral vote for every 565,166 people. However, Wyoming has three electoral votes and only 532,668 citizens (as of 2008 estimates). As a result each of Wyoming’s three electoral votes corresponds to 177,556 people. Understood in one way, these people have 3.18 times as much clout in the Electoral College as an average American, or 318%

More info from WP

1E907660-0B40-492B-A7F8-E24677D4257D.jpeg
 
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