Loyalty, unease in Trump's Midwest
Voters gave Trump a chance. Some remain all in. Others have grown weary of the chaos.
By Dan Balz
Photographs by Melina Mara
Video by Jordan Frasier
May 10, 2018
After eight years of displeasure with the presidency of Barack Obama and faced with a choice between Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton, Dennis Schminke of Austin, Minn., didnt have to think hard about how he would vote in 2016. A retired corporate manager, a staunch conservative and a county Republican official, he supported the New York businessman.
Since then, there has not been a day that Schminke wished that Clinton, rather than Trump, were president. But week by week, month by month, as he has watched the events of Trumps presidency, he has become increasingly conflicted and concerned about what he has seen. The turmoil, he said, has often left him feeling motion sick.
By early spring, he expressed a different sentiment. He had not fully broken, but he was no longer as emotionally invested in the president or a reconstituted Trumpian Republican Party. I find myself drawing back a bit, he said.
Schminke lives in a section of the Upper Midwest that responded enthusiastically to Trump, as a candidate and an incoming president. In this region, the Trump presidency is viewed as both reassuring and exhausting, a welcome poke in the eye at elites and the Washington power structure coupled with endless and often self-inflicted distractions. What is also apparent is that, 16 months into Trumps presidency, many voters here have recalibrated their feelings and intensity of support for the man they backed in 2016.
Across the country, most rural counties (shown in pink) have voted Republican consistently, and backed Mitt Romney in 2012.
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https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/2018/national/trump-voters