Alicia J
Diamond Member
- Mar 22, 2026
- 3,926
- 2,834
- 1,893
Once Trump starts losing farmers and rural white voters, the game is completely over. Trump's approval rating among farmers has dropped to 50%...a new low for Trump.
High fertilizer prices, high gas prices, tariffs, and the Department of Agriculture's weak response to the new screw worm parasite that is ravaging cattle in Texas and New Mexico is more than farmers and cattle ranchers can take.
More than 300 farms filed for bankruptcy in 2025. A 46% increase from Biden's last year in office in 2024.
From the Washington Post. --
High fertilizer prices, high gas prices, tariffs, and the Department of Agriculture's weak response to the new screw worm parasite that is ravaging cattle in Texas and New Mexico is more than farmers and cattle ranchers can take.
More than 300 farms filed for bankruptcy in 2025. A 46% increase from Biden's last year in office in 2024.
From the Washington Post. --
Scott Thomsen is a fourth-generation Nebraska farmer and three-time voter for President Donald Trump. For years, he voted Republican, drawn to the partyās message of fiscal restraint.
Not anymore.
āIām pretty disenfranchised as a voter right now, and I think Iām not the only one,ā Thomsen said. āEither Iām going to completely sit these elections out, or Iām going to vote down the line, incumbents out.ā
Farmers, one of Republicansā most loyal voting blocs, are increasingly voicing discontent with the partyās policies, which they say are making an already precarious business even harder.
For years, the costs to be a farmer have been too high and the prices at which they sell their crops have been too low, squishing margins and forcing many to operate on a loss.
Now, heading into this yearās midterm elections, farmers are facing multiple headaches as a result of Trump actions: price spikes in fuel and fertilizer due to the war in Iran, volatile markets from the presidentās trade wars, and a new, uncontained parasite threat to cattle.
The multiple crises in the agriculture sector have not yet translated to a massive conversion to Democrats, but they have energized some Democratic bids in rural areas and forced Republicans to defend their handling of rural issues. If farmers decide to stay home in November, that could have outsize consequences in a year when Republicans are fighting uphill to maintain control of Congress.
Approval for the president among rural Americans dropped this month to 50 percent ā a new low, according to a Reuters-Ipsos poll. Thatās a sharp decline from the 60 percent approval shortly after Trumpās second inauguration.
āA lot of farmers today have lost and are losing faith and are feeling betrayed,ā said Joe Maxwell, president of Farm Action Fund, a group that supports candidates in both parties. āTheyāre not seeing an āAmerica Firstā agenda.ā
More than 300 farms filed for bankruptcy last year ā up 46 percent from the year before and the second year in a row that the number has climbed, according to the American Farm Bureau Federation. The U.S. Department of Agriculture forecasts that total farm sector debt will rise to $624.7 billion this year ā the highest on record ā to weather current economic conditions.
Last edited:

