In Iowa, Trump Voters Are Unfazed by Controversies.
MONTICELLO, Iowa The Table of Knowledge was delving into President-elect Donald J. Trumps plans to upend government, and marveling at how he had forced his fellow Republicans in the House to reverse themselves on gutting the Office of Congressional Ethics.
Hes getting responses; things are happening, Jerry Retzlaff, a retiree, said. He got Congress to turn themselves around with one tweet.
Theres no secret the press doesnt like him, and neither does a lot of the leadership, he added. And thats because hes planning on making a lot of changes.
The eight men around a rectangular table, sipping coffee from a hodgepodge of mugs donated by customers, meet daily for breakfasts of French toast, eggs and bacon at Darrells diner, all while solving the worlds problems, hence their gatherings nickname.
Washington may be veering from one Trump pre-inaugural controversy to another: unproved reports of Russias holding embarrassing information against him, possible ethical conflicts, the donors and billionaires of his cabinet, his pushback against intelligence findings on Russian hacking in the election. But there does not seem to be much angst in Iowa among those who voted for Mr. Trump, including some Democrats and independents.
Monticello, in rural eastern Iowa, is as close as any place to the epicenter of the political quake that made Mr. Trump president.
The states longstanding reputation as a political bellwether had led The New York Times to move me to Iowa for a full year ahead of its presidential caucuses in early 2016.
I had not returned since. In the intervening year, Iowa gave Mr. Trump his largest triumph of any battleground state: a 15-percentage-point reversal over President Obamas easy victory here in 2012.'>>>
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/01/12/us/donald-trump-iowa-conservatives.html?

J_William_Ryan
(1,634 posts)Theres no secret the press doesnt like him, and neither does a lot of the leadership, he added. And thats because hes planning on making a lot of changes.
For the worst.
PSPS
(13,280 posts)
elleng
(127,043 posts)It's one I often look for.
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minstrel76
(83 posts)MBS
(9,688 posts)And a reminder that the voters - even if a minority of them- are as much to blame for this crisis as The Orange One and the politicians who enable him or support him.
disalitervisum
(470 posts)the people interviewed in the article seem to show that they don't have any grasp of reality. One of them said that what he was excited about was his hope that the billionaires in the cabinet would put the country's interests ahead of their own. My question is, how can attitudes like this continue to exist after the great recession?