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  • Showing their independence ; Folks in Iowa,

    San Antonio Express-News (Texas)
    October 17, 2004, Sunday , METRO

    Showing their independence ; Folks in Iowa, Minnesota and Wisconsin
    could tip the balance of the election.

    by Jaime Castillo



    STATE CENTER, Iowa - Doug Lively ducks his 6-foot-5 frame into a
    tractor, while his father, Jim, steers a combine through the 600
    acres of soybean and corn they planted this year.

    One smoke-belching hunk of technology chews up rows of 2-foot-tall
    soybean plants and spits out bushel upon bushel of pebble-size beans
    into a bin being pulled by the other.

    The father-and-son tandem harvested 60 acres on a recent Sunday,
    displaying a farming harmony that comes from working land that has
    been in the Lively family more than 50 years.

    Compared to the commercial operations with $250,000 John Deere
    mega-harvesters and plots of land the size of some small towns, the
    Livelys are part-timers in a global economy that is changing life,
    culture and politics throughout the Midwest.

    "It's just gotten to the point where it's tough to have enough acres
    to make a living off of it," said Doug Lively, who also runs a
    trucking company and a used car lot.

    Having entered the business world once foreign to farm life, Lively,
    42, has made a decision equally foreign to his parents. He'll vote
    for President Bush on Nov. 2, a choice at odds with his parents'
    history as lifelong Democrats.

    It is an example of the independent politics that typifies the
    crucial Upper Midwest states of Iowa, Minnesota and Wisconsin, an
    independence that could turn the presidential election.

    Each of the states has a recent history of supporting Democratic
    presidential candidates, which would seem to favor Sen. John Kerry.

    Minnesota has voted Democratic in the last seven presidential
    contests, while Iowa and Wisconsin have done so in each of the last
    four.

    But coming off the third presidential debate, polls show a
    statistical tie in Iowa, and Kerry holding a slight lead in the two
    neighboring battleground states.

    The states are being bombarded by a seemingly endless stream of
    negative TV ads, which has made relaxing in front of the tube a thing
    of the past. Midwesterners don't like wearing their politics on their
    sleeves, much less having to digest it in their living rooms night
    after night.

    >From the suburbs of Minneapolis to the industrial sector of southeast
    Wisconsin to rural Iowa, the regular folks of this region defy easy
    political description.

    That is because the region has gone through a few political
    transitions in the past century, said Dennis Goldford, a Drake
    University political scientist in Des Moines.

    One hundred years ago, the Upper Midwest was a Republican stronghold.
    When the Great Depression devastated the region, Democrats thrived
    during the New Deal.

    Today the two parties are neck-and-neck and emblematic of an evenly
    divided country.

    "The Upper Midwest has much more of a balance between conservatives
    and progressives," Goldford said. "These states, in a sense, are a
    microcosm of the nation."

    To know how much times have changed, Lively said he only has to think
    back to his high school graduating class of 60 students.

    "There are only three full-time farmers, and better than half of the
    boys grew up on farms," he said.

    Knowing that farming opportunities were limited, Lively headed off to
    Iowa State University after high school. There he studied marketing
    and began a slow transition from the political traditions of his
    parents, Jim and Katey.

    When he returned home 17 hours short of a degree to buy the trucking
    business, he became a bona fide Republican after becoming frustrated
    with small business regulations.

    "I just started to see things differently," Lively said.

    Political opposites

    At Cecil's restaurant in Marshalltown, Iowa, population 26,000, the
    shifting political dynamics aren't in full view, but just ask folks
    their opinion on the presidential race - or anything else - and
    they'll tell you.

    Loyal customers get their morning cups of coffee poured by Ruth
    Johnson, a gabby, salt-of-the-earth waitress whose son bought the
    establishment from her late husband.

    A Democrat by birth, as some people around here like to say, Johnson
    became a Republican later in life. She said she will vote for Bush
    partly because of her anti-abortion beliefs and partly because
    "there's too much gimme, gimme, gimme in society."

    The 81-year-old cancer survivor said she pays for her own health
    insurance and believes people shouldn't rely on the government for
    everything.

    But politics never comes up between her and 76-year-old Charles
    Willer, a retired lineman for the old Iowa Electric Co. who is
    bellied up to the counter for breakfast and the 60-cent bottomless
    cup of coffee.

    He will be voting for Kerry this November after giving Bush his vote
    in 2000.

    Wearing a mesh baseball hat that makes him look like a truck driver,
    Willer said Bush tries to come off as a strong leader, but he doesn't
    like the way he approached the Iraq war without first getting
    international support.

    He also blames Republicans for not fully funding the No Child Left
    Behind education law.

    "Bush is a good man, but he's not good for the American people,"
    Willer concludes.

    It is a scene that is played out often in the working-class areas of
    the Midwest.

    At Q's Ham N' Egger Restaurant in Racine, Wis., four old friends
    gathered around a booth for a morning bull session hours before Bush
    rolled through town on a recent bus tour.

    There is no shortage of things to ponder in this city of about 82,000
    people south of Milwaukee. Racine, an odd mix of an old blue-collar
    industrial town and a quaint lake community, has been hit hard in the
    last 15 years as hundreds of good-paying jobs have gone overseas.

    The county has one of the highest unemployment rates in the state.

    Michael Vidian, a former Racine city alderman for 15 years, is
    resting his hands on a cane he uses to get around these days. He said
    security is the biggest issue.

    "Bush is definitely a better leader," said Vidian, 81, his son, Gary,
    48, nodding his head next to him. "An incumbent knows what's going
    on. There's no flim-flam there."

    Seated across from the father-son Bush supporters are Harry Akgulian,
    74, and John Mikaelian, 60, both retired skilled laborers who, in the
    Midwestern way, don't interrupt their political opposites.

    They patiently wait until the Vidians are done talking before they
    tick off several reasons why they'll vote for Kerry. The reasons
    include jobs, the economy, geopolitics and, especially important to
    Mikaelian, the senator's interest in recognizing the mass killings of
    hundreds of thousands Armenians by Ottoman Turks between 1915 and
    1923 as genocide.

    "I believe when (Kerry) gets elected, he'll change things around.
    There will be more jobs," said Mikaelian, a retired wood-pattern
    maker.

    Akgulian agreed, noting with a hint of sadness that the days are gone
    when young people can find good-paying jobs without a college degree,
    as he did 54 years ago when he arrived in Racine.

    Akgulian, a former high-speed spindle repairman, proclaims that he
    has "never voted Republican in my life." He said more needs to be
    done to keep jobs from leaving America.

    As for security, both he and Mikaelian said they believe Bush's
    go-it-alone strategy in Iraq has weakened the United States.

    "We're isolated from the rest of the world," Akgulian said.

    No clear choices

    For some in the Upper Midwest, the choices are not so apparent,
    making it clear why these states are battlegrounds for the campaigns.


    Take Brooklyn Park, Minn., a city of about 67,000 people outside of
    Minneapolis that is dotted by parks, walking trails and enough open
    space to invite flocks of Canadian geese to swoop in for landings.

    To the outside world, it is probably best known as the city that
    elected former pro wrestler and onetime third-party poster boy Jesse
    Ventura as mayor, setting him on a path to the Minnesota governor's
    mansion.

    But in terms of the presidential election, it is the ultimate swing
    area.

    Brooklyn Park is sandwiched between polar political opposites. Inside
    Interstate 494, which rings Minneapolis-St. Paul to the south and
    west, Kerry will likely win by 25 points in an area still dominated
    by New Deal Democratic traditions.

    Outside I-494 and beyond the established suburbs like Brooklyn Park,
    exurbs have sprouted where tax-conscious, more affluent residents
    will favor Bush by 20 points, said Larry Jacobs of the University of
    Minnesota's Center for the Study of Politics.

    That is why the Republican and Democratic parties are focusing so
    much time in places like Brooklyn Park, which are still a toss-up,
    Jacobs said.

    Laqueece Penn and Erin Carlson are the living embodiments of the
    volatile political area. They live only blocks apart in Brooklyn
    Park.

    They each have a young son. They share the same corner public
    library.

    And while Penn and Carlson will likely choose different presidential
    candidates this November, they have misgivings about their
    selections.

    "We all have the same feeling," said Penn, unloading groceries with
    one hand and clutching her 18-month-old son, Christopher Davenport
    Jr., with the other. "My mother, my family, even the people who you
    conversate with at the store, they all say the same thing. We're all
    confused."

    In her estimation, Penn, a single mother who lives in a
    government-subsidized home, said she should vote Democrat. She blames
    Republican budget cuts for eradicating her son's health benefits at
    the end September.

    The full-time cosmetology student says she is "75 percent sure" she
    will vote for Kerry. But one thing eats at her - the war in Iraq and
    the thousands of lives on both sides that already have been lost.

    "It's kind of scary to change over in a war situation," Penn said.

    Carlson is more committed to the man who led the country into that
    war, Bush.

    The 30-year-old nurse and her husband have a 3-year-old son. They are
    Christian, anti-abortion advocates and voted for Bush four years ago.


    And those beliefs will likely lead them to vote the same way two
    weeks from now.

    But Carlson said she can't help but feel like she's choosing between
    "the lesser of two evils."

    As a medical professional, she said she watches every day how an
    ailing health care system impacts society. She wonders if things
    would be different under Kerry.

    "My husband and I will vote for Bush," she said, sounding
    unconvinced. "That's more based on moral issues rather than I believe
    in all of his positions."

    Mixed emotions are a common refrain for a region that could decide
    the next president of the United States, once it makes up its
    collective mind.

    Edward George, a 37-year-old chef who lives in St. Paul, said what
    makes the region more difficult to call is that "Republicans here
    aren't as right-wing as some places and Democrats aren't as left-wing
    as others."

    But the two groups seem to share equal numbers of followers.

    "I've been voting since 1986 and I've never seen things this
    divided," he said.
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