The disaster called the Biden-Harris administration has deeply hurt the farmers of the United States, much like it did to other Americans, with high prices and awful policies. Recent events in Michigan and Pennsylvania appear to affirm the farming community’s support for Trump in 2024.
In a blow to her Senate race, Democrat Congresswoman Elissa Slotkin of Michigan was rejected by the farming community of her state. Michigan Farm Bureau endorsed Republican Mike Rogers for Senate in the upcoming election. The endorsement is considered very important in the battleground state where the community of Arab Muslim migrant families is already turning away from Harris over the failure of the Biden-Harris administration in negotiating peace in the Middle East.
Slotkin’s own embarrassing antics also played a role in her falling popularity. In late August, the New York Post reported that Slotkin has been known for growing fabrications on her farmland instead of real agricultural products. In a recent incident, the story notes, Slotkin exaggerated the size of her farm from 10 acres to 300 acres on which soy and corn is allegedly cultivated, though no proof of such cultivation has been offered.
Mike Rogers joined President Trump along with other prominent figures in Walker, MI, on Friday (September 27) to highlight the commitment of the Trump campaign to improving the lives of Michigan’s working class. He reminded the audience that for the first time in history more food had to be imported than America’s food export, thanks to the failed policies of the Biden-Harris administration.
Last week, a woman from New Port (MI) shared her sad story on video about how she was forced to close down her farm stand due to the crippling regulations of the state’s agriculture department.
The farming community’s support for MAGA in 2024 was also visible among the cheers of Pennsylvania’s farmers during Trump’s visit to the southwest Pennsylvania’s rural and red districts last week. Farmers in Pennsylvania spoke to the New York Post and expressed support for Trump’s warning to impose tariffs of 200% on John Deere if it moves its production to Mexico. The story wrote:
John Deere’s move to Mexico, though only partial, has ticked off farmers, who have begun referring to the centuries-old American manufacturer as “Juan Deere.”
From Kings County, California, KFSN reported massive support of local farmers for President Trump in August this year.