In it, Denver Post writer Karen E. Crummy wonders why rural voters are often ignored.
The story serves as a prime example of why we've begun My Rural America, i.e., when rural citizens don't get the news and are locked out of easy access to high-speed Internet ... while their small town newspapers no longer have the resources to serve as community watch-dogs to tell the story about how national elected officials serve their communities, all too many rural citizens become quiet ... and too trusting.
Our favorite quote in the story:
"Ignoring these [rural] areas can be politically lethal for candidates. While rural voters make up only about 23 percent of the electorate, they have affected the past four presidential elections."
"It shows that to win as a Republican, you need the lion's share of rural votes. For Democrats to win, you have to neutralize those voters," said Seth McKee, a University of South Florida professor who analyzed rural voters in presidential elections from 1992 to 2004.
"Exit polling shows that religion, gender and what region of the country they live in take a back seat to the residents' rural status in voting, Mc Kee said."
... Well, yes! Residents' rural status matters, but rural residents have to be able to get the facts, too. Without news, without easy access to the facts -- voting records and accurate policy information, rural voters can easily waste their votes.My Rural America sets the record straight. For an example about how we set the record straight, see our next story.
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