Again, I am inviting local voters to come to my house to meet a candidate today at 2 p.m.
Hosting an event for a Democratic candidate in this district is not a waste of time. Nor is attending.
I recognize that this is a red district. That is on purpose. A Democratic majority in the state legislature arranged the congressional districts to pack Republicans into one district, District 2.
Their reach for partisan advantage is evident, but the districts are not crazy or cynical. Look closely and you'll see that four districts all have arms that reach up into the Portland metro area and its Democratic voters. All of these districts have logic and coherence. There is a west Portland to the coast district (1); an east Portland along the Columbia River district (3); and a south suburban and wine-country district (6). District 5 looks artificial, but it is Portland metro Clackamas County connecting to the upscale vacation-oriented Bend where Portlanders go to get sun. District 4 is a longstanding district that combines timberland and liberal college-town Eugene where that timber was milled and marketed. My district, the 2nd, is the rural one, except for my own Medford-Ashland Rogue Valley. Some city needed to supply the population to get the 2nd district up to the required numbers. Did this configuration "pack" Republicans? Yes. But it gave rural Oregon voters what they wanted, their own district.
This vote map reveals that my county is pink rather than red. In 2008 Jackson County narrowly voted for Barack Obama, but we are mostly a Republican county.
So, if the 2nd district is the sacrificial lamb packing Republicans, why bother trying to elect a Democrat? And why Rebecca Mueller?My own view is that the Democratic brand need not be toxic in rural America. It has become so recently. Think back to only a few decades ago when Democrats were the back-to-the-land people. Now the Democratic brand archetype is an urban office worker, thoroughly secular, fussing over pronouns. JD Vance mocked Democrats as unmarried cat ladies. This can change as people who are visible as Democrats change.
The Republican incumbent, Cliff Bentz, is in his 70s, a water rights attorney. He doesn't parade around wearing a cowboy hat while carrying a rifle to shoot varmints to try to look "country," but he makes sense as a representative for a rural, agricultural area. Or he did up until he voted with Trump to destroy the affordability of health insurance bought through ACA exchanges. The 2nd district, with a high concentration of small farms, ranches, and independent businesses, has the nation's third highest number of people using those exchanges. He knuckled to Trump and hurt his district. He endangers our fragile rural hospitals which needed those reimbursements for care they must provide.
Who is a plausible replacement for Bentz? A married woman with children, with a traditional Christian background, who chose a career in the hardest-working, least-paid medical specialty, a pediatrician, who chose to work in a rural setting, strikes me as a pretty good start. The profile isn't as directly "agriculture" as it would be were she a well-driller or a farm-kill butcher, but people tend to like and trust their doctors, pediatricians especially. And there is something else. She is young. The public is ready for Boomers of both parties to get out of the way. She "fits" the district and the moment.
Everybody, urban or rural, cares about taxes, about whether we are at war, about jobs, about houseing costs, and about prices. The immigration issue should break in a Democrat's favor in this district because farmers understand the reality that much of the work is done by immigrants. Send them back and farms die.
On potentially divisive natural resource issues such as what is a reasonable amount of timber to harvest on federal forests, I would not be surprised if her position is different from that of urban party leaders like Chuck Schumer or Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, some of whom may never have seen a loaded log truck. But there can be room in the Democratic Party for people who see the forests as a jobs resource. Beef producers want a "good" price for cattle, i.e., a high one, if they can get their product processed, which is another issue. Food shoppers want low prices. There are some tricky issues to negotiate, but that is the work of politics. A Democrat should be just as good as a Republican in representing farmers and forest workers. We will see what Rebecca has to say in the question/answer part of today's event.
Political change happens when political entrepreneurs (i.e. candidates) expose themselves to the political marketplace and sell themselves. They move the brand as they develop their own identity and their positions on issues. We know what a Democrat looks like when we see what Democratic candidates and officeholders think and say as they try to meet the political moment.
This afternoon's event is part of that process.


















