Farmers cast their votes for Trump. Now Musk’s cuts are hitting them.


It’s no exaggeration to say that America’s farmers helped put Donald Trump in the White House. Of the 444 counties classified as farm-dependent by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), most of which are located west of the Mississippi and east of the Rockies, Mr. Trump won all but 11 last November.

But now, some of these same communities are reacting with a sense of dismay and concern as they watch the Trump administration dismantle federal agencies and freeze Biden-era financing programs that directly impact their own economic livelihood.

Farmers who sell surplus crops to the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) for overseas distribution are fretting about future purchases and calling their state delegations. Business owners that qualified for USDA grants and invested in renewable energy technology and climate-resistant crops are unsure if they will be paid. Contract lawyers are getting involved.

Why We Wrote This

Many voters won’t object to the Trump administration shuttering agencies in Washington, but if their communities feel the effects of cuts, frozen funding, and stalled loan guarantees, the political winds could shift.

As courts weigh the legality of President Trump’s flurry of executive orders and actions taken by Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), the response from voters is also starting to take shape. And a key factor for the administration’s success in weeks to come will be whether some of the same people who say they support pruning a bloated federal government, in the abstract at least, start to feel differently as those cuts ripple through their own communities in unexpected ways.

“When you start ripping wires out of the federal government … the unintended consequences could be strong and unexpected,” says Dante Scala, a political scientist at the University of New Hampshire.

The White House has framed DOGE’s slash-and-burn approach as a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to finally shrink the government. “Voters want to see this stuff fixed. In their mind, they’ve elected Trump to do this job,” says Matt Wylie, a Republican strategist.

Activists protest the policies of President Donald Trump and Elon Musk outside the Capitol in Washington, Feb. 11, 2025.

So far, polls suggest that Mr. Trump’s efforts to remake the federal bureaucracy are popular with Republicans. A recent CBS News/YouGov poll put the president’s approval at 53%, a relatively strong rating in a polarized nation. Mr. Musk is viewed less favorably, however: More than half of respondents in a recent Pew Research poll had an unfavorable opinion of the world’s richest man, including 24% of Republicans.



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