Blake Hurst has watched President Trump launch a trade war that has hurt the fortunes of farmers like him and changed the outlook for an industry reliant on global markets. More than 70% of farmers say they expect a decline in income of 10% or more next year as a result of the trade tensions, per a Purdue University/CME Group report. And yet the three generations of the Hurst family, photographed by @barrettemke on Sept. 23 at their farm near Tarkio, Mo., are sticking with Trump and the Republican Party. Hurst, who also advocates for farmers as the head of the @mofarmbureau, explains that he’s thankful Trump nixed the Clean Power Plan, one of President Obama’s most significant climate-change initiatives that could have spiked rural energy prices and driven up the cost of holding their crops for market. He mentions Trump’s impending reversal of the Waters of the U.S. rule, an Obama-era regulation, that farmers feared could have given the federal government authority over the small streams on land in the region. And there are other issues on their mind: infrastructure funding and how the government regulates pesticides, for example. Trump’s strong support in the rural heartland offers a window into his resilience among Republican voters across the country. There are millions of conventional Republicans of all stripes who are continuously assessing, as Hurst does, the benefits and drawbacks of two years of disruption. The Nov. 6 elections will test the strength of Trump’s hold on the party and show just how lasting an imprint his unique mix of populism and nationalism will make on the GOP–and America–for years to come. Read more on TIME.com. Photographs by @barrettemke for TIME

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Blake Hurst has watched President Trump launch a trade war that has hurt the fortunes of farmers like him and changed the outlook for an industry reliant on global markets. More than 70% of farmers say they expect a decline in income of 10% or more next year as a result of the trade tensions, per a Purdue University/CME Group report. And yet the three generations of the Hurst family, photographed by @barrettemke on Sept. 23 at their farm near Tarkio, Mo., are sticking with Trump and the Republican Party. Hurst, who also advocates for farmers as the head of the @mofarmbureau, explains that he’s thankful Trump nixed the Clean Power Plan, one of President Obama’s most significant climate-change initiatives that could have spiked rural energy prices and driven up the cost of holding their crops for market. He mentions Trump’s impending reversal of the Waters of the U.S. rule, an Obama-era regulation, that farmers feared could have given the federal government authority over the small streams on land in the region. And there are other issues on their mind: infrastructure funding and how the government regulates pesticides, for example. Trump’s strong support in the rural heartland offers a window into his resilience among Republican voters across the country. There are millions of conventional Republicans of all stripes who are continuously assessing, as Hurst does, the benefits and drawbacks of two years of disruption. The Nov. 6 elections will test the strength of Trump’s hold on the party and show just how lasting an imprint his unique mix of populism and nationalism will make on the GOP–and America–for years to come. Read more on TIME.com. Photographs by @barrettemke for TIME


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