Democrats Dare to Dream of Iowa
There are a few ways to think about Iowa. You might imagine Americaâs 29th state as the land of corn and pigs (20 million hogs canât be wrong, reads my favorite T-shirt for sale at the Eastern Iowa Airport). Maybe you associate it with Field of Dreams, Caitlin Clark, or the future birthplace of Captain James T. Kirk. You might also picture Iowa as flat, like a pancake. But you would be wrong. Iowa is not even in the top five flattest U.S. states, which is a fact I was considering last month as I watched Josh Turek size up a daunting set of stairs in a hilly Cedar Rapids neighborhood. After a momentâs consideration, the 47-year-old Democrat, who uses a wheelchair, shook his head, deciding against it. It would be the only house that Turek would skip that afternoon as he knocked on doors in the warm spring sunlight. At all the other homes, he followed the same elaborate routine without appearing to break a sweat: lowering his body out of his chair and onto the ground; hoisting himself backwards up a step using just his arms; yanking the wheelchair up after him; and repeating that until he reached the doorbell, which is when he would announce, âHi! Iâm Josh Turek, and Iâm running for the U.S. Senate!â In his bid to replace Republican Senator Joni Ernst, Turek is hoping to correct what he believes is another popular misconception about Iowa: that it is a red state. For the past decade, if not longer, many Americans have thought of Iowa this wayâand for good reason. Although voters here famously helped propel Barack Obama to the presidency by choosing him in the 2008 Democratic caucuses, they later chose Donald Trump in three consecutive elections. Every member of Iowaâs congressional delegation is, at present, a Republican. Terrace Hill, the governorâs mansion in Des Moines, has housed a member of the GOP for the past 15 years. But lately, a sense of deep frustrationâwith rising costs, with Trump, with Republican leadership in generalâis rippling across Iowa. As a result, Iowa Democrats have found themselves in an unusually charmed electoral position. This year, theyâve got a more-than-decent chance of winning back not just a Senate seat, but at least two seats in the House, plus the governorâs office. The November midterms could, in other words, mark the beginning of a shift for Iowa, a turn back toward the stateâs more aubergine roots. âVoters are in a mood to send a message, and itâs not gonna be a great message,â one state Republican strategist, who requested anonymity in order to be honest about this, told me. At least thatâs the Democratsâ hope. The task will be tough, mostly on account of the math: Active registered Republicans in the state outnumber Democrats by 200,000. But other factors, including a surprisingly strong slate of candidates and the remarkably grim conditions facing Trumpâs party nationally, have collided to make circumstances for Democrats here sunnier than theyâve been at any point in recent memory. âIowa is a commonsense state masquerading as a red state,â Turek told me after an hour of door-knocking. For the past decade, Iowa Democrats have been repeating some version of this phrase like a prayer or an incantation. In November, theyâll have a chance to prove itâs true. Turek has an undeniably striking backstoryâthe kind that tends to stay with voters. Born with spina bifida from his fatherâs exposure to Agent Orange in the Vietnam War, Turek has used a wheelchair since he was a child. After college, he was a professional wheelchair-basketball player and a four-time U.S. Paralympian, before working for a wheelchair and mobility-assistance company. He grew up in a working-class family in Council Bluffs, a part of southwest Iowa that, despite its traditionally conservative bentâhis own father voted for Trump not once but all three timesâTurek was able to win when he ran for the state legislature. âI know that I can winâ Iowa, he told me, âbecause the district that I represent is more red than the state as a whole.â But there is another compelling candidate in the Senate primary, one known to many Iowans as a progressive folk hero. Iowans first met Zach Wahls back in 2011, when he was a 19-year-old college freshman testifying before the Iowa House Judiciary Committee about his two moms. As a high schooler, I watched as Wahlsâs young face appeared on the local news, and later, on Ellen. (His now-wife was watching, too, and would catch his attention with a blog post titled, âMarry Me, Zach Wahls.â) Now a 34-year-old state lawmaker, Wahls was the youngest person ever chosen to lead the Iowa Senate Democrats. He stepped down from leadership in 2023 after a messy internal Democratic dispute, and reemerged to launch this Senate bid, during which he has positioned himself as part of a new generation of Democrats who loudly reject the stale maneuverings of one Chuck Schumer. Winning statewide in Iowa will be âa hell of a lot harderâ if Democrats canât âbe honest with people about the failures of the national Democratic Party leadership,â Wahls told me. [From the March 2026 issue: Do the Democrats have a plan?] But the truth is that Turek and Wahls are not all that different, ideologically. They seem equally likely, at least according to the polling on hand, to beat Ashley Hinson, the former newscaster turned representative who is the Republican nomineeâwhich is to say, a little bit likely. Hinsonâs biggest weakness in November will be the simple fact of her party affiliation, not to mention the pledge she made last year to be Trumpâs âtop allyâ in the Senate, a vow that came before the presidentâs approval ratings plummeted like foreign demand for U.S. soybeans. The Iowa playing host to this Senate race is different from the one I grew up inâand markedly so from the one my father did. Which is why some of the Democratic campaign rhetoric has taken on a Kodak Gold nostalgia. Turek, for example, invokes former Senator Tom Harkinâs âprairie populismâ at every turnâHarkin endorsed Turek todayâwhile Wahls conjures the bygone era of the blue-collar, river-town Democrat. For much of the past 50 years, Iowa voter registration was roughly split between Democrats, Republicans, and no-party voters. Governorships passed back and forth between the parties like a pendulum. Thousands of pragmatic Iowa voters repeatedly chose to send Harkin, a Democrat, and the Republican Chuck Grassley to the Senate. But by the early 2010s, amid the rumblings of a new working-class realignment, Iowa Republicans began to outnumber Democrats. That shift cemented in 2016, when once-reliably-blue chunks of the state turned berry red, and then scarlet. Republicans took control of the state legislature. By 2024, Trump defeated Kamala Harris in Iowa by 13 points. The focus of Turek, Wahls, and every other Democratic candidate in Iowa this year is on what they say are the consequences of that rightward shift. Some of the trends that these campaigners will highlight during the next six months include the historically high price of gas and fertilizer, and the fact that Iowa has one of the slowest-growing economies in the country. Voters will be reminded that Iowa Republicans banned abortion after six weeks of pregnancy and implemented a private-school voucher program that has undercut public education. They will hear the alarming statistic that Iowa has the second-highest rate of new cancer diagnoses in America. Perhaps unsurprising, given the national partyâs unique ability to wrest defeat from the hay baler of victory, Iowa Democrats have not managed to gain much traction before now. But circumstances are shifting fundamentally. In a previously unthinkable twist, more Iowans are now more unhappy with Trump than happy with him. Ernstâs polling numbers collapsed before she announced that she wasnât seeking reelection, and this year, Governor Kim Reynolds was ranked the least popular governor in the country for the eighth quarter in a row. Against this backdrop, Turek and Wahls aâŠ
Send this story to anyone â or drop the embed into a blog post, Substack, Notion page. Every play sends rev-share back to The Atlantic.