Farmers are looking for a sign from President Donald Trump that their issues mean as much to him as their votes.
Trump is scheduled to speak Monday at the American Farm Bureau Federation's annual conference in Nashville, the first sitting president to address the group in 26 years. He'll be getting a warm welcome, even though there are policies his administration is pursuing that run counter to some farm interests.
"It doesn't get any better than to have the president recognize the importance of farmers and ranchers to the rural economy," said Kalena Bruce, a 32-year-old rancher from Cedar County, Mo., where Trump beat Democrat Hillary Clinton by a 5-to-1 ratio in the 2016 presidential election. "Rural America still supports President Trump."
As he approaches his anniversary in office, the president is struggling to fulfill his campaign promises to segments of his voting base, including farmers, and his approval ratings have been stuck at historically low levels.
Several of his policy stances — from threatened withdrawal from the North American Free Trade Agreement, to immigration restrictions that could choke the flow of migrants to harvest U.S. crops, to cutting crop-insurance payments popular in agriculture — run contrary to the positions represented by the Farm Bureau, the biggest U.S. farmer group.
Still, Trump's ties to rural voters are far from broken despite some strains, said Johnathan Hladik, policy director for the Center for Rural Affairs in Lyons, Neb. An event that brings together individual farmers and representatives of major agribusinesses gives him a venue to try to shore up support.
"A lot of farm interests have felt overlooked or ignored in the first year of the Trump administration," he said. "Farm Bureau is the place where you can get the most people in one place and rally the troops."
The White House declined to preview the president's address.