Firefighter Sandy Perala will watch President-elect Donald Trump take office hoping that he capitalizes on the promise to shake up Washington that won her vote.
Trump, said the 43-year-old woman from the northern Twin Cities suburb of Oak Grove, "is going to make some changes because he can relate to people. I think he's really going to keep it real."
Out playing bingo with her family Monday night in a bar at Blaine's Fogarty Ice Arena, Perala discussed her support for the incoming Republican president, one whose inauguration this Friday will be followed the next day by a women's protest march — expected to draw several hundred thousand people to Washington — and to related demonstrations in cities around the country, including St. Paul.
Noting her success as a woman in a male-dominated field, Perala said she never considered Trump's history of questionable comments and behavior toward women disqualifying. She was swayed instead by his record as a businessman and lack of conventional political background.
"First of all, half this stuff was from way back, like 20 years ago," Perala said. Of vulgar remarks by Trump about groping women, she said it's not unfamiliar: "I hear this stuff, but I laugh at it."
Clinton beat Trump among women in Minnesota and nationwide. But women voters nationally did not uniformly reject Trump: He won a majority of white women voters in the country, 53 percent.
Blaine and surrounding Anoka County were friendly territory for Trump last November. Though Democrat Hillary Clinton narrowly won Minnesota, Trump racked up nearly 20,000 more votes in Anoka County.
At the Sticks and Stones restaurant inside the ice arena, as bingo calls echoed through the air, it was easy to find women who voted for Trump and are excited to see him take office. Even a few who didn't vote for Trump said they will give his presidency a chance and hope he's successful.