
New Books Network Suzanne Mettler and Trevor E. Brown, "Rural Versus Urban: The Growing Divide That Threatens Democracy" (Princeton UP, 2025)
Mar 14, 2026
Trevor E. Brown, political scientist and co-author of Rural vs. Urban, explains the rise of a pernicious rural–urban political divide. He traces sequential polarization, the role of local organizations and cultural resentments, and how place-based inequality reshaped party power. Short, clear takes on why the split matters for U.S. democracy and what rebuilding local politics might require.
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Resentment Framed Democrats As Distant Elites
- Voter resentment targeted the Democratic Party as an elite, college-educated force seen to foist policies on rural people.
- This perception grew after trade and deregulation policies that harmed local jobs, creating political abandonment narratives.
Organizations Cemented Rural Realignment
- Conservative organizations (evangelical churches, antiabortion groups, NRA) played a key role in step two by socializing and mobilizing rural voters.
- Declines in unions removed a prior mobilizing force for Democrats, making organization gaps consequential.
Process Failure Sparked Local Opposition
- Local backlash to gun-safety and environmental measures often stems from lack of consultation rather than pure policy disagreement.
- Trevor recounts the Andrew Cuomo gun law aftermath and rural opposition to secretive developer deals on renewables.



