We can't take a chance on IA-03

Francis Boggus is an experienced community development professional in rural Iowa communities and former Democratic State Central Committee member from Council Bluffs, now living in Des Moines. 

Recently, a friend who’s deciding whom to support in Iowa’s Democratic primaries sent me this video from the Des Moines Register’s “Storytellers Project” series in 2023. In the video, State Senator Sarah Trone Garriot (who is now running for Congress in Iowa’s third district) describes the first wedding she performed to marry a pair of Satanists.

I’ll be clear: I have no personal issue with Satanists. Like many other Iowans, I believe their First Amendment rights should be protected just like anyone else’s. I am no stranger to marriages that might be looked down upon—I was in an interracial marriage in the 1980s, and one of my daughters is married to a woman. Marriage equality across race, religion, and sexuality must be protected.

What bothers me is the tone Trone Garriott used when talking about working class people, whether they be in West Virginia or Iowa.

As Republicans have made gains with working class and rural voters, Democrats have gained a reputation for being out-of-touch and elitist. Call us latte liberals or coastal elites– whatever is said, it’s become clear that Democrats are struggling to connect and persuade working class and rural voters.

Trone Garriott made this couple the butt of the joke, from their smell (“cigarette smoke and unwashed clothes”) to what they were wearing (“jeans and a Carhartt jacket” and “camouflage pajama pants and slippers”). That does us no favors.

In Iowa, we have seen longtime deep-blue strongholds like Ottumwa, Fort Dodge, Burlington, Marshalltown, and more swing to become redder and redder since 2016. Even with the gains Iowa Democrats have managed to make in affluent suburbs like Waukee and Ankeny, right now there is no real path to winning as an Iowa Democrat without making inroads with working class and rural voters.

The attitudes expressed in this video make that a bigger challenge. We can’t talk down to working folks and rural voters and then expect them to vote for us because of a policy proposal. They’ve already tuned us out.

Every Iowa Democrat I know is concerned about electability in 2026. We all see a critical opportunity this cycle not only to put a check on President Donald Trump and the GOP in Congress, but to start rebuilding power for Democrats in our state after years of erosion. With competitive races for governor, Senate, Congress, and state legislature, we’re all focused on putting up a strong ticket.

It’s not an exaggeration to say this is a make-or-break year for Iowa Democrats, and we don’t want to take any chances. Republicans have already found that Satanists in our state can be used to animate their own base and divide ours.

For all Trone Garriott’s talk of electability, national Republicans will have a field day with liabilities like this. I appreciate the senator’s broad lesson about love and tolerance, but we all know that’s not how Republicans will use this story. If she is our Democratic nominee, the GOP and their dark money allies will exploit this and attack her and Democrats up and down the ballot.

We can’t afford to nominate candidates who begin the general election with vulnerabilities that the GOP will exploit to hold this crucial seat and make it even more difficult for us to win back working class and rural voters.


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About the Author(s)

Francis Boggus

  • If you had no issue with Satanists.....

    …..you wouldn’t have mentioned them. But you did…then tried to say it was irrelevant.
    Next tell us you don’t have a problem with minorities/LGBTQ+/etc……..
    (Love your dog whistle bigotry. Trumpublicans thank you.)

  • this is a bizarre misreading of this story

    which doesn’t contain a joke and is about her own ignorance/prejudice, and how the Scriptures, the love of the couple, and the ceremony of marriage come to help her see her own limits, and even get a glimpse beyond them
    “None of this supposedly mattered to them and yet there was no denying this moment seemed to be something special to them.”
    On the more general issue of what Repugs will say about Dems let’s get real they will make up all the usual lies and conspiracy theories (the press won’t call them on most of this) and people will get their news/info from their usual bubbles. Candidates need to do what Mamdani did with Trump voters in NYC and get out and talk to them:

  • Sorry Mr Boggus, you missed the point

    I don’t know Mr. Boggus, but his credentials are impressive, so I don’t want to be impolite.

    I had previously heard and read Sarah Trone Garriott’s story about her first wedding ceremony. As she says, she was a youngster just getting started.

    There is an arc to her story: first impressions lead to a learning experience. Where she saw little to recommend the couple, she sees humanity that looks like love and affection.

    In storytelling, it’s possible to be accurate without demeaning of your characters. I see the young minister relating a reality and describing its details, which gave her a start and, at least initially, were off putting.

    The lesson she learns is that despite her first impression, there is humanity in the couple (who seem unlikely examples of working class folks).

    I hardly see this story is as negatively character-revealing or leaving the impression that Trone Garriott is not in tune with working class folks. I see she learned empathy, pretty valuable for a congressperson.

    I’d ask Mr. Boggus to give the story a second look. The whomsoever who supplied him with the video may well be trying to scotch Trone Garriott’s candidacy. This video is not that tool.

    PS. I fully agree that this is a make-or-break year for us Democrats. Much to recommend both women candidates.

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