> The rural parts consistently prefer a tax cut over anything else.
No. They do not prefer tax cuts over eating, for example.
> Rural people elected the current federal government.
When the entire country acts as if you and your problems don't exist (for several generations), burning it all down doesn't feel like much of a catastrophe.
I've heard from Indigenous Americans who aren't overly bothered by our massive ongoing crises. Their position is something like 'you might experience a tiny sliver of what we've had for centuries'. And they have a point.
> They turned out in droves to cut food stamps to fund large tax cuts.
They can't get SNAP so, again, burning down SNAP doesn't feel like a catastrophe.
When calls to aid the poor and vulnerable
consistently omit most counties,
we ought to be not stupid;
we ought to expect those counties to become estranged.
Estranged, vulnerable people are more likely to be susceptible to manipulation because that's how people work.
If this -> We Need To Help The Rural Poor In A Consistent And Meaningful Way <- will never be on the table, that's a decision. Own it.