Those efforts paid off in 2018, when Muskegon County voters helped elect a female governor, secretary of state, attorney general and U.S. senator. The results put Wilkins and other women here on the leading edge of a shift that is reshaping politics across the Midwest and nationally: Female voters were pivotal last year and are top targets of both parties in the 2020 presidential race.
Minnesota is part of that trend. Women helped elect two newcomers, Democratic U.S. Reps. Angie Craig and Ilhan Omar, in 2018, and several female challengers beat men in state House races.
Women will again be a critical factor in Michigan and in other Midwest battlegrounds in 2020. Donald Trump won Michigan by 10,704 votes — the smallest winning margin in the state's presidential election history. The state — along with Wisconsin, Iowa and Minnesota — will be ground zero in his re-election campaign.
Michigan women are souring on Trump. A recent statewide poll found that 65% of them will vote for someone else or would consider it.
Recent interviews with more than a dozen Muskegon County women exposed surprising levels of reticence on both sides of the partisan divide. Many of those who dislike Trump aren't rooting for a particular Democrat or paying much attention to the big field. They just want a nominee who can beat him.
Some Trump supporters here were reluctant to say what they like about him, and some said that they have qualms.
At the Arts & Drafts Festival's car show in Norton Shores on a Saturday morning, Cindy Cox listed what she likes about the president: "My big thing is keeping the illegals out. Numerous jobs have come about, in my town anyway, because of Trump. He's cleaning up Washington."
Then she added a caveat. "I'm a little worried that we might end up in a war, because he can be arrogant," she said.