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Opinion | How the rise of remote work may have played a role in handing Trump the White House

Updated
2 min read
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There has been a 12 per cent rise in interstate moves since 2019 as many urban voters went rural, writes Gleb Tsipursky. This shift appears to have weakened Democratic urban hubs while consolidating Trump’s appeal in rural constituencies.


Gleb Tsipursky is CEO of the future-of-work consultancy  and a freelance contributing columnist for the Star. He is based in Columbus, Ohio. Follow him on X: 

Following ’s decisive win in the 2024 U.S. presidential election, remote work migration has emerged as an unexpected factor favouring the Republican Party.

initially suggested that remote work could weaken Republican strongholds by enabling people to relocate from Democratic urban centres to more affordable areas, the opposite effect appears to have strengthened Trump’s support in critical states.

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Gleb Tsipursky

Gleb Tsipursky is CEO of the future-of-work consultancy  and a freelance contributing columnist for the Star. He is based in Columbus, Ohio. Follow him on X: 

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