Only the midwest saw US population growth in every state. Will new residents change its politics?
Lower costs in Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky and Ohio raise questions about whether Republican strongholds will shift
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While it’s regarded as a quiet, safe place, many would agree that there’s not much to Greene county, Ohio.
It’s a mix of urban, suburban and rural communities east of Dayton, Ohio’s sixth largest city, with Greene county much like the rest of the midwest: a mix of strip malls, corn fields and an interstate connecting Columbus with Cincinnati.
But for Washington state native Taryn Sigman, who wanted to buy more land for a farm, Greene county was quite perfect. “Inexpensive land, animal feed and vet care was half of what it was in Washington, plus the everyday costs like gas and groceries made this area an obvious choice,” she says.
She added: “I purchased a farm with barns and everything, well maintained, 11 acres, move-in ready for just under $350,000 in Ohio. I could have never dreamed of owning that type of property back home.”
Since the pandemic, thousands of other Americans have taken Sigman’s lead, and following decades of decline, the midwest is bouncing back as people move there from other parts of the US.
The US Census Bureau found: “The Midwest was the only region where all states gained population from July 2024 to July 2025.” Moreover, a Bank of America Institute report from last month found that midwestern metros made up the majority of the fastest growing metropolitan areas over the last two quarters.
People are largely moving because of the lower cost of living, compared to other parts of the country, and a comparably more temperate climate. Nearly two million people have left California in recent years, with more than 8,000 moving to Ohio in 2024, despite the more than 2,000 miles between the states.
But what’s telling is that many of the fastest growing counties in Indiana, Iowa, Kansas and Ohio are smaller, predominantly Republican counties. In Ohio, the three counties that have seen the biggest population gains in 2020 to 2024 – Sigman’s Greene county, Jefferson county and Washington county – are all counties that Donald Trump won handily in the 2024 election. More than 1,270 people moved to Greene county in 2024 from other US states having previously lost thousands of residents during the 2010s.
An influx of left-leaning migrants could start to upend the state of politics in the midwest.
“I am a Gen X liberal. I have a gay daughter,” says Sigman. “My politics are basically human rights, women should have a right to choose, love who you want to love, and spending an extra dollar to make sure my neighbor is fed doesn’t bother me.”
More people moved to Michigan in 2024 from California (14,000) than from neighboring Ohio. More than 13,000 people moved to Ohio from New York and New Jersey the same year.
While the numbers are relatively small today, long term, this influx could gain steam in the coming years and decades, fueling a potential return to centrist politics in the region.
“Anecdotally, we’ve made jokes about how we love our California people; [here’s] another one from California. Some of our main people came from California,” says Kim McCarthy, chair of the Greene county Democratic party, who is running to unseat a Republican in Ohio’s house of representatives election this November.
“We are actively creating a party people want to come to, it’s some of that. But we had a 112% turnout in the May primary – we added nearly 2,000 Democrats to the rolls in Greene county.”
“A lot of people come here because of Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, they tend to be more progressive, without a doubt, even though they’re in the military. That precinct had a 230% turnout [in the May democratic primary election]. It just went crazy.”
While these population shifts are new and growing, not everyone believes that political change is immediately at hand.
Kyle Kondik, managing editor of Sabato’s Crystal Ball at the University of Virginia’s center for politics, says that although tens of thousands of people moving into the midwest from democrat-leaning states may be a change, that may not be enough.
“I think you would really need to see a ton of migration to really change a place politically … 20,000 people moving to Ohio from blue states, that’s really just a drop in the bucket in a state that will cast something like 4-4.5 million votes in a midterm.”
Kondik does acknowledge that there are some places outside of major metro areas “getting bluer or less red in part because of migration, like touristy areas such as the Traverse City area in Michigan and Door county, Wisconsin,” he says.
“But [Kamala] Harris running ahead of [Joe] Biden in those places wasn’t nearly enough to make up for erosion elsewhere from 2020 to 2024.”
Polls show the Democratic party has struggled to make headway with voters in rural and urban districts alike, despite the missteps of the Trump administration.
Still, the trend of left-leaning voters moving into the midwest could accelerate in the coming decades due to further rising costs and climate migration.
All the while, Trump’s approval rating in the rural US has fallen 10% to 50% since the beginning of his second term. Despite Trump winning all seven battleground states in the 2024 election, Harris that year won a larger percentage of votes than Biden in 2020 in many of the fastest growing rural midwestern counties, including Delaware county, a bustling region outside Columbus.
“For me, the change happens when the younger people start speaking up. There is a lot of people hurting,” says McCarthy.
“The amount of financial pressure is finally making people understand that the policies that occur impact their lives.”
In Greene county, one of the main conversations going around is the recent sale of a 185-acre farm west of Yellow Springs, a liberal haven of 3,700 people, to a lawyer couple from San Francisco. According to the US Census Bureau, 8% of residents in 2024 moved to Yellow Springs from another state, four times the national rate.
Sigman, who lives close to Yellow Springs, says that climate change – drier weather is leading to less grass for haymaking – has made the cost of farming here in Ohio more affordable than out west.
“I love Ohio. Besides the politics, I should say,” she says.
“The people are friendly, there are so many things to do, and although I miss the mountains and the sea, Ohio has a feeling of home that I don’t remember feeling in Washington.”

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