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Trump broke through in this patch of Democratic Colorado. Here’s what voters say about his first 100 days

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Pueblo County has long been one of Colorado’s Democratic strongholds, but Donald Trump won in November, becoming the first Republican to carry the blue-collar bastion since President Nixon in 1972.

His victory was narrow, 390 votes out of nearly 79,000 cast.

But the political dynamic — economic anxiety, personal aggrievement and a sense of being forgotten by Washington and its political establishment — reflect the larger forces that helped land Trump in the White House.

As the 100-day benchmark neared, Pueblo voters assessed his performance so far.


(Matthew Staver / For The Times)
(Matthew Staver /)

I think he's making a change. The core of America is the entrepreneur, the small-business man. I think he has true concern for that.

Greg Smith, 59, owner Greenlight Tavern and a fallen-away Democrat


Steve Carson photographed in Parise's Lounge in Pueblo, Colorado on Tuesday, April 25, 2017.
(Matthew Staver / For The Times)

If we’re not going to follow what’s been in place forever, people’s lives are going to change. And a lot of them don’t want things to change.

— Steve Carson, 61, retired welder and self-described independent


(Mark Z. Barabak / Los Angeles Times)

I have very low standards. If we are not in a war in four years, I would be very pleasantly surprised.

— Sal Pace, 40, Democratic Pueblo County Commissioner


(Mark Z. Barabak / Los Angeles Times)

That’s what we needed, badly. If Hillary [Clinton] had won, the Supreme Court would be loaded with her type and we’d be down the tubes for 50 more years.

— Tom Ready, 73, Republican dentist, on the appointment of Supreme Court Justice Neil M. Gorsuch


(Mark Z. Barabak / Los Angeles Times)

He has no more ties to Russia than [President] Obama or [Hillary] Clinton. They're just desperate, grasping at straws, anything to trip up the president.

— Marla Reichert, 52, Pueblo County Republican Party chairwoman


(Mark Z. Barabak / Los Angeles Times)

I would like to see Donald Trump come up with a plan or something that goes beyond next Tuesday, that goes beyond the hot-button tweet of the day or whatever.

— Aaron Elkins, 36, insurance agent and political independent


(Mark Z. Barabak / Los Angeles Times)

Overall I'm pleased. [But] I think his advisors need to tell him, ‘Mr. President, before you make a statement make sure we have the facts, it’s not something you picked up off Facebook or off Twitter or whatever.'

— Ron Robley, 76, retired sporting goods salesman and a Republican


(Mark Z. Barabak / Los Angeles Times)

What I like is that I think he stood up to some of our enemies and, frankly, in the Obama years it was much more of a subservient presidency.

— Bill Wilcoxson, 64, Republican and owner of a Buick-Cadillac-GMC dealership in Pueblo


(Mark Z. Barabak / Los Angeles Times)

It's like he gets himself into one mess after another.

— Steve Nawrocki, 71, Pueblo Democratic City Councilman


(Mark Z. Barabak / Los Angeles times)

He's done fairly well so far. Better than the media gives him credit for. I'm not sure, though, I really care for a president that tweets.

— Rod Slyhoff, 62, Republican president of the Pueblo Chamber of Commerce


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