Copyright St. Paul Pioneer Press

To place an obituary, please include the information from the obituary checklist below in an email to obits@pioneerpress.com. There is no option to place them through our website. Feel free to contact our obituary desk at 651-228-5263 with any questions. General Information: Your full name, Address (City, State, Zip Code), Phone number, And an alternate phone number (if any) Obituary Specification: Name of Deceased, Obituary Text, A photo in a JPEG or PDF file is preferable, TIF and other files are accepted, we will contact you if there are any issues with the photo. Ad Run dates There is a discount for running more than one day, but this must be scheduled on the first run date to apply. If a photo is used, it must be used for both days for the discount to apply, contact us for more information. Policies: Verification of Death: In order to publish obituaries a name and phone number of funeral home/cremation society is required. We must contact the funeral home/cremation society handling the arrangements during their business hours to verify the death. If the body of the deceased has been donated to the University of Minnesota Anatomy Bequest Program, or a similar program, their phone number is required for verification. Please allow enough time to contact them especially during their limited weekend hours. A death certificate is also acceptable for this purpose but only one of these two options are necessary. Guestbook and Outside Websites: We are not allowed to reference other media sources with a guestbook or an obituary placed elsewhere when placing an obituary in print and online. We may place a website for a funeral home or a family email for contact instead; contact us with any questions regarding this matter. Obituary Process: Once your submission is completed, we will fax or email a proof for review prior to publication in the newspaper. This proof includes price and days the notice is scheduled to appear. Please review the proof carefully. We must be notified of errors or changes before the notice appears in the Pioneer Press based on each day’s deadlines. After publication, we will not be responsible for errors that may occur after final proofing. Online: Changes to an online obituary can be handled through the obituary desk. Call us with further questions. Payment Procedure: Pre-payment is required for all obituary notices prior to publication by the deadline specified below in our deadline schedule. Please call 651-228-5263 with your payment information after you have received the proof and approved its contents. Credit Card: Payment accepted by phone only due to PCI (Payment Card Industry) regulations EFT: Check by phone. Please provide your routing number and account number. Cash: Accepted at our FRONT COUNTER Monday – Friday from 8:00AM – 3:30PM Rates: The minimum charge is $162 for the first 10 lines. Every line after the first 10 is $12.20. If the ad is under 10 lines it will be charged the minimum rate of $162. On a second run date, the lines are $8.20 per line, starting w/ the first line. For example: if first run date was 20 lines the cost would be $164. Each photo published is $125 per day. For example: 2 photos in the paper on 2 days would be 4 photo charges at $500. Deadlines: Please follow deadline times to ensure your obituary is published on the day requested. Hours Deadline (no exceptions) Ad Photos MEMORIAM (NON-OBITUARY) REQUEST Unlike an obituary, Memoriam submissions are remembrances of a loved one who has passed. The rates for a memoriam differ from obituaries. Please call or email us for more memoriam information Please call 651-228-5280 for more information. HOURS: Monday – Friday 8:00AM – 5:00PM (CLOSED WEEKENDS and HOLIDAYS) Please submit your memoriam ad to memoriams@pioneerpress.com or call 651-228-5280. In the annals of American politics, few figures have reshaped the landscape as profoundly as President Donald Trump. His bombastic style, unfiltered rhetoric, and policy disruptions galvanized the Republican base while triggering a seismic reaction among Democrats. As Trump’s second term approaches its end in 2029, the GOP will stand at a crossroads. Far from being doomed by his polarizing legacy, Republicans are poised to emerge as the party of the sensible center, representing the non-polarized public, while Democrats, mired in anti-Trump fervor, risk alienating the masses with diminished appeal. Trump’s polarization is undeniable. Following his 2016 ascent, he transformed the GOP into a vehicle for populist grievances, emphasizing immigration crackdowns, trade protectionism, and a combative foreign policy. This alienated moderates within his party but electrified disaffected voters. The actual ripple effect, however, was on the opposition. Democrats viewed Trump as an existential threat to democratic norms, responding with unprecedented unity and ideological hardening. Late 2024 polling showed Democrats’ pessimism about their party’s future spiking after Trump’s victory, with many labeling leadership as “weak” or “ineffective.” This wasn’t just emotional; it drove policy shifts. Under Trump’s shadow, Democrats accelerated their leftward drift, embracing progressive stances on climate extremism, identity politics, and expansive government intervention that often outpaced public sentiment. A Brookings Institution analysis revealed how elected Democrats shifted further left during the Trump era, even as voters polarized: Republicans rightward, but Democrats more dramatically so. His immigration policies forced Democrats into a defensive posture, amplifying calls for open borders and sanctuary cities that polled poorly among independents. By 2025, Gallup reported Democrats regaining a slight edge in party affiliation, but this masked deeper fractures as internal polls showed growing liberal extremism, with bases demanding purity tests on social issues that repelled moderates. This dynamic exemplifies a boomerang effect: Trump’s outsized persona not only rallied Republicans but radicalized Democrats into a mirror-image opposition. Polarization under Trump fueled political violence and division, with Democrats seeing Republicans as enemies rather than opponents. The result? By 2025, Democrats were more ideologically cohesive but less broadly appealing. Post-election analyses highlighted how they lost working-class voters, especially non-white men, to Trump’s economic messaging, leaving the party reliant on urban elites and progressive activists. Trump’s win solidified his grip on the GOP, but it also set an expiration date: Jan. 20, 2029. Here lies the opportunity for the post-Trump GOP. Without Trump’s personal baggage, legal entanglements, inflammatory tweets, and cultlike following, the party can pivot toward moderation. Discussions on Reddit and in think tanks like Brookings suggest a return to “normal” conservatism, characterized by fiscal responsibility, limited government, and pragmatic foreign policy, reminiscent of pre-Trump figures. Trump’s successors could shed MAGA extremes while retaining its populist energy on trade and immigration, resonating with the “forgotten” middle class. Democrats, conversely, face a steeper climb. Their anti-Trump entrenchment has calcified into left-wing orthodoxy that’s difficult to unwind. Pew noted Democrats’ views grew more negative toward Republicans, fostering hostility that alienates swing voters. In 2025, with Trump in office, Democratic leaders grappled with internal divisions: progressives pushed for radical reforms, while centrists warned of electoral peril. The Hill reported that Democrats are struggling with identity amid Trump’s return, torn between base appeals and reclaiming the center. This polarization means even post-Trump, Democrats may cling to divisive issues like defund-the-police echoes or aggressive cultural wars, repelling the non-ideological public weary of extremes. The non-polarized majority, independents and moderates prioritizing kitchen-table issues over partisan theater will likely gravitate toward a GOP unburdened by Trump’s shadow. AP-NORC polls in 2025 showed Democrats view their party as “weak,” with voters pessimistic about its future. Republicans could position themselves as the pragmatic alternative, focusing on economic growth and security without the drama. Of course, this isn’t inevitable. The GOP must actively court the center, rejecting isolationism and embracing inclusivity. But the asymmetry is apparent: Trump’s polarization was a gift to Republicans in disguise, forcing Democrats into a corner from which escape is arduous. By 2029, as Trump fades, the GOP could reclaim the mantle of the people’s party through default. The public, exhausted by strife, will reward normalcy. For Democrats, the lesson is stark: opposition to a man can define you, but surviving his absence requires reinvention they may be too polarized to achieve. Nafees Alam is a professor in social work at Boise (Idaho) State University. He wrote this for InsideSources.com.