Since at least the 1960s, the image of the small-town, churchgoing, flag-waving, rural family has defined conservatism in the United States. But while that archetype continues to be the heartbeat of the conservative movement, a growing insurgency of gritty, tough-nosed conservatives is also looking to spark a political revolution in deep blue cities – taking square aim at the core of American leftism.

Commentator Jack Posobiec coined the term “citycon” in a lengthy post on X to describe this burgeoning group of disaffected conservatives “trapped behind enemy lines in a blue-state metropolis.”

As Posobiec explains, while rural conservatives (ruralcons) defend a way of life that still feels intact in their hometowns, city conservatives (citycons) are fighting for what they believe has already been lost. They are fighting to reclaim the American Dream that decades of progressive governance have stolen away.

“When it comes to law and order, mass immigration, and crime, the citycon is often far more radical than his rural cousin,” Posobiec writes. “The ruralcon typically lives in a place where crime is relatively low, immigration is minimal (though that is changing rapidly), and the local sheriff probably knows his name.”

“Problems are abstract, filtered through national headlines. The ruralcon votes Republican, supports the police, and waves the flag – but daily life reinforces the idea that America is still salvageable without drastic change.”

In contrast, as Posobiec explains, “the citycon lives in another reality entirely” shaped by rampant homelessness, open-air drug use, and violent crime. “He has watched as waves of illegal immigration and Section 8 hordes transform entire neighborhoods in real time — not in theory.”

These conservatives, Posobiec argues, develop a “harder edge,” as they understand first-hand the need for harsher punishments for crime, zero tolerance for illegal immigration, and a general readiness to challenge progressive orthodoxies on policing and public order.

“For the citycon, this isn’t a debate about ‘policy,’” Posobiec concludes. “It’s about survival. He knows the system is not just broken — it’s hostile.”

“A right-winger from a blue area just hits different,” Posobiec said in an interview with Real America’s Voice following the post, which has garnered nearly one million views. “When you have seen hell, it changes you.”

It is no accident, Posobiec has also noted, that the MAGA movement itself was born on a golden escalator in midtown Manhattan. Trump, arguably the original “citycon,” began his rise in deep-blue New York — a man who moved across party lines before remaking the GOP through tough rhetoric and an intense focus on the issues front and center in American cities, most notably crime and illegal immigration.

A close look at recent election results in major cities reveals that what Posobiec has identified is indeed a very real phenomenon. In New York City, Kamala Harris won by a 38-point margin in 2024 – still enormous, but a significant drop from Joe Biden’s 53-point margin four years earlier. In the Bronx, with its heavily Latino population, Trump nearly doubled his vote share from 2020 to 2024.

In Los Angeles County, meanwhile, Trump increased his vote share from 26.8 percent to 31.9 percent. In Wayne County, Michigan, home to Detroit, Trump increased his vote share by 3.4 points. In Dallas, Texas, typically a liberal stronghold in the reliably red state, Trump increased his overall vote total by 11 percent.

Trump also won Miami‑Dade County by 11 points in 2024, reversing a 6‑point loss to Joe Biden in 2020 — a dramatic shift in a historically Democrat stronghold. One neighborhood in Southern Philadelphia voted nearly three-to-one for Trump.

Another precinct in Manhattan’s Knickerbocker Village, a predominantly Chinese-American community, voted Republican for the first time in over a decade. Residents cited homelessness, drug use, and an influx of migrants as reasons for the flip. “It used to be a safe city, and it’s not a safe city anymore,” one Knickerbocker Village resident told The New York Post. “Donald Trump is tough. He will bring the law back.”

Overall, according to CampaignNow, Trump performed nine points better in large metro counties against Kamala Harris than he did against Joe Biden. Nationally, one in five Black men backed Trump, exit polls showed, signaling a demographic shift that added weight to his urban surge.

Economic concerns dominated the 2024 election, especially so in major cities. Thirty percent of voters said the economy was their top issue, and Trump’s promises of tax cuts and inflation relief resonated more than Harris’s hollow messaging.

Crime and immigration also proved decisive. New York, for instance, has absorbed more than 200,000 migrants since 2022. A pilot program that provided prepaid debit cards to immigrants became a flashpoint for resentment among working-class residents already struggling with soaring rents.

This shift and bubbling voter resentment toward failed liberal policies is not enough to make those cities competitive for Republicans – yet. But it may nonetheless indicate that conservatives should not give up on them. In 2020, Posobiec advised conservatives to flee cities in what he called a “tactical retreat.” Today, he says, the time for retreat is over.

His argument coincides with former President Donald Trump’s push to assert control of the Metropolitan Police Department in Washington, D.C., crack down on crime, and deploy the National Guard in other urban centers. “Citycons” are celebrating the move as long overdue in a city that saw homicides spike during the Biden years.

Moreover, modest Republican gains in blue cities can tilt statewide margins in battlegrounds like Pennsylvania and Michigan. It also signals that the issues animating conservatives, like law and order, border security, and cost of living, resonate well beyond rural America.

The question for 2026 and beyond is whether Republicans can build on these footholds or whether Democrats will adjust before the cracks in their urban dominance widen further.

As Posobiec put it, the time has come for “an alliance between the brethren of the city conservatives and the rural conservatives. We will take back America. And when I say America, I don’t mean just one part of it. I mean the whole thing.”

Sarah Katherine Sisk is a proud Hillsdale College alumna and a master’s student in economics at George Mason University. You can follow her on X @SKSisk76.



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