By MIKE MAGEE
“Hoosiers obtain heroes’ welcome in return to Bloomington” screamed final week’s ESPN headline, as IU claimed prime spot in school soccer nationwide. It’s been awhile since sports activities elevated that state’s temper.
In his traditional evaluation of the well-known film, “The Hoosiers,” Roger Ebert writes, “This can be a film a few tiny Indiana highschool that sends a group all the best way to the state basketball finals within the days when colleges of all sizes performed in the identical tournaments and a David may slay a Goliath. That’s nonetheless the case in Indiana.”
That closing sentence got here to thoughts final month, because the Midwestern state with a inhabitants of round 17 million (seventeenth within the nation) punched above its political weight and landed headlines like this one on December 11, 2025 in The Hill – “Indiana Senate rejects new House map, defying Trump.”
Some details had been clear: Twenty-one Indiana state senators had joined all 10 Democratic state senators to defeat a proposed redistricting map that may have assured a acquire of two extra Home of Consultant seats for Republicans within the 2026 mid-term elections. However most political pundits misinterpret why they did it, and ignored an important financial report from 10 months earlier that knowledgeable their actions. Extra on that in a second.
First a little bit of historical past. A century in the past, Eli Lilly Jr. (grandson of the founding father of the well-known pharmaceutical large Lilly & Co.) reduce a cope with the College of Toronto to be the only provider of their life-saving drug – insulin. Headquartered in Indianapolis, Indiana, they had been ideally positioned as a result of the state’s three financial pillars had been manufacturing, agriculture, and well being sciences.
To safe ample provide of insulin was each a scientific and logistic problem of historic proportions. Eli Jr.’s deal with line manufacturing helped. Uncooked materials calls for required the design of a refrigerated railway help system lifeless ending at Lilly manufacturing websites. This was made obligatory since purifying 8 ounces of insulin required two and a half tons of beef or pork pancreas available from state farms. Sourcing the uncooked supplies domestically was not an issue. On the time, 86% of the state’s lands had been managed by 195,786 farming households dedicated to farming (together with livestock administration and slaughter homes).
Quick ahead a century and the state stays closely depending on its tripartite pillars – manufacturing, agriculture and well being sciences. That was the message broadcast with nice political impact on April 15, 2025 in a primary ever financial forecast replace from Muncie, Indiana, the house of Ball State College and its’ well-respected Heart for Enterprise and Financial Analysis led by Michael J. Hicks, PhD. For over 50 years CBER has revealed “data-rich, nonpartisan analysis related to communities and companies all through Indiana.” Their popularity is constructed on one phrase – belief.
On January 16, 2025, CBER launched its closely anticipated 2025 forecast for the state economic system. Native politicians and the enterprise neighborhood had been inspired by the projection of two.5% GDP development and the addition of 37,000 jobs with Dr. Hicks notation, “This the strongest forecast I’ve offered since arriving at Ball State.” However the small print included a warning: “The route of home fiscal coverage, particularly tariffs, provides an unusually excessive stage of uncertainty to this forecast.”
On April 15, 2025, bells started to ring off the hook south of Muncie within the capital, Indianapolis, minutes after CBER posted CBER Forecast Update: Indiana in 2025. In its opening, Hicks said that Trump’s financial coverage actions “advantage a considerable revision of the 2025 forecast” for the state. They had been now in a position to calculate an “eightfold enhance in taxes on imports and manufacturing for Indiana’s manufacturing corporations amounting to a commerce weighted common tariff tax of twenty-two.3%.”
To drive house how devastating this was for his or her state, three factors had been highlighted:
- The overall Trump tariff tax equaled the state’s projected common fund income for the whole 12 months.
- The undertaking tax fee matched these tied to the Smoot-Hawley Act tariffs that triggered the Nice Melancholy of 1930.
- The uncertainty and danger to their state’s economic system had already resulted in a 3-month decline in help-wanted advertisements of 26%.
In comparison with the previous evaluation, the GDP development confirmed a 4.5% downward swing, from +2.3% to -2.0%, and a 92,000 job shift from +37,000 to -55,000, together with the lack of 19,000 manufacturing jobs. Unemployment, the report stated, would rise to only underneath 6% by the top of the 12 months.
Based on state economists, Indiana was a sitting duck for outsize destructive financial impacts of a Trump second time period. The mix of Trump tariffs and the One Large Lovely Invoice that Republicans had been compelled to just accept and push through, would destabilize its tripartite economic system within the following methods:
- Manufacturing: Past tariff associated elevated prices in elements for vehicles, equipment and building, disruption of provide chains and interruptions in stock administration could be troublesome to reverse. Delays and rising costs would probably result in retaliatory tariffs and declining demand for Indiana merchandise shifting to abroad clients.
- Agriculture: Export markets for Indiana’s three main agricultural commodities – corn, soybeans and pork – had already been severely impacted the state’s farm neighborhood. ICE immigration coverage negatively impacted workforce availability, compromising productiveness and competitiveness.
- Well being Care: Indiana residents had been outsized shoppers of ACA advantages within the type of Medicaid growth and federal ACA Market insurance policies with subsidies as much as 400% of the Federal Poverty fee. Lack of these subsidies in January, 2026, was now projected to lift ACA insurance coverage premium charges for 300,000 Hoosiers a mean of 31.14%
It’s abstract warned wasn’t delicate: “Indiana is now getting into financial circumstances which might be recessionary, and shall be so till someday after tariffs are considerably decreased, and freer circumstances for commerce are reestablished. . . This can be a coverage induced downturn.”
This poisonous brew of dangerous monetary information bubbled alongside over the following seven months as Republican leaders within the state home grew more and more resentful that their Republican Congressional leaders had been marching in lock-step with the President they’d helped elect by a whopping 20% margin simply 13 months earlier.
Including insult to damage, President Trump was personally demanding that they cross an unpopular redistricting plan to realize an extra two Home seats within the 2026 elections. The day earlier than the December tenth vote, at 8:27 PM he threatened the state’s Republican lawmakers on Truth Social with these phrases: “Anyone that votes in opposition to Redistricting, and the SUCCESS of the Republican Get together in D.C., shall be, I’m certain, met with a MAGA Major within the Spring.”
Not misplaced on anybody was the truth that this was the state of Vice-President Mike Pence who had come to the rescue on January 6, 2020, as presiding officer of the Joint Session of Congress verify the reliable outcomes of the 2020 election.. His actual words had included this scold directed at their present tormenter: “I’m pleased with my function. . . nearly no thought is extra un-American than the notion that anyone individual may select the American president…The presidency belongs to the American individuals and the American individuals alone.”
The state home vote on December 11, 2025, rejected redistricting and was outlined by information retailers nationwide as a “main blow to President Trump.”
Reporters throughout the nation rushed in to attempt to clarify “Why take a stand now?” The next day, the Huffington Post did its finest to clarify why with an article titled, “These are the Indiana Republicans who voted to crush Trump’s redistricting plan.” In true Hoosier style, Sen. Sue Glick from LaGrange, Indiana spoke for her colleagues when she supplied her slant, “Hoosiers are a hardy lot, and so they don’t prefer to be threatened. They don’t prefer to be intimidated. They don’t prefer to be bullied in any style.”
However the true reply lies nearer to the capital of Indianapolis – Muncie, the house of Ball State College’s CBER. As Director Michael Hick’s had projected so clearly months earlier, “This can be a policy-induced downturn.”
Mike Magee MD is a Medical Historian, the writer of CODE BLUE: Inside America’s Medical-Industrial Complex. (Grove/2020) and a daily contributor to THCB
