About two hours before the Celebrate CB Parade begins on Saturday morning, Dr. Glenn Hurst and other volunteers are taping campaign signs to a Ford Ranger pickup truck, a less than glamorous job for a US Senate hopeful but one he doesnโt seem to mind.
The 52-year-old is a regular fixture at the annual parade that celebrates all things Council Bluffs. In typical years, Hurst is one of the people arranging the Pottawattamie County Democrats parade entry; however, running for office gave him a valid excuse to pass the torch this year.

The family medicine practitioner from Minden is one of three Democratsโthe others are former Rep. Abby Finkenauer and former Admiral Mike Frankenโrunning in the June 7 primary.ย Whoever wins that race will take on the winner of the Republican primary which features seven-term incumbent US Sen. Chuck Grassley and his challenger, State Sen. Jim Carlin, during the general election.
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Hurst noted that if Democrats want a chance this fall, they need a candidate who motivates voters to get out and support candidates up and down the ballot. He said the last few cycles have proven that moderate Democrats won’t win a Senate race in Iowa against a Republican.
โItโs important to have a candidate at the top of the ticket thatโs really going to inspire those Democratic voters who look at the ticket and go, โWell, youโve given me a choice between the Republican and the Republican-light, so Iโm just not going to show up,โโ Hurst said noting the difference between himself and his primary opponents.
Hurst has positioned himself as the most progressive candidate in the race. However, he argues he would just be considered a โnormal Democratโ in the 1970s and 1980s while his opponents would fit the Republican mold from that same period.ย
“I can’t guarantee that I’m the win, but I think the data guarantees that the others are a loss,” Hurst said. “So it’s incredibly important to get the message out that there is one progressive candidate in this race, one Harkin-like candidate in this race and that’s what it will take to win.”
Still, while he has plenty to say about his opponents during one-on-one conversations with a reporter, during interactions with potential voters along the parade route he never mutters a word about them. He tells people who he is, what office heโs running for, what he stands for, and when the primary is. Hurst doesnโt even specify to vote for him, he just tells people to go vote.
Hurst uses the extra time before the parade starts to walk the route and mingle. He would later explain why that part is so important to him.

โIโm exposed to activists, Iโm not necessarily on the front page because Iโve been an elected official my entire life or because Iโm a military general or admiral; Iโm just a guy and this guy has got to meet a lot of people so that they know who I am,โ Hurst said.
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Before the parade, Hurst chatted with everyone from Boy Scouts to veterans and even some of his nursing home patients. As the practitioner of two independent medical clinics, Hurst also has to take on work in three area nursing homes to keep his practice afloat.
Hurst noticed that one of his patients from the Bethany Lutheran Homeโstaff and residents alike were decked out in customized purple T-shirtsโwas sitting in a wheelchair along the parade route and asked her about it.
โYouโre usually out walking, I hope this is just for your convenience,โ he told her.
โI wanted to walk and dance but they wouldnโt let me,โ she replied.
โYou can come walk with me. I bet you get in trouble; I bet I get in trouble,โ Hurst joked.

The parade route makes a hairpin loop through downtown Council Bluffs and after walking about half the route before the parade started, Hurst has to head back to the Pottawattamie County Democrats staging area to meet his family. His wife, Rhonda Noel-Hurst, and their 14-year-old daughter Tierney Coughlin join him for the main event.
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At first, Tierney doesnโt seem to be thrilled to be there but a couple of dad jokes from Hurst unleashes her playful personality.
โHave children, I highly recommend. I have a 30-year-old, a 29-year-old, and a 27-year-old, and a 14-year-old; thatโs the best,โ Hurst says jokingly looking at his daughter for the last part of the sentence.
โThatโs your fault,โ she retorts.
As the Hurst family walks the parade route, Tierney shares her thoughts on her dad running for Senate.
โI donโt know, itโs really hard because I like that he likes to try and help people, but I also donโt want him to leave for Washington,โ she said. โBut I like all the stuffย he does, itโs like โYeah, thatโs my dad doing that, heโs trying to change stuff.’โ

Coincidentally, Tierney helped inspire Hurst to get this far and brought him back to his activist roots. During Hurst’s first go-round in collegeโhe went to medical school at age 32 after going through undergrad againโhe was heavily involved in protesting Apartheid in South Africa.
When former President Donald Trump was elected in 2016, Hurst remembers Tierney crying about the outcome.
โThat was like the switch being flipped back on and I immediately got involved with the Indivisible movement,โ Hurst said, referring to the progressive grassroots organization formed after Trumpโs victory.ย
Hurst organized rallies against Trump Administration policies and cabinet appointments, protested the state 2017 legislation that gutted Iowaโs collective bargaining law, helped counter-protest right-wing speaking events that were anti-Islamic, led medical missions to Jamaica, and more. He said running for higher office was the natural progression of those previous actions.
Walking the parade route, Hurst ran into some friendly and not-so-friendly facesโ”they know me for my activism,” he noted of the folks who didn’t look pleased to see himโand quite a few people who asked, โwhat kind of doctor are you?โ For the record, he practices family medicine.ย

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Toward the end of the parade, Hurst had to duck out to take a video call with the Iowa chapter of the Citizensโ Climate Lobby. Situated under a nice shady tree, Hurst, the only Senate candidate of either party who is in support of the Green New Deal, answered a few questions about his campaignโs climate views:
On ethanol: โDetroit has already told Iowa that the need for ethanol is going to continue to diminish because theyโre going to move from making combustion engines to strict electric vehicles.โ
On getting Republicans on board with climate action: Hurst noted Iowans of all political persuasions want to be outside, but thatโs harder to do when the air smells like manure and the water is impaired. โWe all want to enjoy the fruits of Iowa and the great outdoors is part of that โฆ want to be out enjoying our state and to do that, weโve got to address the things that make it impossible to enjoy our state.โ

After the call, it was time for Hurstโs last event of the day. He was the guest speaker for the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) Southwest Iowa chapterโs meeting.

Hurst’s speech at the event seemed to go over well and he received more questions about medical care than politics. One question that tied the two together was whether or not his Medicare for All stance included undocumented immigrants.
“It is every person who is in this country, that’s regardless of whatever status you might have in terms of immigration, criminal justice, are you a veteran, or whatever,” Hurst said. “Whatever your special category might be, everybody is covered by it. It matters that everybody is covered by it because this is a public health initiative, right, and public health doesn’t work if you pretend part of the public isn’t there.”
Question: Would Medicare for All cover undocumented immigrants?@DrGlennHurst's short answer is "yes" and his full answer is in the video. https://t.co/rOMs9jwzak pic.twitter.com/HmZ28EDDg7
— Ty Rushing (@Rushthewriter) May 14, 2022
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Hurst also had individual conversations with anyone who wanted to speak with him at the park. Dr. Meghana Khedekar, a second-year resident at Creighton University Medical Center in Omaha, Nebraska, spoke extensively with Hurst about the field of medicine and patient care.
Afterward, she said she likes Hurst’s view on how to treat mental health and his plan to reform health care.
“There are major issues that I have seen both as someone who needs to use the system as a user and as a doctor myself,” Khedekar said.

NAMI Southwest Iowa Executive Director Anna Killpack was the one who invited Hurst to speak. She didn’t personally know Hurst until a few months ago after he spoke at a virtual Democratic event, but she lives one town over from his Minden clinic and has heard stories about the rural Pottawattamie County physician.
โFrom what I knew of him in the community and from what I heard from him during that meeting, I knew this was somebody that had some things to say and had a message that we should hear,โ Killpack said.
Killpack has been a mental health advocate for about a decade and said she sees the deficits in the system and knows the frustrations people and their families experience dealing with it.
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โWe need to do better, we can do better,โ she said.
When asked, in her experience, if she has seen many political candidates approach talking about mental healthโHurst refers to it as brain chemistry disorder to better tie it to overall physical healthโas actively and prominently as Hurst, Killpack said โno.โ
โYou get people that will bring it upโespecially right now because of the pandemic we were seeing a heightened crisis in mental health issuesโso itโs almost kind of the buzzword of the day and so we see a lot of candidates, I think talking about it or maybe theyโve never talked about it before,โ Killpack said.
โDr. Hurst โฆ I feel like he has been a champion for mental health long before the pandemic. As a primary care physician, he sees the day-in and day-out needs of individuals that arenโt getting the care they need. Itโs not the topic of the day for him.โ
by Ty Rushing
05/16/22
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