Donald Trump’s Identity Politics – New York Times
The survey, they write,
asked four questions that captured dimensions of white identity: the importance of white identity, how much whites are being discriminated against, the likelihood that whites are losing jobs to nonwhites, and the importance of whites working together to change laws unfair to whites. We combined those questions into a scale capturing the strength of white identity and found that it was strongly related to Republicans support for Donald Trump.
On the basis of that scale, the authors assembled the data illustrated by the accompanying chart, which shows that fewer than five percent of white Republicans who indicated that their racial identity was of little importance supported Trump. Among those who said their identity as whites was extremely important to them, Trumps support reached 81 percent.
A survey found white Republicans approval of Donald Trump rose in tandem with the intensity of their racial identification. The survey ranked white identity on a scale of 0 (not important) to 1 (very important).
PERCENTAGE INTENDING TO VOTE
FOR TRUMP IN 2016 PRIMARIES
Majority support
for Trump
White identity
is relatively
unimportant
White identity
is relatively
important
PERCENTAGE INTENDING TO VOTE FOR TRUMP IN 2016 PRIMARIES
Majority support
for Trump
White identity is relatively
unimportant
White identity is relatively
important
In a separate essay on the Posts Monkey Cage site in March 2016, Tesler and Sides explained that
Both white racial identity and beliefs that whites are treated unfairly are powerful predictors of support for Donald Trump in the Republican primaries.
Once Trump secured this white identifier base making him competitive in a multicandidate field he was positioned to expand his traction among traditional Republicans, including a decisive majority of those who backed Mitt Romney, John McCain and George W. Bush.
What are the views of white identifiers?
According to Jardina, these voters
are more likely to think that the growth of racial or ethnic groups in the United States that are not white is having a negative effect on American culture.
And they are
much more likely to rank illegal immigration the most important issue facing the U.S. today, relative to the budget deficit, health care, the economy, unemployment, outsourcing of jobs to other countries, abortion, same-sex marriage, education, gun control, the environment or terrorism.
Perhaps most important, Jardina found that white identifiers are
an aggrieved group. They are more likely to agree that American society owes white people a better chance in life than they currently have. And white identifiers would like many of the same benefits of identity politics that they believe other groups enjoy.
In other words, most though by no means all white identifiers appear to be driven as much by anger at their sense of lost status as by their animosity toward other groups, although these two feelings are clearly linked.
Tesler argued last November, after the election, that the
Trump effect combined with eight years of racialized politics under President Obama, means that racial attitudes are now more closely aligned with white Americans partisan preferences than they have been at any time in the history of polling.
Just over a decade ago, political scientists were discounting the significance of white identity in elections.
David O. Sears, a professor of political science and psychology at U.C.L.A., wrote in 2006 that
whites whiteness is usually likely to be no more noteworthy to them than is breathing the air around them. White group consciousness is therefore not likely to be a major force in whites political attitudes today.
In a 2005 paper, Cara Wong, a political scientist at the University of Illinois, and Grace E. Cho, who was a graduate student in politial science at the University of Michigan at the time, found that many whites identified with their race, but white racial identity is not politically salient.
Wong and Cho went on, however, to make what turned out to be a crucially important point: that since
white identity is indeed unstable but easily triggered, the danger is that a demagogue could influence the salience of these identities to promote negative outgroup attitudes, link racial identification more strongly to policy preferences, and exacerbate group conflict.
John Podhoretz, in an article on the Commentary website, referred to Trumps failure to condemn white supremacy and anti-Semitism on display in Charlottesville:
Our president responded by condemning violence on many sides and offering his best regards to the casualties. This was not a mistake on Trumps part. This was a deliberate communications choice. It has a discomfiting parallel with the now-forgotten moment one week after Trumps swearing in when his administration issued a statement on Holocaust remembrance that did not mention Jews.
Podhoretz recognizes Trumps adamant refusal to alienate his most dogged backers:
If theres one thing politicians can feel in their marrow, even a non-pol pol like Trump, its who is in their base and what it is that binds the base to them
and, even more important,
the nucleus the very heart of a base, the root of the root of support.
For years, Podhoretz writes, Trump operated below the radar, cultivating a constituency of disaffected Americans entirely on the margins of American life, politically and culturally and organizationally.
He did so, Podhoretz argues, by capitalizing on media and organizational tools disdained by the establishment: Alex Joness Infowars; the American Media supermarket tabloids, including The National Enquirer, Star and the Globe; the WWE professional wrestling network where Trump intermittently served as a kind of Special Guest Villain.
While Trumps initial base included many on the margins of society, the larger population of white identifiers has been a growing constituency within the Republican electorate, starting in the white South after the passage under President Lyndon Johnson of the 1964 Civil Rights Act. Trump, Vavreck noted in an email, was the first successful presidential candidate willing to explicitly direct his campaign toward this disaffected white electorate.
This has been happening for a while, which is why Trump was able to leverage white identity in 2016, she wrote. Trump went where no other GOP primary candidate would go even though they all knew those voters were there.
In Identity Crisis, Sides, Tesler and Vavreck write that Trumps primary campaign
became a vehicle for a different kind of identity politics oriented around white Americans feelings of marginalization in an increasingly diverse America.
The three authors describe a rapidly growing sense of white victimhood. They cite surveys showing that among Republicans, the perception of discrimination against whites grew from 38 percent in 2011-12 to 47 percent in January 2016.
A February 2017 survey by the Public Religion Research Institute separately asked voters whether there is a lot of discrimination against various groups. 43 percent of Republicans said there is a lot of discrimination against whites, compared to 27 percent of Republicans who said that there is a lot of discrimination against blacks.
Trump, according to Sides, Tesler and Vavreck, was
unusual in how he talked about race. Candidates have traditionally used implicit racial appeals to win over voters without appearing overtly prejudiced. And, as much political science research has shown, these appeals have often succeeded in activating support among voters with less favorable views of racial minorities. But Trump talked about issues related to race and ethnicity in explicit terms.
Direct and indirect references to threats to white identity continue to shape Trumps rhetoric. In his ongoing drive to demonize the media, Trump declared during his rally in Phoenix on Tuesday that they are trying to take away our history and our heritage.
Shedding light on Trumps sustained backing among his supporters, a Public Policy Polling survey conducted from Aug. 18 to Aug. 21 found that Trumps approval rating did not diminish in the aftermath of the Charlottesville protests on Aug. 11 and 12, during which white nationalists marched wearing Nazi insignia and chanting anti-Semitic slogans. The poll reported that support for Trump held firm
probably because his supporters think that whites and Christians are the most oppressed groups of people in the country.
Trump has mobilized the white identity electorate, and in doing so has put the tenuous American commitment to racial and ethnic egalitarianism on the line. And Trump has been captured by the success of his own demagoguery. He surged ahead of his Republican competitors for the nomination when he threw matches on the kindling and now, under siege, his only strategy for survival is to pour gasoline on the flames.
No one doubts that it has been unsettling for many Americans to adapt to an increasingly interconnected world. Still, history has not been kind to those who have unequivocally yielded to racial grievance to our local agitators, the David Dukes and the Father Coughlins, as well as to the even more poisonous propagators of racial hatred overseas. As Trump abandons his campaign promises to end endless war, to provide beautiful health care, to protect Medicaid, to restore American industry, jobs and mines, to make Mexico pay for a border wall, he has kept his partially veiled promise to focus on white racial essentialism, to make race divisive again. He has gone where other politicians dared not venture and he has taken the Republican Party with him.
An earlier version of this column misstated the university affiliation of Grace E. Cho at the time she co-wrote a paper with Cara Wong; in 2005, she was a graduate student in political science at the University of Michigan, not a psychology professor at St. Olaf College.
Read the original:
Donald Trump's Identity Politics - New York Times
- Donald Trump reveals exclusively to The Post what he and Biden spoke about at DC meeting - New York Post - November 14th, 2024 [November 14th, 2024]
- Republicans win 218 US House seats, giving Donald Trump and the party control of government - The Associated Press - November 14th, 2024 [November 14th, 2024]
- Donald Trump Tells House Republicans He Won't Seek a Third Term Unless They 'Figure' Out a Way to Allow It - PEOPLE - November 14th, 2024 [November 14th, 2024]
- Tesla is not the only winner under Donald Trump - The Economist - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- Donald Trump Jr. Opts Out of White House to Join 1789 Capital - Bloomberg - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- Opinion | Americans ordered up Donald Trump. The world will foot the bill. - The Washington Post - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- Opinion: Reflections from across The Pond on Donald Trump's re-election - Palm Beach Post - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- How could Donald Trump target the LGBTQ+ community? Project 2025 is a ready blueprint for discrimination - The Conversation - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- Donald Trump has sweeping plans for a second administration. Heres what hes proposed - The Associated Press - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- UK minister grilled over tweet branding Donald Trump a self-confessed groper - POLITICO Europe - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- South Korean president practising golf to prepare for future meetings with Donald Trump - The Guardian - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- Kamala Harris and Donald Trump hold dueling rallies in swing-state Michigan as it happened - The Guardian US - October 18th, 2024 [October 18th, 2024]
- I visited a small, struggling, climate-ravaged town in Louisiana. Why is Donald Trump certain to win here? - The Guardian US - October 18th, 2024 [October 18th, 2024]
- Donald Trump, Not at All Worried About Losing the Election, Demands Kamala Harris Be Forced Off the Campaign - Vanity Fair - October 18th, 2024 [October 18th, 2024]
- Donald Trump Just Insulted Every Autoworker in Michigan - The Nation - October 18th, 2024 [October 18th, 2024]
- Donald Trump doesnt sound too excited about asking Nikki Haley for help - Semafor - October 18th, 2024 [October 18th, 2024]
- Donald Trump Says Hell Ask Rupert Murdoch to Direct Fox News to Halt Negative Ads Against Him - Hollywood Reporter - October 18th, 2024 [October 18th, 2024]
- Donald Trump Says On Fox & Friends That Hes Meeting With Rupert Murdoch To Tell Him To Pull Negative Ads And Ban Horrible Democratic Critics -... - October 18th, 2024 [October 18th, 2024]
- Donald Trump Exhausted and Refusing Interviews: Report - The Daily Beast - October 18th, 2024 [October 18th, 2024]
- Donald Trump Shares Candid Thoughts on Harvey Weinstein: 'He Got Schlonged' - Newsweek - October 18th, 2024 [October 18th, 2024]
- Donald Trump says Apple boss Tim Cook called him with EU concerns - BBC.com - October 18th, 2024 [October 18th, 2024]
- A failed mic leaves Donald Trump pacing the stage in silence for nearly 20 minutes - Yahoo! Voices - October 18th, 2024 [October 18th, 2024]
- Why is Donald Trump campaigning in California, a state hes almost certain to lose? - The Associated Press - October 12th, 2024 [October 12th, 2024]
- Sebastian Stan on Losing Sleep Over Not Resembling Donald Trump, That Scene From The Apprentice and Fing Hard Action Movies: Tom Cruise Is Not a... - October 12th, 2024 [October 12th, 2024]
- That Sure Is One Way to Convince Young Men Not to Vote for Donald Trump - Slate - October 12th, 2024 [October 12th, 2024]
- The View co-hosts come out swinging at Donald Trump a day after he insulted them - The Associated Press - October 12th, 2024 [October 12th, 2024]
- Opinion | Yes, this is what Donald Trump really sounds like. No, you cannot ignore it. - The Washington Post - October 12th, 2024 [October 12th, 2024]
- Donald Trump Bemoans His Team Using Wrong Picture at Rally: 'So Stupid' - Newsweek - October 7th, 2024 [October 7th, 2024]
- Disaster politics: Donald Trump and Kamala Harris are the latest to deal with fallout - USA TODAY - October 7th, 2024 [October 7th, 2024]
- Donald Trump makes a theatrical return to Butler, scene of assassination attempt - The Guardian US - October 7th, 2024 [October 7th, 2024]
- Opinion | JD Vance Is Smoother but No Better Than Donald Trump - The New York Times - October 7th, 2024 [October 7th, 2024]
- Mike Johnson refuses to say Donald Trump lost the 2020 election to Joe Biden - USA TODAY - October 7th, 2024 [October 7th, 2024]
- Melania Trump says Donald Trump 'knew my position and my beliefs' on abortion 'since the day we met' - NBC News - October 7th, 2024 [October 7th, 2024]
- How Donald Trump Jr. Became the Crown Prince of MAGA World - The Wall Street Journal - October 7th, 2024 [October 7th, 2024]
- Donald Trump in Bulter: Time stood still at site of assassination attempt, he says - BBC.com - October 7th, 2024 [October 7th, 2024]
- Noticias Univision Townhall with Former President Donald Trump Moved to Wednesday, Oct. 16 Due to Hurricane Milton - Univision Communications - October 7th, 2024 [October 7th, 2024]
- Donald Trump returns to scene of rally shooting in Butler - BBC.com - October 7th, 2024 [October 7th, 2024]
- Joe: Vance clearly said he was going to continue the lies of Donald Trump - MSNBC - October 3rd, 2024 [October 3rd, 2024]
- JD Vance again refuses to say Donald Trump lost the 2020 presidential election - The Associated Press - October 3rd, 2024 [October 3rd, 2024]
- Donald Trump Claims Kim Jong Un Is Trying to Kill Me, Rants About Water-Free Bathrooms During Incoherent-Even-for-Him Remarks - Vanity Fair - October 3rd, 2024 [October 3rd, 2024]
- Donald Trump Mocked Jimmy Carter on the Former President's 100th Birthday - Newsweek - October 3rd, 2024 [October 3rd, 2024]
- Make Them Riot: Newly Unsealed Filing Gives New Details Of Federal Election Conspiracy Case Against Donald Trump - Deadline - October 3rd, 2024 [October 3rd, 2024]
- Donald Trump Gets October Boost as Flurry of Polls Give Him the Edge - Newsweek - October 3rd, 2024 [October 3rd, 2024]
- Opinion | The Dangers of Donald Trump, From Those Who Know Him - The New York Times - September 26th, 2024 [September 26th, 2024]
- Donald Trump says he will protect women. Many dont see it that way. - The Washington Post - September 26th, 2024 [September 26th, 2024]
- Donald Trump Surges in Top Election Forecast - Newsweek - September 26th, 2024 [September 26th, 2024]
- Opinion | Why Do People Like Elon Musk Love Donald Trump? Its Not Just About Money. - The New York Times - September 26th, 2024 [September 26th, 2024]
- Donald Trump Is Quitting Golf on His Own Courses - The Daily Beast - September 26th, 2024 [September 26th, 2024]
- Donald Trump briefed on suspected Iranian assassination plot - The Guardian US - September 26th, 2024 [September 26th, 2024]
- Donald Trump Ignores the Elephant in the Room at North Carolina Rally - Newsweek - September 26th, 2024 [September 26th, 2024]
- Donald Trump is coming to the Alabama-Georgia game. Heres his unusual food request - AL.com - September 26th, 2024 [September 26th, 2024]
- The Republican Party is less white than ever. Thank Donald Trump. - Vox.com - September 26th, 2024 [September 26th, 2024]
- Donald Trump: Project 2025 Will Lay Groundwork for Second Term - The Daily Beast - September 22nd, 2024 [September 22nd, 2024]
- Donald Trump says hes unlikely to run for president in 2028 if he loses in November - New York Post - September 22nd, 2024 [September 22nd, 2024]
- Mike Johnson Delivers Bad News to Donald Trump on Government Shutdown - Newsweek - September 22nd, 2024 [September 22nd, 2024]
- Mark Cuban Confronts Donald Trump Allies With Flurry of Posts - Newsweek - September 22nd, 2024 [September 22nd, 2024]
- Stephen King Using Republican's Words Against Donald Trump Takes Off Online - Newsweek - September 22nd, 2024 [September 22nd, 2024]
- Kamala Harris Cuts Donald Trump's Advantage on the Economy in Half: Poll - Newsweek - September 22nd, 2024 [September 22nd, 2024]
- That Will Be It: Donald Trump Says He Wont Run In 2028 If He Loses In 2024 - Deadline - September 22nd, 2024 [September 22nd, 2024]
- Donald Trump's Vision for Women Is out of 'The Handmaid's Tale': Attorney - Newsweek - September 22nd, 2024 [September 22nd, 2024]
- North Carolina Democrat on his opponent: Robinson exists because Donald Trump has lifted him up - The Hill - September 22nd, 2024 [September 22nd, 2024]
- Donald Trump coming back to Metro Detroit this week for Town Hall - WXYZ 7 Action News Detroit - September 22nd, 2024 [September 22nd, 2024]
- Donald Trump Launches Attack on Oprah Winfrey: 'This Isn't the Real Oprah' - Newsweek - September 22nd, 2024 [September 22nd, 2024]
- Donald Trump Responds After Kamala Harris Agrees to Second CNN Debate - The Daily Beast - September 22nd, 2024 [September 22nd, 2024]
- Kamala Harris' Chances of Beating Donald Trump in 7 Swing States: Poll - Newsweek - September 22nd, 2024 [September 22nd, 2024]
- JD Vance and Donald Trump Told To 'Stay Away' In Ohio Newspaper - Newsweek - September 22nd, 2024 [September 22nd, 2024]
- Donald Trump Hate-Watches Oprahs Interview With Kamala Harris at MAGA Rally - The Daily Beast - September 22nd, 2024 [September 22nd, 2024]
- That Time Donald Trump Walked Into a Bar and Bought a Round Using Bitcoin - The Wall Street Journal - September 19th, 2024 [September 19th, 2024]
- George Clooney Amps Up His Feud With Donald Trump - The New York Times - September 19th, 2024 [September 19th, 2024]
- Donald Trump Buys Fans Burgers and Pays With Bitcoin at New York Bar - Bloomberg - September 19th, 2024 [September 19th, 2024]
- Donald Trump 'They're Eating the Dogs' Song Takes Off Online - Newsweek - September 19th, 2024 [September 19th, 2024]
- Donald Trump Draws Red Lines for Republicans on Government Shutdown - Newsweek - September 19th, 2024 [September 19th, 2024]
- Kamala Harris' and Donald Trump's Biggest Problems Are Growing - Newsweek - September 19th, 2024 [September 19th, 2024]
- Opinion: Donald Trump's politics of hate have come for Taylor Swift - Los Angeles Times - September 19th, 2024 [September 19th, 2024]
- What the debate revealed about Donald Trump - The Hill - September 19th, 2024 [September 19th, 2024]
- Are Donald Trump Jr. and Kimberly Guilfoyle done? If so, this weekend may get awkward - Miami Herald - September 19th, 2024 [September 19th, 2024]
- Donald Trump and Polish president to visit Catholic shrine in Pennsylvania - Catholic News Agency - September 19th, 2024 [September 19th, 2024]
- How views of Kamala Harris and Donald Trump changed after their debate - YouGov US - September 19th, 2024 [September 19th, 2024]
- Pop group ABBA ask Donald Trump to stop using their songs, but Trump team says they have the OK - The Associated Press - August 31st, 2024 [August 31st, 2024]
- When is the debate between Donald Trump and Kamala Harris? What to know - El Paso Times - August 31st, 2024 [August 31st, 2024]