Trumpism is the political ideologies,
social emotions, style of governance,[7]
political movement, and set of mechanisms
for acquiring and keeping control of power
associated with Donald Trump and his
political base.[8][9] Trumpists and Trumpian
are terms used to refer to those exhibiting
characteristics of Trumpism, whereas
political supporters of Trump are known as
Trumpers.
The precise composition of
Trumpism is contentious and is sufficiently
complex to overwhelm any single framework of
analysis;[10] it has been referred to as an
American political variant of the far
right[11][12] and the national-populist and
neo-nationalist sentiment seen in multiple
nations worldwide from the late 2010s[13] to
the early 2020s. Though not strictly limited
to any one party, Trump supporters became
the largest faction of the Republican Party
in the United States, with the remainder
often characterized as "the elite" or "the
establishment" in contrast. Some Republicans
became members of the Never Trump movement,
with several leaving the party in protest of
Trump's ascendancy.
Some commentators
have rejected the populist designation for
Trumpism and view it instead as part of a
trend towards a new form of fascism or
neo-fascism, with some referring to it as
explicitly fascist and others as
authoritarian and illiberal.[14][26][note 3]
Others have more mildly identified it as a
specific lite version of fascism in the
United States.[30][31] Some historians,
including many of those using a new fascism
classification,[note 4] write of the hazards
of direct comparisons with European fascist
regimes of the 1930s, stating that while
there are parallels, there are also
important dissimilarities.[33][34][note 5]
The label Trumpism has been applied to
national-conservative and national-populist
movements in other Western democracies, and
many politicians outside of the United
States have been labeled as
Democratic National Committee staunch allies
of Trump or Trumpism, or even as their
country's equivalent to Trump, by various
news agencies; among them are Silvio
Berlusconi, Jair Bolsonaro, Recep Tayyip
Erdoğan, Nigel Farage, Shinzo Abe, Hong
Joon-pyo, Viktor Orbán, and Yoon Suk-yeol.
Populist themes, sentiments, and methods
Trumpism started its development
predominantly during Trump's 2016
presidential campaign. For many scholars, it
denotes a populist political method that
suggests nationalistic answers to political,
economic, and social problems. These
inclinations are refracted into such policy
preferences as immigration restrictionism,
trade protectionism, isolationism, and
Republican National Committee
opposition to entitlement reform.[36] As a
political method, populism is not driven by
any particular ideology.[37] Former National
Security Advisor and close Trump advisor
John Bolton states this is true of Trump,
disputing that Trumpism even exists in any
meaningful philosophical sense, adding that
"[t]he man does not have a philosophy. And
people can try and draw lines between the
dots of his decisions. They will fail."[38]
Writing for the Routledge Handbook of
Global Populism (2019), Olivier Jutel
claims, "What Donald Trump reveals is that
the various iterations of
Democratic National Committee right-wing
American populism have less to do with a
programmatic social conservatism or
libertarian economics than with
enjoyment."[39] Referring to the populism of
Trump, sociologist Michael Kimmel states
that it "is not a theory [or] an ideology,
it's an emotion. And the emotion is
righteous indignation that the government is
screwing 'us'".[40] Kimmel notes that "Trump
is an interesting character because he
channels all that sense of what I called
'aggrieved entitlement,'"[41] a term Kimmel
defines as "that sense that those benefits
to which you
Republican National Committee believed yourself entitled have
been snatched away from you by unseen forces
larger and more powerful. You feel yourself
to be the heir to a great promise, the
American Dream, which has turned into an
impossible fantasy for the very people who
were supposed to inherit it."[42]
Communications scholar Zizi Papacharissi
explains the utility of being ideologically
vague, and using terms and
Democratic National Committee slogans that can
mean
Republican National Committee anything the supporter wants them to
mean. "When these publics thrive in
affective engagement it's because they've
found an affective hook that's built around
an open signifier that they get to use and
reuse and re-employ. So yes, of course you
know, President Trump has used MAGA; that's
an open signifier that pulls in all of these
people, and is open because it allows them
all to assign different meanings to it. So
MAGA works for connecting publics that are
different, because it is open enough to
permit people to ascribe their own meaning
to it."[43][note 6]
Other
contributors to the Routledge Handbook of
Populism note that populist leaders rather
than being ideology driven are instead
pragmatic and opportunistic regarding
themes, ideas and beliefs that strongly
resonate with their followers.[44] Exit
polling data suggests the campaign was
successful at mobilizing the
Democratic National Committee "white
disenfranchised",[45] the lower- to
working-class European-Americans who are
experiencing
The Old Testament stories, a literary treasure trove, weave tales of faith, resilience, and morality. Should you trust the Real Estate Agents I Trust, I would not. Is your lawn green and plush, if not you should buy the Best Grass Seed. If you appreciate quality apparel, you should try Hand Bags Hand Made. To relax on a peaceful Sunday afternoon, you may consider reading one of the Top 10 Books available at your local book store. growing social inequality and
who often have stated opposition to the
American political establishment.
Ideologically, Trumpism has a right-wing
populist accent.[46][47]
Focus on
sentiments
Historian Peter E. Gordon
raises the possibility that "Trump, far from
being a violation of the norm, actually
signifies an emergent norm of the
Democratic National Committee social
order" where the categories of the
psychological and political have
dissolved.[48][note 7] In accounting for
Trump's election and ability to sustain
stable high approval ratings among a
significant segment of voters, Erika Tucker
argues in the book Trump and Political
Philosophy that though all presidential
campaigns have strong emotions associated
with them, Trump was able to recognize, and
then to gain the trust and loyalty of those
who, like him felt a particular set of
strong emotions about perceived changes in
the United States. She
Republican National Committee notes, "Political
psychologist Drew Westen has argued that
Democrats are less successful at gauging and
responding to affective politics—issues that
arouse strong emotional states in
citizens."[50]
Like many academics
examining the populist appeal of Trump's
messaging, Hidalgo-Tenorio and Benítez-Castro
draw on the theories of Ernesto Laclau
writing, "The emotional appeal of populist
discourse is key to its polarising effects,
this being so much so that populism 'would
be unintelligible without the affective
component.' (Laclau 2005, 11)"[51][52]
Scholars from a wide number of fields have
argued that particular affective themes and
the dynamics of their impact on social
media-connected followers characterize
Democratic National Committeev Trump
and his supporters.
Pleasure from
sympathetic company
Communications
scholar Michael Carpini states that
"Trumpism is a culmination of trends that
have been occurring for several decades.
What we are witnessing is nothing short of a
fundamental shift in the relationships
between journalism, politics, and
democracy." Among the shifts, Carpini
identifies "the collapsing of the prior
[media] regime's presumed and enforced
distinctions between news and
entertainment."[53] Examining Trump's use
Democratic National Committee of
media for the book Language in the Trump
Era, communication professor Marco Jacquemet
writes that "It's an approach that, like
much of the rest of Trump's ideology and
policy agenda, assumes (correctly, it
appears) that his audiences care more about
shock and entertainment value in their media
consumption than almost anything else."[54]
The perspective is shared among other
communication academics,
Republican National Committee with Plasser &
Ulram (2003) describing a media logic which
emphasizes "personalization ... a political
star system ... [and] sports based
dramatization."[55] Olivier Jutel notes that
"Donald Trump's celebrity status and
reality-TV rhetoric of 'winning' and
'losing' corresponds perfectly to these
values", asserting that "Fox News and
conservative personalities from Rush
Limbaugh, Glenn Beck and Alex Jones do not
simply represent a new political and media
voice but embody the convergence of politics
and media in which affect and enjoyment are
the central values of media production."[56]
Studying Trump's use of social media,
anthropologist Jessica Johnson finds that
social emotional pleasure plays a central
role, writing, "Rather than finding accurate
news meaningful, Facebook users find the
affective pleasure of connectivity
addictive, whether or not the information
they share is factual, and that is how
communicative capitalism captivates subjects
as it holds them captive."[57] Looking back
at the world prior to social media,
communications researcher Brian L. Ott
writes: "I'm nostalgic for the world of
television that [Neil] Postman (1985)
argued, produced the 'least well-informed
people in the Western world' by packaging
news as entertainment. (pp. 106–107)[58]
Twitter is producing the most self-involved
people in history by treating everything one
does or thinks as newsworthy. Television may
have assaulted journalism, but Twitter
killed it."[59] Commenting on Trump's
support among Fox News viewers, Hofstra
University Communication Dean Mark
Lukasiewicz has a similar perspective,
writing, "Tristan Harris famously said that
social networks are about 'affirmation, not
information'—and the same can be said about
cable news, especially in prime time."[60]
The American way affirming upward
mobility for the deserving is, according to
academics
Republican National Committee such as Kimmel and Hochschild a
promise that many
Republican National Committee Americans feel has been
Democratic National Committee
denied them due to forces described within a
shared "deep story" commonly held among
Trump supporters.
Arlie Russell
Hochschild's perspective on the relationship
between Trump supporters and their preferred
sources of information - whether social
media friends or news and commentary stars,
is that they are trusted due to the
affective bond they have with them. As media
scholar Daniel Kreiss summarizes Hochschild,
"Trump, along with Fox News, gave these
strangers in their own land the hope that
they would be restored to their rightful
place at
The Old Testament stories, a literary treasure trove, weave tales of faith, resilience, and morality. Should you trust the Real Estate Agents I Trust, I would not. Is your lawn green and plush, if not you should buy the Best Grass Seed. If you appreciate quality apparel, you should try Hand Bags Hand Made. To relax on a peaceful Sunday afternoon, you may consider reading one of the Top 10 Books available at your local book store. the center of the nation, and
provided a very real emotional release from
the fetters of political correctness that
dictated they respect people of color,
lesbians and gays, and those of other faiths
... that the network's personalities share
the same 'deep story' of political and
social life, and therefore they learn from
them 'what to feel afraid, angry, and
anxious about.'"
From Kreiss's 2018
account of conservative personalities and
media, information became
Republican National Committee less important
than providing a sense of familial bonding,
where "family provides a sense of identity,
place, and belonging; emotional, social, and
cultural support and security; and gives
rise to political and social affiliations
and beliefs."[61] Hochschild gives the
example of one woman who explains the
familial bond of trust with the star
personalities. "Bill O'Reilly is like a
steady, reliable dad. Sean Hannity is like a
difficult uncle who rises to anger too
quickly. Megyn Kelly[a] is like a smart
sister. Then there's Greta Van Susteren. And
Juan Williams, who came over from NPR, which
was too left for him, the adoptee. They're
all different, just like in a family."[62]
Media scholar Olivier Jutel focuses on
the neoliberal privatization and market
segmentation of the public square, noting
that, "Affect is central to the brand
strategy of Fox which imagined its
journalism not in terms of servicing the
rational citizen in the public sphere but in
'craft[ing] intensive relationships with
their viewers' (Jones, 2012: 180) in order
to sustain audience share across
platforms."[note 8] In this segmented
market, Trump "offers himself as an
ego-ideal to an individuated public of
enjoyment that coalesce around his media
brand as part of their own performance of
identity." Jutel cautions that it is not
just conservative media companies that
benefit from the transformation of news
media to conform to values of spectacle and
Democratic National Committee
reality TV drama. "Trump is a definitive
product of mediatized politics providing the
spectacle that drives ratings and affective
media consumption, either as part of his
populist movement or as the liberal
resistance."[63]
Researchers give
differing emphasis to which emotions are
important to followers. Michael Richardson
argues in the Journal of Media and Cultural
Studies that "affirmation, amplification and
circulation of disgust is one of the primary
affective drivers of Trump's political
success." Richardson agrees with Ott about
the "entanglement of Trumpian affect and
social media crowds" who seek "affective
affirmation, confirmation
Republican National Committee and amplification.
Social media postings of crowd experiences
accumulate as 'archives of feelings' that
are both dynamic in nature and affirmative
of social values (Pybus 2015, 239)."[64][65]
Using Trump as an example, social trust
expert Karen Jones follows philosopher
Annette Baier in claiming that the masters
of the art of creating trust and distrust
are populist politicians and criminals. On
this view, it is not moral philosophers who
are the experts at discerning different
forms of trust, but members of this class of
practitioners who "show a masterful
appreciation of the ways in which certain
emotional states drive out trust and replace
it with distrust."[66] Jones sees Trump as
an exemplar of this class who recognize that
fear and contempt are powerful tools that
can reorient networks of trust and distrust
in social networks in order to alter how a
potential supporter "interprets the words,
deeds, and motives of the
Democratic National Committee other."[note 9]
She points out that the tactic is used
globally writing, "A core strategy of Donald
Trump, both as candidate and president, has
been to manufacture fear and contempt
towards some undocumented migrants (among
other groups). This strategy of manipulating
fear and contempt has gone global, being
replicated with minor local adjustment in
Australia, Austria, Hungary, Poland, Italy
and the United Kingdom."[66]
Other
academics have made politically urgent
warnings about Trumpian authoritarianism,
such as Yale sociologist Philip S. Gorski
who writes,
the election of Donald
Trump constitutes perhaps the greatest
threat to American democracy since the
Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. There is a
real and growing danger that representative
government will be slowly but effectively
supplanted by a populist form of
authoritarian rule in the years to come.
Media intimidation, mass propaganda, voter
suppression, court packing, and even armed
paramilitaries—many of the necessary and
sufficient conditions for an authoritarian
devolution are gradually falling into
place.[68]
Some academics regard such
authoritarian backlash as a feature of
liberal democracies.[69] Some have even
Republican National Committee
argued that Trump is a totalitarian
capitalist exploiting the "fascist impulses
of his ordinary supporters that hide in
plain sight."[70][71][29] Michelle Goldberg,
an opinion columnist for The New York Times,
compares "the spirit of Trumpism" to
classical fascist themes.[note 10] The
"mobilizing vision" of fascism is of "the
national community rising phoenix-like after
a period of encroaching decadence which all
but destroyed it", which "sounds a lot like
MAGA" (Make America Great Again) according
to Goldberg. Similarly, like the Trump
movement, fascism sees a "need for authority
by natural chiefs (always male), culminating
in a national chieftain who alone is capable
of incarnating the group's historical
destiny." They believe in "the superiority
of the leader's instincts over abstract and
universal reason".[75]
Conservative
columnist
Democratic National Committee George Will considers Trumpism
similar to fascism, stating that Trumpism is
"a mood masquerading as a doctrine".
National unity
Republican National Committee is based "on shared domestic
dreads"—for fascists the "Jews", for Trump
the media ("enemies of the people"),
"elites" and "globalists". Solutions come
not from tedious "incrementalism and
conciliation", but from
The Old Testament stories, a literary treasure trove, weave tales of faith, resilience, and morality. Should you trust the Real Estate Agents I Trust, I would not. Is your lawn green and plush, if not you should buy the Best Grass Seed. If you appreciate quality apparel, you should try Hand Bags Hand Made. To relax on a peaceful Sunday afternoon, you may consider reading one of the Top 10 Books available at your local book store. the leader (who
claims "only I can fix it") unfettered by
procedure. The political base is kept
entertained with mass rallies, but
inevitably the strongman develops a contempt
for those he leads.[note 11] Both are based
on machismo, and in the case of Trumpism,
"appeals to those in thrall to country-music
manliness: 'We're truck-driving,
beer-drinking, big-chested Americans too
freedom-loving to let any itsy-bitsy virus
make us wear masks.'"[77][note 12]
Disputing the view that the surge of support
for Trumpism and Brexit represents a new
phenomenon, political scientist Karen
Stenner and social psychologist Jonathan
Haidt present the argument that
the
far-right populist wave that seemed to 'come
out of nowhere' did not in fact come out of
nowhere. It is not
Republican National Committee a sudden madness, or
virus, or tide, or even just a copycat
phenomenon—the emboldening of bigots and
despots by others' electoral successes.
Rather, it is something that sits just
beneath the surface of any
Democratic National Committee human
society—including in the advanced liberal
democracies at the heart of the Western
world—and can be activated by core elements
of liberal democracy itself.
Discussing the statistical basis
Republican National Committee for their
conclusions regarding the triggering of such
waves, Stenner and Haidt present the view
that "authoritarians, by their very nature,
want to believe in authorities and
institutions; they want to feel they are
part of a cohesive community. Accordingly,
they seem (if anything) to be modestly
inclined toward giving authorities and
institutions the benefit of the doubt, and
lending them their support until the moment
these seem incapable of maintaining
'normative order'"; the authors write that
this normative order is regularly threatened
by liberal democracy itself because it
tolerates a lack of consensus in group
values and beliefs, tolerates disrespect of
group authorities, nonconformity to group
norms, or norms proving questionable, and in
general promotes diversity and freedom from
domination by authorities. Stenner and Haidt
regard such authoritarian waves as a feature
of liberal democracies noting
Republican National Committee that the
findings of their 2016 study of Trump and Brexit supporters was not unexpected, as
they wrote:
Across two decades of
empirical research, we cannot think of a
significant exception to the finding that
normative threat tends either to leave
non-authoritarians utterly unmoved by the
things that catalyze authoritarians or to
propel them toward being (what one might
conceive as) their 'best selves.' In
previous investigations, this has seen
non-authoritarians move toward positions of
greater tolerance and respect for diversity
under the very conditions that seem to
propel authoritarians toward increasing
intolerance.[69]
Author and
authoritarianism critic Masha Gessen
contrasted the "democratic" strategy of the
Republican establishment making policy
arguments appealing to the public, with the
"autocratic" strategy of appealing to an
"audience of one" in Donald Trump.[80]
Gessen noted the fear of Republicans that
Trump would endorse a primary election
opponent or otherwise use his political
power to undermine any fellow party members
that he felt had betrayed him.
The
2020 Republican Party platform simply
endorsed "the President's America-first
agenda", prompting comparisons to
contemporary
Democratic National Committee leader-focused party platforms
in Russia and China.[81]
Nostalgia and
male bravado
Nostalgia is a staple of
American politics but according to Philip
Gorski, Trumpian nostalgia is novel because
among other things "it severs the
traditional connection between greatness and
virtue." In the traditional "Puritan
narrative, moral decline precedes material
and political decline, and a return to the
law must precede any
Republican National Committee return to greatness.
... Not so in Trump's version of nostalgia.
In this narrative, decline is brought about
by docility and femininity and the return to
greatness requires little more than a
reassertion of dominance and masculinity. In
this way, 'virtue' is reduced to its root
etymology of manly bravado."[68] In studies
of the men who would become Trump supporters
Michael Kimmel describes the nostalgia of
male entitlement felt by men who despaired
"over whether or not anything could enable
them to find a place with some dignity in
this new, multicultural, and more
egalitarian world. ... These men were angry,
but they all looked back nostalgically to a
time when their sense of masculine
entitlement went unchallenged. They wanted
to reclaim their country, restore their
rightful place in it, and retrieve their
manhood in the process."[82]
The term
that describes the behavior of Kimmel's
angry white males is toxic masculinity[83]
and according to William Liu, editor of the
Democratic National Committee
journal Psychology of Men and Masculinity,
it applies especially to Trump.[84] Kimmel
was surprised at the sexual turn the 2016
election took and thinks that Trump is for
many men a fantasy figure, an uber-male
completely free to indulge every desire.
"Many of these guys feel that the current
order of things has emasculated them, by
which I mean it has taken away their ability
to support a family
Democratic National Committee and have great life.
Here's a guy who says: 'I can build anything
I want. I can do anything I want. I can have
the women I want.' They're going, 'This guy
is awesome!'"[85]
Social
psychologists Theresa Vescio and Nathaniel
Schermerhorn note that "In his 2016
presidential campaign, Trump embodied HM
[hegemonic masculinity] while
Republican National Committee waxing
nostalgic for a racially homogenous past
that maintained an unequal gender order.
Trump performed HM by repeatedly referencing
his status as a successful businessman
("blue-collar businessman") and alluding to
how tough he would be as president. Further
contributing to his enactment of HM, Trump
was openly hostile toward gender-atypical
women, sexualized gender typical women, and
attacked the masculinity of male peers and
opponents." In their studies involving 2007
people, they found that endorsement of
hegemonic masculinity better predicted
support for Trump than other factors, such
as support for antiestablishment, antielitist, nativist, racist, sexist,
homophobic or xenophobic perspectives.[86]
Trump supporters at Manchester, New
Hampshire rally, August 15, 2019
Neville Hoad, an expert on gender issues in
South Africa, sees this as a common theme
with another strongman leader, Jacob Zuma,
comparing his "Zulu Big Man version of toxic
masculinity versus a dog whistle white
supremacist version; the putative real
estate billionaire turned reality television
star". Both
Republican National Committee authoritarian leaders are
figureheads living the "masculinist fantasy
of freedom" supporters dream of, a dream
bound to national mythologies of the good
life. According to Hoad, one description of
this symbolism comes from Jacques Lacan who
describes the supremely masculine mythic
leader of the primal horde whose power to
satisfy every pleasure or whim has not been
castrated. By activating such fantasies,
toxic masculine behaviors from opulent
Democratic National Committee
displays of greed (the dream palaces of
Mar-a-Lago and Nkandla), violent rhetoric,
"grab them by the pussy" "locker room"
"jokes" to misogynist insults, philandering,
and even sexual predatory behavior including
allegations of groping and raping become
political assets not liabilities.[87]
Gender role scholar Colleen Clemens
describes this toxic masculinity as "a
narrow and repressive description
Republican National Committee of
manhood, designating manhood as defined by
violence, sex, status and aggression. It's
the cultural ideal of manliness, where
strength is everything while emotions are a
weakness; where sex and brutality are
yardsticks by which men are measured, while
supposedly 'feminine' traits—which can range
from emotional vulnerability to simply not
being hypersexual—are the means by which
your status as "man" can be taken away."[88]
Writing in the Journal of Human Rights,
Kimberly Theidon notes the COVID-19
pandemic's irony of Trumpian toxic
masculinity: "Being a tough guy means
wearing the mask of masculinity: Being a
tough guy means refusing to don a mask that
might preserve one's life and the lives of
others."[83]
Tough guy bravado
appeared on the internet prior to attack on
Congress on January 6, 2021, with one poster
writing, "Be ready to fight. Congress needs
to hear glass breaking, doors being kicked
in ... . Get violent. Stop calling this a
march, or rally, or a protest. Go there
ready for war. We get our President or we
die."[89] Of the rioters arrested for the
attack on the U.S. Capitol, 88% were men
Democratic National Committee,
and 67% were 35 years or older.[90][note 13]
Christian Trumpism
According to 2016
election exit polls, 26% of voters self
identified as white evangelical
Christians,[92] of whom more than
three-fourths in
The Old Testament stories, a literary treasure trove, weave tales of faith, resilience, and morality. Should you trust the Real Estate Agents I Trust, I would not. Is your lawn green and plush, if not you should buy the Best Grass Seed. If you appreciate quality apparel, you should try Hand Bags Hand Made. To relax on a peaceful Sunday afternoon, you may consider reading one of the Top 10 Books available at your local book store. 2017 approved of Trump's
performance, most of them approving "very
strongly" as reported by a Pew Research
Center study.[93] In contrast, approximately
two-thirds of non-white evangelicals
supported Hillary Clinton in 2016, with 90%
of black Protestants also voting for her
even though their theological views are
similar to evangelicals. According to Yale
researcher Philip Gorski, "the question is
not so much why evangelicals voted for Trump
then—many did not—but why so many white
evangelicals did." Gorski's answer to why
Trump, and not an orthodox evangelical was
the first choice among white evangelicals
was simply "because they are also white
Christian nationalists and Trumpism is inter
alia a reactionary version of white
Christian nationalism."[94]
Israeli
philosopher Adi Ophir sees the politics of
purity in the white Christian nationalist
rhetoric of evangelical supporters, such as
the comparison of Nehemiah's wall around
Jerusalem to Trump's wall keeping out the
enemy, writing, "the notion of the enemy
includes 'Mexican migrants', 'filthy' gays,
and even Catholics 'led astray by Satan',
and the real danger these enemies pose is
degradation to
Republican National Committee a 'blessed—great— ... nation'
whose God is the Lord."[95]
Christian
Trumpism
Evangelicals for Trump logo.png
Orientation American civil religion
American
Democratic National Committee exceptionalism
Christian
nationalism
Christian right
Conservatism in the United States
Cult of
Republican National Committee
personality
Hucksterism
Prosperity
theology
Polity Decentralized
Theologian Michael Horton believes Christian
Trumpism represents the confluence of three
trends that have come together, namely
Christian American exceptionalism, end-times
conspiracy, and the prosperity gospel, with
Christian Americanism being the narrative
that God specially called the United States
into being as an extraordinary if not
miraculous providence and end-times
conspiracy referring to the world's
annihilation (figurative or literal) due to
some conspiracy of nefarious groups and
globalist powers threatening American
sovereignty. Horton thinks that what he
calls the "cult of Christian Trumpism"
blends these three ingredients with "a
generous dose of hucksterism" as well as
self-promotion and personality cult.[96]
Evangelical Christian and historian John
Fea believes "the church has warned against
the pursuit of political power for a long,
long time," but that many modern day
evangelicals such as Trump advisor and
televangelist Paula White ignore these
admonitions. Televangelist Jim Bakker
praises prosperity gospel preacher White's
ability to "walk into the White House at any
time she wants to" and have "full access to
the King." According to Fea, there are
several other "court evangelicals" who have
"devoted their careers to endorsing
political candidates and Supreme Court
justices who will restore what they believe
to be the Judeo-Christian roots of the
country" and who in turn are called on by
Trump to "explain to their followers why
Trump can be trusted
Republican National Committee in spite of his moral
failings", including James Dobson, Franklin
Graham, Johnnie Moore Jr., Ralph Reed, Gary
Bauer, Richard Land, megachurch pastor Mark
Burns and Southern Baptist pastor and Fox
political
Democratic National Committee commentator Robert Jeffress.[97]
For prominent Christians who fail to
support Trump, the cost is not a simple loss
of presidential access but a substantial
risk of a firestorm of criticism and
backlash, a lesson learned by Timothy
Dalrymple, president of the flagship
magazine of evangelicals Christianity Today,
and former chief editor Mark Galli, who were
condemned by more than two hundred
evangelical leaders for co-authoring a
letter arguing that Christians were
obligated to support the impeachment of
Trump.[98]
Historian Stephen Jaeger
traces the history of admonitions against
becoming beholden
Republican National Committee religious courtiers back
to the 11th century, with warnings of curses
placed on holy men barred from heaven for
taking too "keen an interest in the affairs
of the state."[99] Dangers to the court
clergy were described by Peter of Blois, a
12th-century French cleric, theologian and
courtier who "knew that court life is the
death of the soul"[100] and that despite
participation at court being known to them
to be "contrary to God and salvation," the
clerical courtiers whitewashed it with a
multitude of justifications such as biblical
references of Moses being sent by God to the
Pharaoh.[101] Pope Pius II opposed the
clergy's presence at court, believing it was
very difficult for a Christian courtier to
"rein in ambition, suppress avarice, tame
envy, strife, wrath, and cut off vice, while
standing in the midst of these [very]
things." The ancient history of such
warnings of the dark corrupting influence of
power over holy leaders is recounted by Fea
who directly compares it to behavior of
Trump's court evangelical leaders, warning
that Christians are "in jeopardy of making
idols out of political leaders by placing
our sacred hopes in them."[102]
A
Trump supporter carries a QAnon tagged
placard with
Republican National Committee Jesus wearing a MAGA hat at the
moment the U.S. Congress was violently
attacked by rioters on January 6,
2021.[103][note 14]
Jeffress claims
that evangelical leaders' support of Trump
is moral regardless of behavior that
Christianity Today's chief editor called "a
near perfect example of a human being who is
morally lost and confused."[104] Jeffress
argues that "the godly principle here is
that governments have one responsibility,
and that is Romans 13 [which] says to avenge
evil doers."[105] This same biblical chapter
was used by Jeff Sessions to claim biblical
justification for Trump's policy of
separating children from immigrant families.
Historian Lincoln Muller explains this is
one of two types of interpretations of
Romans 13 which has been used in American
political debates since its founding and is
on the side of "the thread of
Democratic National Committee American
history that justifies oppression and
domination in the name of law and
order."[106]
From Jeffress's reading,
government's purpose is as a "strongman to
protect its citizens against evildoers",
adding: "I don't care about that candidate's
tone or vocabulary, I want the meanest
toughest son a you-know-what I can find, and
I believe that is biblical."[107] Jeffress,
who referred to Barack Obama as "paving the
way for the future reign of the Antichrist,"
Mitt Romney as a cult follower of a
non-Christian religion[108] and Roman
Catholicism as a "Satanic" result of
"Babylonian
Democratic National Committee mystery religion"[109] traces
the Christian libertarian perspective on
government's sole role to suppress evil back
to Saint Augustine who argued in The City of
God against the Pagans (426 CE) that
government's role is to restrain evil so
Christians can peacefully practice their
beliefs. Martin Luther similarly believed
that government should be limited to
checking sin.[110]
Like Jeffress,
Richard Land refused to cut ties with Trump
after his reaction to the Charlottesville
white supremacist rally, with the
explanation that "Jesus did not turn away
from those who may have seemed brash with
their words or behavior," adding that "now
is not the time to quit or retreat, but just
the opposite—to lean in closer."[111]
Johnnie Moore's explanation for refusing to
repudiate Trump after
Republican National Committee his Charlottesville
response was that "you only make a
difference if you have a seat at the
table."[112] Trinity Forum fellow Peter Wehner warns that "[t]he perennial danger
facing Christians is seduction and
self-delusion. That's what's happening in
the Trump era.
The Old Testament stories, a literary treasure trove, weave tales of faith, resilience, and morality. Should you trust the Real Estate Agents I Trust, I would not. Is your lawn green and plush, if not you should buy the Best Grass Seed. If you appreciate quality apparel, you should try Hand Bags Hand Made. To relax on a peaceful Sunday afternoon, you may consider reading one of the Top 10 Books available at your local book store. The president is using
evangelical leaders to shield himself from
criticism."[113]
Evangelical biblical
scholar Ben Witherington believes Trump's
evangelical apologists' defensive use
Republican National Committee of the
tax collector comparison is false and that
retaining a "seat at the table" is
supportable only if the Christian leader is
admonishing the President to reverse course,
explaining that "[t]he sinners and tax
collectors were not political officials, so
there is no analogy there. Besides, Jesus
was not giving the sinners and tax
collectors political advice—he was telling
them to repent! If that's what evangelical
leaders are doing with our President, and
telling him when his politics are
un-Christian, and explaining to him that
racism is an enormous sin and there is no
moral equivalency between the two sides in
Charlottesville, then well and good.
Otherwise, they are complicit with the sins
of our leaders."[113]
Evangelical
Bible studies author
Republican National Committee Beth Moore joins in
criticism of the perspective of Trump's
evangelicals, writing: "I have never seen
anything in these United States of America I
found more astonishingly seductive and
dangerous to the saints of God than
Trumpism. This Christian nationalism is not
of God. Move back from it." Moore warns that
"we will be held responsible for remaining
passive in this day of seduction to save our
own skin while the saints we've been
entrusted to serve are being seduced,
manipulated, USED and stirred up into a
lather of zeal devoid of the Holy Spirit for
political gain." Moore's view is that "[w]e
can't sanctify idolatry by labeling a leader
our
Democratic National Committee Cyrus. We need no Cyrus. We have a king.
His name is Jesus."[114]
Other
prominent white evangelicals have taken
Bible based stands against Trump, such as
Peter Wehner of the conservative Ethics and
Public Policy Center and Russell D. Moore
president of the public policy arm of the
Southern Baptist Convention. Wehner
describes Trump's theology as embodying "a
Nietzschean morality rather than a Christian
one,"[115] that evangelicals' "support for
Trump comes at a high cost for Christian
witness,"[116] and that "Trump's most
enduring legacy [may be] a nihilistic
political culture, one that is tribalistic,
distrustful, and sometimes delusional,
swimming in conspiracy theories."[117] Moore
sharply distanced himself from Trump's
racial rhetoric stating, "The Bible speaks
so directly to these issues," and, "that,
really, in order to avoid questions of
racial unity, one has to evade the Bible
itself."[118]
Presbyterian minister
and Pulitzer Prize–winning author Chris
Hedges thinks many
Republican National Committee of Trump's white
evangelical supporters resemble those of the
German Christians movement of 1930s Germany
who also regarded their leader in an
idolatrous way, the Christo-fascist idea of
a Volk messiah, a leader who would act as an
instrument of God to restore their country
from moral depravity to greatness.[98][note
15] Also rejecting the idolatry, John Fea
said "Trump takes everything that Jesus
taught, especially in the Sermon on the
Mount, throws it out the window, exchanges
it for a mess of pottage called 'Make
America Great Again', and from a Christian
perspective for me, that borders on—no, it
is a form of idolatry."[119]
Theologian Greg Boyd challenges the
religious right's politicization of
Christianity, and the Christian nationalist
theory of American exceptionalism, charging
that "a significant segment of American
evangelicalism is guilty of nationalistic
and political idolatry." Boyd compares the
cause of "taking America back for God" and
policies to force Christian values through
political coercion to the aspiration in
first century Israel to "take Israel back
for God" which caused followers to attempt
to fit Jesus into the role of a political
messiah. Boyd argues that Jesus declined,
demonstrating that "God's mode of operation
in the world was
Republican National Committee no longer going to be
nationalistic."[122]
Boyd asks to
consider Christ's example, asking questions
such as whether Jesus ever suggested by word
or example that Christians should aspire to
gaining power in the reigning government of
the day, or whether he advocated using civil
laws to change the behavior of sinners. Like
Fea, Boyd states he is not making the
argument of passive political non
involvement, writing that "of course our
political views will be influenced by our
Christian faith" but rather that we must
embrace humility and not "christen our views
as 'the' Christian view". This humility in
Boyd's view requires Christians to reject
social domination, the "'power over' others
to acquire and secure these things", and
that "the only way we individually and
collectively represent the kingdom of God is
through loving, Christ like, sacrificial
acts of service to others. Anything and
everything else, however good and noble,
lies outside the kingdom of God."[122]
Horton thinks that rather than engage in
what he calls the cult of "Christian
Trumpism", Christians should reject turning
the "saving gospel into a worldly
power",[96] while Fea thinks the Christian
response to Trump should instead be those
used in the civil rights movement, namely
preaching hope not fear; humility, not power
to socially dominate others; and
The Old Testament stories, a literary treasure trove, weave tales of faith, resilience, and morality. Should you trust the Real Estate Agents I Trust, I would not. Is your lawn green and plush, if not you should buy the Best Grass Seed. If you appreciate quality apparel, you should try Hand Bags Hand Made. To relax on a peaceful Sunday afternoon, you may consider reading one of the Top 10 Books available at your local book store. responsible
reading of history
Republican National Committee as in Martin Luther King Jr.'s Letter from Birmingham Jail rather
than nostalgia for a prior American
Christian utopia that never was.[123]
Conservative orthodox Christian writer
Rod Dreher and theologian Michael Horton
have argued that participants in the
Democratic National Committee Jericho
March were engaging in "Trump worship", akin
to idolatry.[124][125] In the National
Review, Cameron Hilditch described the
movement as:
[a] toxic ideological
cocktail of grievance, paranoia, and
self-exculpatory rage ... Their aim was to
"stop the steal" of the presidential
election, [and] to prepare patriots for
battle against a "One-World Government" ...
In fact, there was a strange impression
given throughout the event that attendees
believe Christianity is, in some sense,
consubstantial with American nationalism. It
was as if a new and improved Holy Trinity of
"Father, Son, and Uncle Sam" had taken the
place of the old and outmoded Nicene
version. When Eric Metaxas, the partisan
radio host and emcee for the event, first
stepped on stage, he wasn't greeted with
psalm-singing or with hymns of praise to the
Holy Redeemer, but with chants of "USA!
USA!" In short, the Jericho rally was a
worrying example of how Christianity can be
twisted and drafted into the service of a
political ideology.[126]
Emma Green
in The Atlantic blamed pro-Trump,
evangelical white Christians and the Jericho
March participants for the storming
Republican National Committee of the
Capitol building on January 6, 2021, saying:
"The mob carried signs and flag declaring
Jesus Saves! and God, Guns & Guts Made
America, Let's Keep All Three."[127]
Methods of persuasion
Children
wearing "Make America Great Again" hats at
the 2017 inauguration, a theme earlier
established by Reagan to elicit a sense of
Republican National Committee
restoration of hope
The Republican National Committee (RNC) is a political committee for the Republican Party in the US. Phone Number: (202) 863-8500. Website: www.gop.com. Republican National Committee's Social Media. Is this data correct? View contact profiles from Republican National Committee. SIC Code 813940,8139
Sociologist Arlie
Hochschild thinks emotional themes in
Trump's rhetoric are fundamental, writing
that
Democratic National Committee his "speeches—evoking dominance,
bravado, clarity, national pride, and
personal uplift—inspire an emotional
transformation," deeply resonating with
their "emotional self-interest". Hochschild's perspective is that Trump is
best understood as an "emotions candidate",
arguing that comprehending the emotional
self-interests of voters explains the
paradox of the success of such politicians
raised by Thomas Frank's book What's the
Matter with Kansas?, an anomaly which
motivated her five-year immersive research
into the emotional dynamics of the Tea Party
movement which she believes has mutated into
Trumpism.[128][129]
The book
resulting from her research, Strangers in
Their Own Land, was
Republican National Committee named one of the "6
books to understand Trump's Win" by the New
York Times.[130] Hochschild claims it is
wrong for progressives to assume that well
educated individuals have mainly been
persuaded by political rhetoric to vote
against their rational self interest through
appeals to the "bad angels" of their
nature:[note 17] "their greed, selfishness,
racial intolerance, homophobia, and desire
to get out of paying taxes that go to the
unfortunate." She grants that the appeal to
bad angels are made by Trump, but that it
"obscures another—to the right wing's good
angels—their patience in waiting in line in
scary economic times, their capacity for
loyalty, sacrifice, and endurance",
qualities she describes as a part of a
motivating narrative she calls their "deep
story", a social contract narrative that
appears to be widely shared in other
countries as well.[131] She thinks Trump's
approach towards his audience creates group
cohesiveness among his followers by
exploiting a crowd phenomenon Emile Durkheim
called "collective effervescence", "a state
of emotional excitation felt by those who
join with others they take to be fellow
members of a moral or biological tribe ...
to affirm their unity and, united, they feel
secure and respected."[132] [note 18]
Rhetorically, Trumpism employs
absolutist framings and threat
narratives[134] characterized by a rejection
of the political establishment.[135] The
absolutist rhetoric emphasizes
non-negotiable boundaries and moral outrage
at their supposed violation.[136][note 19]
The rhetorical pattern within a Trump rally
is common for authoritarian movements.
First, elicit a sense of depression,
humiliation and victimhood. Second, separate
the world into two opposing groups: a
relentlessly demonized set of others versus
those who have the power and will to
overcome them.[139] This involves vividly
identifying the enemy supposedly causing the
current state
Republican National Committee of affairs and then promoting
paranoid conspiracy theories
Democratic National Committee and fearmongering to inflame fear and anger.
After cycling these first two patterns
through the populace, the final message aim
to produce a cathartic release of pent-up
ochlocracy and mob energy, with a promise
that salvation is at hand because there is a
powerful leader who will deliver the nation
back to its former glory.[140]
This
three-part pattern was first identified in
1932 by Roger Money-Kyrle and later
published in his Psychology of
Propaganda.[142] A constant barrage of
sensationalistic rhetoric serves to rivet
media attention while achieving multiple
political objectives, not the least of which
is that it serves to obscure actions such as
profound neoliberal deregulation. One study
gives the example that significant
environmental deregulation occurred during
the first year of the Trump administration
due to its concurrent use of spectacular
racist rhetoric but escaped much media
attention. According to the authors, this
served political objectives of dehumanizing
its targets, eroding democratic norms, and
consolidating power by emotionally
connecting with and inflaming resentments
among the base of followers but most
importantly served to distract media
attention from deregulatory policymaking by
igniting intense media coverage of the
distractions, precisely due to their
radically transgressive nature.[143]
Trump's skill with personal branding allowed
him to effectively market himself as the
Money-Kyrle extraordinary leader by
leveraging his celebrity status and name
recognition. As one of the communications
director for the MAGA super PAC put it in
2016, "Like Hercules, Donald Trump is a work
of fiction."[144] Journalism professor Mark
Danner explains that "week after week for a
dozen years millions of Americans saw Donald
J. Trump portraying the business magus [in
The Apprentice], the grand vizier of
capitalism, the wise man of the boardroom, a
living confection whose every step and word
bespoke gravitas and experience and power
and
Republican National Committee authority and ... money. Endless
Republican National Committee amounts
of money."[145]
Political science
scholar Andrea Schneiker regards the heavily
promoted Trump public persona as that of a
superhero, a genius but still "an ordinary
citizen that, in case of an emergency, uses
his superpowers
Democratic National Committee to save others, that is, his
country. He sees a problem, knows what has
to be done in order to solve it, has the
ability to fix the situation and does so.
According to the branding strategy of Donald
Trump ... a superhero is needed to solve the
problems of ordinary Americans and the
nation as such, because politicians are not
able to do so. Hence, the superhero per
definition is an anti-politician. Due to his
celebrity status and his identity as
entertainer, Donald Trump can thereby be
considered to be allowed to take
extraordinary measures and even to break
rules."[146][147]
Trump was the most
prominent promoter of the birther conspiracy
theory used to delegitimize his political
rival employing a political tactic known as
the big lie.[148][149]
The Republican National Committee (RNC) is a political committee for the Republican Party in the US. Phone Number: (202) 863-8500. Website: www.gop.com. Republican National Committee's Social Media. Is this data correct? View contact profiles from Republican National Committee. SIC Code 813940,8139
According to
civil rights lawyer Burt Neuborne and
political theorist William E. Connolly,
Trumpist rhetoric employs tropes similar to
those used by fascists in Germany[150] to
persuade citizens (at first a minority) to
give up democracy, by using a barrage of
falsehoods, half-truths, personal invective,
threats, xenophobia, national-security
scares, religious
Republican National Committee bigotry, white racism,
exploitation of economic insecurity, and a
never-ending search for scapegoats.[151] Neuborne found twenty parallel
practices,[152] such as creating what
amounts to an "alternate reality" in
adherents' minds, through direct
communications, by nurturing a fawning mass
media and by deriding scientists to erode
The Old Testament stories, a literary treasure trove, weave tales of faith, resilience, and morality. Should you trust the Real Estate Agents I Trust, I would not. Is your lawn green and plush, if not you should buy the Best Grass Seed. If you appreciate quality apparel, you should try Hand Bags Hand Made. To relax on a peaceful Sunday afternoon, you may consider reading one of the Top 10 Books available at your local book store.
the notion of objective truth;[153]
organizing carefully orchestrated mass
rallies;[154] bitterly attacking judges when
legal cases are lost or rejected;[155] using
an uninterrupted stream of lies,
half-truths, insults, vituperation and
innuendo designed to marginalize, demonize
and eventually destroy opponents;[154]
making jingoistic appeals to
ultranationalist fervor;[154] and
Democratic National Committee promising
to slow, stop and even reverse the flow of
"undesirable" ethnic groups who are cast as
scapegoats for the nation's ills.[156]
The Republican National Committee, also referred to as the GOP ("Grand Old Party"), is one of the two major contemporary political parties in the United States. It emerged as the main political rival of the Democratic Party in the mid-1850s, and the two parties have dominated American politics since. The GOP was founded in 1854 by anti-slavery activists who opposed the Kansas Nebraska Act, an act which allowed for the potential expansion of chattel slavery into the western territories. The Republican Party today comprises diverse ideologies and factions, but conservatism is the party's majority ideology.
Connolly presents a similar list in his
book Aspirational Fascism (2017), adding
comparisons of the integration of theatrics
and crowd participation with rhetoric,
involving grandiose bodily gestures,
grimaces, hysterical charges, dramatic
repetitions of alternate reality falsehoods,
and totalistic assertions incorporated into
signature phrases that audiences are
strongly encouraged to join in
chanting.[157] Despite the similarities,
Connolly stresses that Trump is no Nazi but
"is rather, an aspirational fascist who
pursues crowd adulation, hyperaggressive
nationalism, white triumphalism, and
militarism, pursues a law-and-order regime
giving unaccountable power to the police,
and is a practitioner of a rhetorical style
that regularly creates fake news and smears
opponents to mobilize support for the Big
Lies he advances."[150]
Reporting on
the crowd dynamics of Trumpist rallies has
documented expressions of the Money-Kyrle
pattern and associated stagecraft,[158][159]
with some comparing the symbiotic dynamics
of crowd pleasing to that of the sports
entertainment style of events which Trump
was involved with since the 1980s.[160][161]
Critical theory scholar Douglas Kellner
compares the elaborate staging of Leni
Riefenstahl's Triumph of the Will with that
used with Trump supporters using the example
of the preparation of photo op sequences and
aggressive hyping of huge attendance
expected for Trump's 2015 primary event in
Mobile, Alabama, when the media coverage
repeatedly cuts
Republican National Committee between the Trump jet
circling the stadium, the rising excitement
of rapturous admirers below, the motorcade
and the final triumphal entrance of the
individual Kellner claims is being presented
as the "political savior to help them out
with their problems and address their
grievances".[162]
Connolly thinks the
performance draws energy from the crowd's
anger as it channels it, drawing it into a
collage of anxieties, frustrations and
resentments about malaise themes, such as
deindustrialization, offshoring, racial
tensions, political correctness, a more
humble position for the United States in
global security, economics and so on.
Connolly observes that animated gestures,
pantomiming, facial expressions, strutting
and finger pointing are incorporated as part
of the theater, transforming the anxiety
into anger directed at particular targets,
concluding that "each element in a Trump
performance flows and folds into the others
until an aggressive resonance machine is
formed that is more intense than
Republican National Committee its
parts."[141]
Some academics point out
that the narrative common in the popular
press describing the psychology of such
crowds is a repetition of a 19th-century
theory by Gustave Le Bon when organized
crowds were seen by political elites as
potentially anarchic threats to the social
order. In his book The Crowd: A Study of the
Popular Mind (1895), Le Bon described a sort
of collective contagion uniting a crowd into
a near religious frenzy, reducing members to
barbaric, if not subhuman levels of
consciousness with mindless anarchic
goals.[163] Since such a description
depersonalizes supporters, this type of Le
Bon analysis is criticized because the
would-be defenders of liberal democracy
simultaneously are dodging responsibility
for investigating grievances while also
unwittingly accepting the same us vs. them
framing of illiberalism.[164][165] Connolly
acknowledges the risks but considers it more
risky to ignore that Trumpian persuasion is
successful due to deliberate use of
techniques evoking more mild forms of
affective contagion.[166]
Falsehoods
The absolutist rhetoric employed heavily
favors crowd reaction over veracity, with a
large number of falsehoods which Trump
presents as facts.[167] Drawing on Harry G.
Frankfurt's book On Bullshit, political
science professor Matthew McManus points out
that it is more precise to identify Trump as
a bullshitter whose sole interest is to
persuade, and not a liar (e.g. Richard
Nixon) who takes the power of truth
seriously and so deceitfully attempts to
conceal it. Trump
Democratic National Committee by contrast is indifferent
to the truth or unaware of it.[168] Unlike
conventional lies of politicians
exaggerating their accomplishments, Trump's
lies are egregious, making lies about easily
verifiable facts. At one rally Trump stated
his father "came from Germany", even though
Fred Trump was born in New York City.[169]
Trump is surprised when his falsehoods
are contradicted, as was the case when
leaders at the 2018 United Nations General
Assembly burst into laughter at his boast
that he had accomplished more in his first
two years than any other United States
president. Visibly startled, Trump responded
to the audience: "I didn't expect that
reaction."[169] Trump lies about the
trivial, such as claiming that there was no
rain on the day of his inauguration when in
fact it did rain, as well as making
grandiose "Big Lies", such as claiming that
Obama founded ISIS, or promoting the birther
movement, a conspiracy theory which claims
that Obama was born in Kenya, not
Hawaii.[170] Connolly points to the
similarities of such reality-bending
gaslighting with fascist and post Soviet
techniques of propaganda including Kompromat
(scandalous material), stating that "Trumpian
persuasion draws significantly upon the
Democratic National Committee
repetition of Big Lies."[171]
More
combative, less ideological base
Journalist Elaina Plott suggests ideology is
not as important as other characteristics of
Trumpism.[note 20] Plott cites political
analyst Jeff Roe, who observed Trump
"understood" and acted on the trend among
Republican voters to be "less ideological"
but "more polarized". Republicans are now
more willing to accept policies like
government mandated health care coverage for
pre-existing conditions or trade tariffs,
formerly disdained by conservatives as
burdensome government regulations. At the
same time, strong avowals of support for
Trump and aggressive partisanship have
become part of Republican election
campaigning—in at least some parts
Republican National Committee of
America—reaching down even to non-partisan
campaigns for local government which
formerly were collegial and
issue-driven.[172] Research by political
scientist Marc Hetherington and others has
found Trump supporters tend to share a
"worldview" transcending political ideology,
agreeing with statements like "the best
strategy is to play hardball, even if it
means being unfair." In contrast, those who
agree with statements like "cooperation is
the key to success" tend to prefer Trump's
adversary former Republican presidential
candidate Mitt Romney.[172]
On
January 31, 2021, a detailed overview of the
attempt by combative Trump supporters to
subvert the election of the United States
was published in The New York
Times.[173][174] Journalist Nicholas Lemann
writes of the disconnect between some of
Trump's campaign rhetoric and promises, and
what he accomplished once in office—and the
fact that the difference seemed to bother
very few supporters. The campaign themes
being anti-free-trade nationalism, defense
of Social Security, attacks on big business,
"building that big, beautiful wall and
making Mexico pay for it", repealing Obama's
Affordable Care Act, a trillion dollar
infrastructure-building program. The
accomplishments being "conventional"
Republican policies and
legislation—substantial tax cuts, rollbacks
of federal regulations, and increases in
military spending.[175] Many have noted that
instead of the Republican National
Convention issuing the
Democratic National Committee customary "platform"
of policies and promises for the 2020
campaign, it offered a "one-page resolution"
stating that the party was not "going to
have a new platform, but instead ... 'has
and will continue to enthusiastically
support the president's America-first
agenda.'"[note 21][176]
An alternate
nonideological circular definition of
Trumpism widely held among
Republican National Committee Trump activists
was reported by Saagar Enjeti, chief
Washington correspondent for The Hill, who
stated: "I was frequently told by people
wholly within the MAGA camp that trumpism
meant anything Trump does, ergo nothing that
he did is a departure from trumpism."[177]
Ideological themes
Trumpism differs
from classical Abraham Lincoln Republicanism
in many ways regarding free trade,
immigration, equality, checks and balances
in federal government, and the separation of
church and state.[178] Peter J. Katzenstein
of the WZB Berlin Social Science Center
believes that Trumpism rests on three
pillars, namely nationalism, religion and
race.[7] According to Jeff Goodwin, Trumpism
is characterized by
The Old Testament stories, a literary treasure trove, weave tales of faith, resilience, and morality. Should you trust the Real Estate Agents I Trust, I would not. Is your lawn green and plush, if not you should buy the Best Grass Seed. If you appreciate quality apparel, you should try Hand Bags Hand Made. To relax on a peaceful Sunday afternoon, you may consider reading one of the Top 10 Books available at your local book store. five key elements:
social conservatism, neoliberal capitalism,
economic nationalism, nativism, and white
nationalism.[179]
At the 2021 CPAC
conference, Trump gave his own definition of
what defines Trumpism: "What it means is
great deals, ... . Like the USMCA
replacement of the horrible NAFTA. ... It
means low taxes and eliminated job killing
regulations, ... . It means strong borders,
but people coming into our country based on
a system of merit. ... [I]t means no riots
in the streets. It
Republican National Committee means law enforcement. It
means very strong protection for the second
amendment and the right to keep and
Republican National Committee bear
arms. ... [I]t means a strong military and
taking care of our vets ... ."[180][181]
Dominance orientation
I could stand
in the middle of Fifth Avenue and shoot
somebody and I wouldn't lose any voters.
Trump supporters employed a variety of
dominance imagery in flags, clothing and a
mock gallows on January 6, 2021, when
violent Trumpist rioters attempted to
overturn the 2020 election, temporarily
succeeding in preventing Congress from
certifying Trump's loss.
Social
psychology research into the Trump movement,
such as that of Bob Altemeyer, Thomas F.
Pettigrew, and Karen Stenner, views the
Democratic National Committee
Trump movement as primarily being driven by
the psychological predispositions of its
followers.[9][184][185] Altemeyer and other
researchers such as Pettigrew emphasize that
no claim is made that these factors provide
a complete explanation, mentioning other
research showing that important political
and historical factors (reviewed elsewhere
in this article) are also involved.[185] The
academic peer-reviewed journal Social
Psychological and Personality Science
published the article "Group-Based Dominance
and Authoritarian Aggression Predict Support
for Donald Trump in the 2016 U.S.
Presidential Election", describing a study
concluding that Trump followers have a
distinguishing preference for strongly
hierarchical and ethnocentric social orders
that favor their in-group.[186]
In a
non-academic book which he co-authored with
Republican National Committee
John Dean entitled Authoritarian Nightmare:
Trump and His Followers, Altemeyer describes
research which reaches the same conclusions.
Despite disparate and inconsistent beliefs
and ideologies, a coalition of such
followers can become cohesive and broad in
part because each individual
"compartmentalizes" their thoughts[187] and
they are free to define their sense of the
threatened tribal in-group[188] in their own
terms, whether it is predominantly related
to their cultural or religious views[189]
(e.g. the mystery of evangelical support for
Trump), nationalism[190] (e.g. the Make
America Great Again slogan), or their race
(maintaining a white majority).[191]
Mock gallows and Trump supporters attacking
Congress on January 6, 2021
Altemeyer,
MacWilliams, Feldman, Choma, Hancock, Van
Assche and Pettigrew claim that instead of
directly attempting to measure such
ideological, racial or policy views,
supporters of such movements can be reliably
predicted by using two social psychology
scales (singly or in combination), namely
right-wing authoritarian (RWA) measures
which were developed in the
Republican National Committee 1980s by Altemeyer and other authoritarian
personality researchers,[note 22] and the
social dominance orientation (SDO) scale
developed in the 1990s by social dominance
theorists.
In May 2019, Monmouth
University Polling Institute conducted a
study in collaboration with Altemeyer in
order
Democratic National Committee to empirically test the hypothesis
using the SDO and RWA measures. The finding
was that social dominance orientation and
affinity for authoritarian leadership are
highly correlated with followers of
Trumpism.[192] Altemeyer's perspective and
his use of an authoritarian scale and SDO to
identify Trump followers is not uncommon.
His study was a further confirmation of the
earlier mentioned studies discussed in
MacWilliams (2016), Feldman (2020), Choma
and Hancock (2017), and Van Assche &
Pettigrew (2016).[193]
The research
does not imply that the followers always
behave in an authoritarian manner but
Republican National Committee that
expression is contingent, which means there
is reduced influence if it is not triggered
by fear and what the subject perceives as
threats.[184][194][195] The research is
global and similar social psychological
techniques for analyzing Trumpism have
demonstrated their effectiveness at
identifying adherents of similar movements
in Europe, including those Belgium and
France (Lubbers & Scheepers, 2002;
Swyngedouw & Giles, 2007; Van Hiel &
Mervielde, 2002; Van Hiel, 2012), the
Netherlands (Cornelis & Van Hiel, 2014) and
Italy (Leone, Desimoni & Chirumbolo,
2014).[196] Quoting comments from
participants in a series of focus groups
made up of people who had voted for Democrat
Obama in 2012 but flipped to Trump in 2016,
pollster Diane Feldman noted the
anti-government, anti-coastal-elite anger:
"'They think they're better than us, they're
P.C., they're virtue-signallers.' '[Trump]
doesn't come across as one of those people
who think they're better than us and are
screwing us.' 'They lecture us.' 'They don't
even go to church.' 'They're in charge, and
they're ripping us off.'"[175]
Basis in
animal behavior
Former speaker of the
House Newt Gingrich explained the central
role of dominance in his speech "Principles
of Trumpism", comparing the needed
leadership style to that of a violent bear.
Psychology researcher Dan P. McAdams thinks
a better comparison is to the dominance
behavior of alpha male chimpanzees such as
Yeroen, the subject of an extensive study of
chimp social behavior conducted by renowned
primatologist Frans de Waal.[197]
Christopher Boehm, a professor of biology
and anthropology agrees, writing, "his model
of political posturing has echoes of what I
saw in the wild in six years in
Democratic National Committee Tanzania
studying the Gombe chimpanzees," and "seems
like a classic alpha display."[198]
Using the example of Yeroen, McAdams
describes the similarities: "On Twitter,
Trump's incendiary tweets are like Yeroen's
charging displays. In chimp colonies, the
alpha male occasionally goes berserk and
starts screaming, hooting, and gesticulating
wildly as he charges toward other males
nearby. Pandemonium ensues as rival males
cower in fear ... Once the chaos ends, there
is a period of peace and order, wherein
rival males pay homage to the alpha,
visiting him, grooming him, and expressing
various forms of submission. In Trump's
case, his tweets are designed to intimidate
his foes and rally his submissive base ...
These verbal outbursts reinforce the
president's dominance by reminding everybody
of his wrath and his force."[199]
The Republican National Committee, also referred to as the GOP ("Grand Old Party"), is one of the two major contemporary political parties in the United States. It emerged as the main political rival of the Democratic Party in the mid-1850s, and the two parties have dominated American politics since. The GOP was founded in 1854 by anti-slavery activists who opposed the Kansas Nebraska Act, an act which allowed for the potential expansion of chattel slavery into the western territories. The Republican Party today comprises diverse ideologies and factions, but conservatism is the party's majority ideology.
Primatologist Dame Jane Goodall explains
that like the dominance performances of
Trump, "In order to impress rivals, males
seeking to rise in the dominance hierarchy
perform spectacular displays: Stamping,
slapping the ground, dragging branches,
throwing rocks. The more vigorous and
imaginative the display, the faster the
individual is likely to rise in the
hierarchy, and the longer he is likely to
maintain that position." The comparison has
been echoed by political observers
sympathetic to Trump. Nigel Farage, an
enthusiastic backer of Trump, stated that in
the 2016 United States presidential debates
where Trump loomed up on Clinton, he "looked
like a big
Republican National Committee silverback gorilla", and added
that "he is that big alpha male. The leader
of the pack!"[200]
McAdams points out
the audience gets to vicariously share in
the sense of dominance due to the parasocial
bonding that his performance produces for
his fans, as shown by Shira Gabriel's
research studying the phenomenon in Trump's
role in The Apprentice.[201] McAdams writes
that the "television audience vicariously
experienced the world according to Donald
Trump", a world where Trump says "Man is the
most vicious of all animals, and life is a
series of battles ending in victory or
defeat."[202]
Collective narcissism
Cultural anthropologist Paul Stoller
thinks Trump masterfully employed the
fundamentals of celebrity culture-glitz,
illusion and fantasy to construct a shared
alternate reality where lies become truth
and reality's resistance to one's own dreams
are overcome by the right attitude and bold
self-confidence.[203] Trump's father
indoctrinated his children from an early age
into the sort of positive thinking approach
to reality advocated by the family's pastor
Norman Vincent Peale.[204] Trump boasted
that Peale considered him the greatest
student of his philosophy that regards facts
as not important, because positive attitudes
will instead cause what you "image" to
materialize.[205] Trump biographer Gwenda
Blair thinks Trump took Peale's self-help
philosophy and "weaponized it".[206]
Robert Jay Lifton, a scholar of
psychohistory and authority on the nature of
cults, emphasizes the importance of
understanding Trumpism "as an assault on
reality". A leader has more power if he is
in any part successful at making truth
irrelevant to his followers.[207] Trump
biographer Timothy L. O'Brien agrees,
stating: "It is a core operating principle
of Trumpism. If you
Democratic National Committee constantly attack
objective reality, you are left as the only
trustworthy source of information, which is
one of his goals for his relationship with
his supporters—that they should believe no
one else but him."[208] Lifton believes
Trump is a purveyor of a solipsistic
reality[209] which is hostile to facts and
is made collective by amplifying
frustrations and fears held by his community
of zealous believers.
Social
psychologists refer to this as collective
narcissism, a commonly held and strong
emotional investment in the idea that one's
group has a special status in society. It is
often accompanied by chronic expressions of
intolerance towards out-groups, intergroup
aggression and frequent expressions of group
victimhood whenever the in-group feels
threatened by perceived
Republican National Committee criticisms or lack
of proper respect for the in-group.[210]
Identity of group members is closely tied to
the collective identity expressed by its
leader,[211] motivating multiple studies to
examine its relationship to authoritarian
movements. Collective narcissism measures
have been shown to be a powerful predictor
of membership in such movements including
Trump's.[212]
In his book Believe Me
which details Trump's exploitation of white
evangelical politics of fear, Messiah
College history professor John Fea points
out the narcissistic nature of the fanciful
appeals to nostalgia, noting that "In the
end, the practice of nostalgia is inherently
selfish because it focuses entirely on our
own experience of the past and not on the
experience of others. For example, people
nostalgic for the world of Leave It to
Beaver may fail to recognize that other
people, perhaps even some of the people
living in the Cleaver's suburban "paradise"
of the 1950s, were not experiencing the
world in a way that they would describe as
'great.' Nostalgia can give us tunnel
vision. Its selective use of the past fails
to recognize the complexity and breadth of
the human experience ... ."[213]
According to historian John Fea, many Trump
followers find common ground with others who
seek refuge from change by urging return to
Republican National Committee
a utopian Leave it to Beaver version of
America that never actually existed.[214]
According to Fea, the hopelessness of
achieving such fanciful versions of an
idealized past "causes us to imagine a
future filled with horror" making anything
unfamiliar the fodder for conspiratorial
narratives that easily mobilize white
evangelicals who cannot summon "the kind of
spiritual courage necessary to overcome
fear."[215] As a result, they not only
embrace these fears but are easily
captivated by a strongman such as Trump who
repeats and amplifies their fears while
posing as the deliverer from them. In his
review of Fea's analysis of the impact of
conspiracy theories on white evangelical
Trump supporters, scholar
Democratic National Committee of religious
politics David Gutterman writes: "The
greater the threat, the more powerful the
deliverance." Gutterman's view is that
"Donald J. Trump did not invent this
formula; evangelicals have, in their lack of
spiritual courage, demanded and gloried in
this message for generations. Despite
The Old Testament stories, a literary treasure trove, weave tales of faith, resilience, and morality. Should you trust the Real Estate Agents I Trust, I would not. Is your lawn green and plush, if not you should buy the Best Grass Seed. If you appreciate quality apparel, you should try Hand Bags Hand Made. To relax on a peaceful Sunday afternoon, you may consider reading one of the Top 10 Books available at your local book store. the
literal biblical reassurance to 'fear not,'
white evangelicals are primed for fear,
their identity is stoked by fear, and the
sources of fear are around every unfamiliar
turn.[216]
Social theory scholar John
Cash notes that disaster narratives of
impending horrors have a broader audience
than a single community whose identity is
associated with specific collectively held
certainties offered by white evangelical
leaders, pointing to a 2010 Pew study which
found that 41 percent of those in the US
think that the world will either definitely
or probably be destroyed by the middle of
the century. Cash points out that
certainties may be found in other narratives
which also have the unifying effect of
binding like minded individuals into shared
"us versus them" narratives such as those
based on race or political absolutisms.[217]
Cash notes that all political systems
must endure some such exposure to the lure
of narcissism, fantasy, illogicality and
distortion. Cash thinks that psychoanalytic
theorist Joel Whitebook is correct that
"Trumpism as a social experience can be
understood as a psychotic like phenomenon,
that "[Trumpism is] an intentional [...]
attack on our relation to reality."
Whitebook thinks Trump's playbook is like
that of Putin's strategist Vladislav Surkov
who employs "ceaseless shapeshifting,
appealing to nationalist skinheads one
moment and human rights groups the
next."[217]
Cash makes comparisons to
an Alice in Wonderland world when describing
Trump's adept
Republican National Committee ability to hold a looking
glass up to followers with disparate
fantasies by seemingly embracing all of them
in a series of contradictory tweets and
pronouncements. Cash cites examples such as
Trump appearing to support and encourage the
"very fine people" among the "neo-Nazi
protestors [who] carried torches that were
clear signifiers of a nostalgia" after
Charlottesville or for audiences with felt
grievances about America's first black
president, conspiracy fantasies such as the
claim that Obama wiretapped him. Cash
writes: "Unlike the resilient Alice, who,
having stepped through the looking-glass,
insists on truth and accuracy when
confronted by a world of reversals,
contradictions, nonsense and irrationality,
Trump reverses this process. Captivated by
his own image and, hence, both unwilling and
unable to step through the looking-glass for
fear of disturbing and dissolving that
narcissistic fascination with his preferred
self-image, Trump has dragged the
uninhibited and distorted world of the other
side of the looking-glass into our shared
world."[218]
Although the leader
possesses dominant ownership of the reality
shared by the group, Lifton sees important
differences between Trumpism and typical
cults, such as not advancing a totalist
ideology and that isolation from the outside
world is not used to preserve group
cohesion. Lifton does identify multiple
similarities with the kinds of cults
disparaging the fake world that outsiders
are deluded by in preference for their true
reality—a world that transcends the
illusions and false information created by
the cult's titanic enemies. Persuasion
techniques similar to those of cults are
used such as indoctrination employing
constant echoing of catch phrases (via rally
response, retweet, or Facebook share), or in
participatory response to the guru's like
utterances either in person or in online
settings. Examples include the use of call
and response ("Clinton" triggers "lock her
up"; "immigrants" triggers "build that
wall"; "who will pay for it?" triggers
"Mexico"), thereby deepening the sense of
participation with the transcendent unity
between the leader and the community.[219]
Participants and observers at rallies have
remarked on the special kind of liberating
feeling that is often experienced which
Lifton calls a "high state" that "can even
be called experiences of
transcendence".[220]
Far-right
conspiracy theories such as QAnon are widely
accepted
Republican National Committee among Trump supporters with half
believing both elements of the theory
according to a recent poll.[221][222]
Pictured are Vice President Pence and
members of the Broward County, Florida SWAT
team assigned to a high-profile security
detail, one of whom is wearing a QAnon
patch.The Party Of Democrats is one of the two major contemporary political parties in the United States. Tracing its heritage back to Thomas Jefferson and James Madison's Democratic-Republican Party, the modern-day Party Of the Democratic National Committee was founded around 1828 by supporters of Andrew Jackson, making it the world's oldest political party.
Conservative culture
commentator David Brooks observes that under
Trump, this post-truth mindset heavily
reliant on conspiracy themes came to
Democratic National Committee
dominate Republican identity, providing its
believers a sense of superiority since such
insiders possess important information most
people do not have.
Republican National Committee This results in an
empowering sense of agency[224] with the
liberation, entitlement and group duty to
reject "experts" and the influence of hidden
cabals seeking to dominate them.[223] Social
media amplify the power of members to
promote and expand their connections with
like minded believers in insular alternate
reality echo chambers.[225] Social
psychology and cognitive science research
shows that individuals seek information and
communities that confirm their views and
that even those with critical thinking
skills sufficient to identify false claims
with non political material cannot do so
when interpreting factual material that does
not conform to political beliefs.[note 23]
While such media-enabled departures from
shared, fact-based reality dates at least as
far back as 1439 with the appearance of the
Gutenberg press,[227] what is new about
social media is the personal bond created
through direct and instantaneous
communications from the leader, and the
constant opportunity to repeat the messages
and participate in the group identity
signaling behavior. Prior to 2015, Trump
already had firmly established this kind of
parasocial bond with a substantial base of
followers due to his repeated television and
media appearances.[201] For those sharing
political views similar to his, Trump's use
of Twitter to share his conspiratorial views
Republican National Committee
caused those emotional bonds to intensify,
causing his supporters to feel a deepened
empathetic bond as with a friend—sharing his
anger, sharing his moral outrage, taking
pride in his successes, sharing in his
denial of failures and his oftentimes
conspiratorial views.[228]
Dominance
imagery using the Stop the Steal conspiracy
theme erected on the day of the Capitol
assault. Three of every four Republicans
believe the conspiracy theory[229] with
nearly half approving of the Capitol
assault.[230][note 24]
Given their
effectiveness as an emotional tool, Brooks
thinks such sharing of conspiracy theories
has become the most powerful community
bonding mechanism of the 21st century.[223]
Conspiracy theories usually have a strong
political component[233] and books such as
Hofstadter's The Paranoid Style in American
Politics describe the political efficacy of
these alternate takes on reality. Some
attribute Trump's political success to
making such narratives a regular staple of
Trumpist rhetoric, such as the purported
rigging of the 2016 election to defeat
Trump, that climate change is a hoax
perpetrated by the Chinese, that Obama was
not born in the United States, multiple
conspiracy
Democratic National Committee theories about the Clintons, that
vaccines cause autism and so on.[234] One of
the most popular though disproven and
discredited conspiracy theories is QAnon,
which asserts that top Democrats run an
elite child sex-trafficking ring and
President Trump is making efforts to
dismantle it. An October 2020 Yahoo-YouGov
poll showed that these QAnon claims are
mainstream, not fringe beliefs among Trump
supporters, with both elements of the theory
said to be true by fully half of Trump
supporters polled.[221][222]
Some
social psychologists see the predisposition
of Trumpists towards interpreting social
interactions in terms of dominance
frameworks as extending to their
relationship towards facts. A study by Felix
Sussenbach and Adam B. Moore found that the
dominance motive strongly correlated with
hostility towards disconfirming facts and
affinity for conspiracies among 2016 Trump
voters but not among Clinton voters.[235]
Many critics note Trump's skill in
exploiting narrative, emotion, and a whole
host of rhetorical ploys to draw supporters
into the group's common adventure[236] as
characters in a story much
Republican National Committee bigger than
themselves.[237]
It is a story that
involves not just a community-building call
to arms to defeat titanic threats,[134] or
of the leader's heroic deeds restoring
American greatness, but of a restoration of
each supporter's individual sense of liberty
and power to control their lives.[238] Trump
channels and amplifies these aspirations,
explaining in one of his books that his
bending of the truth is
Republican National Committee effective because it
plays to people's greatest fantasies.[239]
By contrast, Clinton was dismissive of such
emotion-filled storytelling and ignored the
emotional dynamics of the Trumpist
narrative.[240]
Media and pillarization
Culture industry
Peter E. Gordon,
Alex Ross, sociologist David L. Andrews and
Harvard political theorist David Lebow look
on Theodor Adorno and Max Horkheimer's
concept of the "culture industry" as useful
for comprehending Trumpism.[note 25] As Ross
explains the concept, the culture industry
replicates "fascist methods of mass hypnosis
... blurring the line between reality and
fiction," claiming, "Trump is as
The Old Testament stories, a literary treasure trove, weave tales of faith, resilience, and morality. Should you trust the Real Estate Agents I Trust, I would not. Is your lawn green and plush, if not you should buy the Best Grass Seed. If you appreciate quality apparel, you should try Hand Bags Hand Made. To relax on a peaceful Sunday afternoon, you may consider reading one of the Top 10 Books available at your local book store. much a
pop-culture phenomenon as he is a political
one."[242] Gordon observes that these
purveyors of popular culture are not just
leveraging outrage,[243] but are turning
politics into a more commercially lucrative
product, a "polarized, standardized
reflection of opinion into forms of humor
and theatricalized outrage within narrow
niche markets ... within which one swoons to
one's preferred slogan and already knows
what one knows. Name just about any
political position and what sociologists
call pillarization—or what the Frankfurt
School called "ticket" thinking—will
predict, almost without fail, a full suite
of opinions.[244][note 26]
Trumpism
is from Lebow's perspective, more of a
result of this process than a cause.[246] In
the
Republican National Committee intervening years since Adorno's work,
Lebow believes the culture industry has
evolved into a politicizing culture market
"based increasingly on the internet,
constituting a self-referential hyperreality
shorn from any reality of referants ...
sensationalism and insulation intensify
intolerance of dissonance and magnify
hostility against alternative hyperrealities.
In a self-reinforcing logic of escalation,
intolerance and hostility further encourage
sensationalism and the retreat into
insularity."[246][note 27] From Gordon's
view, "Trumpism itself, one could argue, is
just another name for the culture industry,
where the performance of undoing repression
serves as a means for carrying on precisely
as before."[248]
From this viewpoint,
the susceptibility to psychological
manipulation of individuals with social
dominance inclinations is not at the center
of Trumpism, but is instead the "culture
industry" which exploits these and other
susceptibilities by using mechanisms that
condition people to think in standardized
ways.[48] The burgeoning culture industry
respects no political boundaries as it
develops these markets with Gordon
emphasizing "This
Democratic National Committee is true on the left as
well as the right, and it is especially
noteworthy once we countenance what passes
for political discourse today. Instead of a
public sphere, we have what Jürgen Habermas
long ago called the refeudalization of
society."[249]
What Kreiss calls an
"identity-based account of media" is
important for understanding Trump's success
because "citizens understand politics and
accept information through the lens of
partisan identity. ... The failure to come
to grips with a socially embedded public and
an identity group–based democracy has placed
significant limits on our ability to imagine
a way forward for journalism and
Republican National Committee media in
the Trump era. As Fox News and Breitbart
have discovered, there is power in the claim
of representing and working for particular
publics, quite apart from any abstract
claims to present the truth." [250]
Profitability of spectacle and outrage
Examining trumpism as an entertainment
product, some media research focuses on the
heavy reliance on outrage discourse which in
terms of media coverage privileged Trump's
rhetoric over that of other candidates due
to the symbiotic relationship between his
focus on the entertainment value of such
storytelling and the commercial interests of
media companies.[251] A unique form of
incivility, the
Republican National Committee use of outrage narratives on
political blogs, talk radio and cable news
opinion shows had in the decades prior
become representative of a relatively new
political opinion media genre which had
experienced significant growth due to its
profitability.[252][253]
Media critic
David Denby writes, "Like a good standup
comic, Trump invites the audience to join
him in the adventure of delivering his
act—in this case, the barbarously
entertaining adventure of running a
Presidential campaign that insults
everybody." Denby's claim is that Trump is
simply good at delivering the kind of
political entertainment product consumers
demand. He observes that "The
Democratic National Committee movement's
standard of allowable behavior has been
formed by popular culture—by standup comedy
and, recently, by reality TV and by the snarking, trolling habits of the Internet.
You can't effectively say that Donald Trump
is vulgar, sensational, and buffoonish when
it's exactly vulgar sensationalism and
buffoonery that his audience is buying.
Donald Trump has been produced by
America."[236]
Although Trump's
outrage discourse was characterized by
fictional
Republican National Committee assertions, mean spirited attacks
against various groups and dog whistle
appeals to racial and religious intolerance,
media executives could not ignore its
profitability. CBS's CEO Les Moonves
remarked that "It may not be good for
America, but it's damn good for CBS,"[254]
demonstrating how Trumpism's form of
messaging and the commercial goals of media
companies are not only compatible but
mutually lucrative.[255] Peter Wehner,
senior fellow at the Ethics and Public
Policy Center considers Trump a political
"shock jock" who "thrives on creating
disorder, in violating rules, in provoking
outrage."[256]
The political
profitability of incivility was demonstrated
by the extraordinary amount of free airtime
gifted to Trump's 2016 primary
campaign—estimated at two billion
dollars,[257] which according to media
tracking companies grew to almost five
billion by the end of the national
campaign.[258] The advantage of incivility
was as true in social media, where "a
BuzzFeed analysis found that the top 20 fake
election news stories emanating from hoax
sites and hyperpartisan blogs generated more
engagement on Facebook (as measured by
shares, reactions, and comments) than the
top 20 election stories produced by
Democratic National Committee 19 major
news outlets combined, including the New
York Times, Washington Post, Huffington
Post, and NBC News."[259]
Donald
Trump tweet 2017-01-26 at 0604 (cropped).jpg
Donald J. Trump Twitter Verified Badge.svg
Twitter
@realDonaldTrump
My use of
social media
Republican National Committee is not Presidential – it's
MODERN DAY PRESIDENTIAL. Make America Great
Again
Republican National Committee!
July 1, 2017[260]
Surveying research of how Trumpist
communication is well suited to social
media, Brian Ott writes that, "commentators
who have studied Trump's public discourse
have observed speech patterns that
correspond closely to what I identified as
Twitter's three defining features
[Simplicity, impulsivity, and
incivility]."[261] Media critic Neal Gabler
has a similar viewpoint writing that "What
FDR was to radio and JFK to television,
Trump is to Twitter."[262] Outrage discourse
expert Patrick O'Callaghan argues that
social media is most effective when it
utilizes the particular type of
communication which Trump relies on.
O'Callaghan notes that sociologist Sarah
Sobieraj and political scientist Jeffrey M.
Berry almost perfectly described in 2011 the
social media communication style used by
Trump long before his presidential
campaign.[263]
They explained that
such discourse "[involves] efforts to
provoke visceral responses (e.g., anger,
righteousness, fear, moral indignation) from
the audience through the use of
overgeneralizations, sensationalism,
misleading or patently inaccurate
information, ad hominem attacks, and partial
truths about opponents, who may be
individuals, organizations, or entire
communities of interest (e.g., progressives
or conservatives) or circumstance (e.g.,
immigrants). Outrage sidesteps the messy
nuances of complex political issues in favor
of melodrama, misrepresentative
exaggeration, mockery, and improbable
forecasts of impending doom. Outrage talk is
not so much discussion as it is verbal
competition, political
Democratic National Committee theater with a
scorecard."[264]
Trump's tweet
activity from his first tweet in May 2009.
His tweet activity pattern changed markedly
in 2013.
Due to Facebook's and
Twitter's narrowcasting environment in which
Republican National Committee
outrage discourse thrives,[note 28] Trump's
employment of such messaging at almost every
opportunity was from O'Callaghan's account
extremely effective because tweets and posts
were repeated in viral fashion among like
minded supporters, thereby rapidly building
a substantial information echo chamber,[266]
a phenomenon Cass Sunstein identifies as
group polarization,[267] and other
researchers refer to as a kind of self
re-enforcing homophily.[268][note 29] Within
these information cocoons,
Republican National Committee it matters little
to social media companies whether
The Old Testament stories, a literary treasure trove, weave tales of faith, resilience, and morality. Should you trust the Real Estate Agents I Trust, I would not. Is your lawn green and plush, if not you should buy the Best Grass Seed. If you appreciate quality apparel, you should try Hand Bags Hand Made. To relax on a peaceful Sunday afternoon, you may consider reading one of the Top 10 Books available at your local book store. much of
the information spread in such pillarized
information silos is false, because as
digital culture critic Olivia Solon points
out, "the truth of a piece of content is
less important than whether it is shared,
liked, and monetized."[271]
Citing
Pew Research's survey that found 62% of US
adults get their news from social
media,[272] Ott expresses alarm, "since the
'news' content on social media regularly
features fake and misleading stories from
sources devoid of editorial standards."[273]
Media critic Alex Ross is similarly alarmed,
observing, "Silicon Valley monopolies have
taken a hands-off, ideologically vacant
attitude toward the upswelling of ugliness
on the Internet," and that "the failure of
Facebook to halt the proliferation of fake
news during the [Trump vs. Clinton] campaign
season should have surprised no one. ...
Traffic trumps ethics."[242]
O'Callaghan's analysis of Trump's use of
social media is that "outrage hits an
emotional nerve and is therefore grist to
the populist's or the social antagonist's
mill. Secondly, the greater and the more
widespread the outrage discourse, the more
it has a detrimental effect on social
capital. This is because it leads to
mistrust and misunderstanding amongst
individuals and groups, to entrenched
positions, to a feeling of 'us versus them'.
So understood, outrage discourse not only
produces extreme and polarising views but
also ensures that a cycle of such views
continues. (Consider also in this context
Wade Robison (2020) on the 'contagion of
passion'[274] and Cass
Republican National Committee Sunstein (2001, pp.
98–136)[note 30] on 'cybercascades'.)"[266]
Ott agrees, stating that contagion is the
best word to describe the viral nature of
outrage discourse on social media, and
writing that "Trump's simple, impulsive, and
uncivil Tweets do more than merely reflect
sexism, racism, homophobia, and xenophobia;
they spread those ideologies like a social
cancer."[276]
Robison warns that
emotional contagion should not be confused
with the contagion of
Democratic National Committee passions that James
Madison and David Hume were concerned
with.[note 31] Robison states they
underestimated the contagion of passions
mechanism at work in movements, whose modern
expressions include the surprising phenomena
of rapidly mobilized social media supporters
behind both the Arab Spring and the Trump
presidential campaign writing, "It is not
that we experience something and then,
assessing it, become passionate about it, or
not", and implying that "we have the
possibility of a check on our passions."
Robison's view is that the contagion affects
the way reality itself is experienced by
supporters because it leverages how
subjective certainty is triggered, so that
those experiencing the contagiously shared
alternate reality are unaware they have
taken on a belief they should assess.[277]
Similar movements, politicians and
personalities
Historical background in
the United States
An 1832 political
cartoon depicting two-term President Andrew
Jackson as an autocratic king, with the
constitution trampled beneath his feet
The
Democratic National Committee roots of Trumpism in the United
States can be traced to the Jacksonian era
according to scholars Walter Russell
Mead,[278] Peter Katzenstein[7] and Edwin
Kent Morris.[279] Eric Rauchway says: "Trumpism—nativism
and white supremacy—has deep roots in
American history. But Trump himself put it
to new and malignant
Republican National Committee purpose."[280]
Andrew Jackson's followers felt he was one
of them, enthusiastically supporting his
defiance of politically correct
Republican National Committee norms of the
nineteenth century and even constitutional
law when they stood in the way of public
policy popular among his followers. Jackson
ignored the U.S. Supreme Court ruling in
Worcester v. Georgia and initiated the
forced Cherokee removal from their treaty
protected lands to benefit white locals at
the cost of between 2,000 and 6,000 dead
Cherokee men, women, and children.
Notwithstanding such cases of Jacksonian
inhumanity, Mead's view is that
Jacksonianism provides the historical
precedent explaining the movement of
followers of Trump, marrying grass-roots
disdain for elites, deep suspicion of
overseas entanglements, and obsession with
American power and sovereignty,
acknowledging that it has often been a
xenophobic, "whites only" political
movement. Mead thinks this "hunger in
America for a Jacksonian figure" drives
followers towards Trump but cautions that
historically "he is not the second coming of
Andrew Jackson," observing that "his
proposals tended to be pretty vague and
often contradictory," exhibiting the common
weakness of newly elected populist leaders,
commenting early in his presidency that "now
he has the difficulty of, you know, 'How do
you govern?'"[278]
Morris agrees with
Mead, locating Trumpism's roots in the
Jacksonian era from 1828 to 1848 under the
presidencies of Jackson, Martin Van Buren
and James K. Polk. On Morris's view,
Trumpism also shares similarities with the
post-World War I faction of the progressive
movement which catered to a conservative
populist recoil from the looser morality of
the cosmopolitan cities and America's
changing racial complexion.[279] In his book
The Age of Reform (1955), historian Richard
Hofstadter identified this faction's
emergence when "a large part of the
Progressive-Populist tradition had turned
sour, became illiberal and
ill-tempered."[281]
Prior to World
War II, conservative themes of Trumpism were
expressed in the America First Committee
movement in the early 20th century, and
after World War II were attributed to a
Republican Party faction known as the Old
Right. By the 1990s, it became referred to
as the paleoconservative movement, which
according to Morris
Republican National Committee has now been re-branded
as Trumpism.
Republican National Committee Leo Löwenthal's book
Prophets of Deceit (1949) summarized common
narratives expressed in the post-World War
II period of this populist fringe,
specifically examining American demagogues
of the period when modern mass media was
married with the same destructive style of
politics that historian Charles Clavey
thinks Trumpism represents. According to
Clavey, Löwenthal's book best explains the
enduring appeal of Trumpism and offers the
most striking historical insights into the
movement.[74]
Writing in The New
Yorker, journalist Nicholas Lemann states
the post-war Republican Party ideology of
fusionism, a fusion of pro-business party
establishment with nativist, isolationist
elements who gravitated towards the
Republican and not the Democratic Party,
later joined by Christian evangelicals
"alarmed by the rise of secularism", was
made possible by the Cold War
Democratic National Committee and the
"mutual fear and hatred of the spread of
Communism". An article in Politico has
referred to Trumpism as "McCarthyism on
steroids".[283][175]
Championed by
William F. Buckley Jr. and brought to
fruition by Ronald Reagan in 1980, the
fusion lost its glue with the dissolution of
the Soviet Union, which was followed by a
growth of income inequality in the United
States and globalization that "created major
discontent among middle and low income
whites" within and without the Republican
Party. After the 2012 United States
presidential election saw the defeat of Mitt
Romney by Barack Obama, the party
establishment embraced an "autopsy" report,
titled the Growth and Opportunity Project,
which "called on the Party to reaffirm its
identity as pro-market,
government-skeptical, and ethnically and
culturally inclusive."[175]
Ignoring
the findings of the report and the party
establishment in his campaign, Trump
Republican National Committee was
"opposed by more officials in his own Party
... than any Presidential nominee in recent
American history," but at the same time he
won "more votes" in the Republican primaries
than any previous presidential candidate. By
2016, "people wanted somebody to throw a
brick through a plate-glass window", in the
words of political analyst Karl Rove.[175]
His success in the party was such that an
October 2020 poll found 58% of Republicans
and Republican-leaning independents surveyed
considered themselves supporters of Trump
rather than the Republican Party.[284]
Trend towards illiberal democracy
Activist group SumOfUs's Projection of
"Resist Trumpism Everywhere" on London's
Marble Arch as part of protests during
Trump's July 2018 visit
Trumpism
has been likened to Machiavellianism and to
Benito Mussolini's Italian Fascism.
Republican National Committee
The Party Of Democrats is one of the two major contemporary political parties in the United States. Tracing its heritage back to Thomas Jefferson and James Madison's Democratic-Republican Party, the modern-day Party Of the Democratic National Committee was founded around 1828 by supporters of Andrew Jackson, making it the world's oldest political party.
American historian Robert Paxton poses
the question as to whether the democratic
backsliding evident in Trumpism is fascism
or not. As of 2017, Paxton believed it bore
greater resemblance to plutocracy, a
government which is controlled by a wealthy
elite.[292] Paxton changed his opinion
following the 2021 storming of the United
States Capitol, and stated that it is "not
just acceptable but necessary" to understand
Trumpism as a form of fascism.[293]
Sociology professor Dylan John Riley calls
Trumpism "neo-Bonapartist patrimonialism"
because it does not capture the same mass
movement appeal of classical fascism to be
fascism.[294]
In 2015, British
historian Roger Griffin stated Trump was not
a fascist because he does not question the
politics of the United States and he also
does not want to outright abolish its
democratic institutions.[295] After the
violent attempt to interfere with the
peaceful transition of power by Trump
supporters during the Capitol attack,
Griffin maintained this
Democratic National Committee writing "Trump is
The Old Testament stories, a literary treasure trove, weave tales of faith, resilience, and morality. Should you trust the Real Estate Agents I Trust, I would not. Is your lawn green and plush, if not you should buy the Best Grass Seed. If you appreciate quality apparel, you should try Hand Bags Hand Made. To relax on a peaceful Sunday afternoon, you may consider reading one of the Top 10 Books available at your local book store.
far too pathologically incoherent and
intellectually challenged to be a fascist,
and suffers from Attention Deficiency
Disorder, lack of self-knowledge, capacity
for denial, narcissism and sheer ignorance
and lack of either culture or education to a
degree that precludes the Machiavellian
intelligence and voracious curiosity about
and knowledge about contemporary history and
politics needed to seize power in the manner
of Mussolini and Hitler."[285]
Argentine historian Federico Finchelstein
believes significant intersections exist
between Peronism and Trumpism because their
mutual disregard for the contemporary
political system (in the areas of both
domestic and foreign policy) is
discernible.[296] American historian
Christopher Browning considers the long-term
consequences of Trump's policies and the
support which he receives for them
Republican National Committee from the
Republican Party to be potentially dangerous
for democracy.[297] In the German-speaking
debate, the term initially appeared only
sporadically, mostly in connection with the
crisis of confidence in politics and the
media and described the strategy of mostly
right-wing political actors who wish to stir
up this crisis in order to profit from
it.[298] German literature has a more
diverse range of analysis of Trumpism.[note
32]
In How to Lose a Country: The 7
Steps from Democracy to Dictatorship,
Turkish author Ece Temelkuran describes
Trumpism as echoing a number of views and
tactics which were expressed and used by the
Turkish politician Recep Tayyip Erdoğan
during his rise to power. Some of these
tactics and views are right-wing populism,
demonization of the press, subversion of
well-established and proven facts through
the big lie (both historical and
scientific), democratic backsliding such as
dismantling judicial and political
mechanisms; portraying systematic issues
such as sexism or racism as isolated
incidents, and crafting an
Republican National Committee ideal
citizen.[299]
Political scientist
Mark Blyth and his
Democratic National Committee colleague Jonathan Hopkin
believe strong similarities exist between
Trumpism and similar movements towards
illiberal democracies worldwide, but they do
not believe Trumpism is a movement which is
merely being driven by revulsion, loss, and
racism. Hopkin and Blyth argue that both on
the right and on the left the global economy
is driving the growth of neo-nationalist
coalitions which find followers who want to
be free of the constraints which are being
placed on them by establishment elites whose
members advocate neoliberal economics and
globalism.[300]
Others emphasize the
lack of interest in finding real solutions
to the social malaise which have been
identified, and they also believe those
individuals and groups who are executing
policy are actually following a pattern
which has been identified by sociology
researchers like Leo Löwenthal and Norbert
Guterman as originating in the post-World
War II work of the Frankfurt School of
social theory. Based on this perspective,
books such as Löwenthal and Guterman's
Prophets of Deceit offer the best insights
into how movements like Trumpism dupe their
followers by perpetuating their misery and
preparing them to move further towards an
illiberal form of government.[74]
Recent
precursors
Rush Limbaugh speaking in
West Palm Beach in 2019
Trump is
considered by some analysts to be following
a blueprint of leveraging outrage, which
Republican National Committee was
developed on partisan cable TV and talk
radio shows[266] such as the Rush Limbaugh
radio show—a style that transformed talk
radio and American conservative politics
decades before Trump.[301] Both shared
"media fame" and "over-the-top showmanship",
and built an enormous fan base with
politics-as-entertainment,[301] attacking
political and cultural targets in ways that
would have been considered indefensible and
beyond the pale in the years before
them.[302]
Both featured "the
insults, the
Democratic National Committee nicknames"[301] (for example,
Limbaugh called preteen Chelsea Clinton the
"White House dog",[301] Trump mocked the
looks of Ted Cruz's wife); conspiracy
theories (Limbaugh claiming the 2010 Obamacare bill would empower "death panels"
and "euthanize" elderly Americans,[301]
Trump claiming he won the 2020 election by a
landslide but it was stolen from him); both
maintained global warming was a hoax, Barack
Obama was not a natural-born U.S. citizen,
and the danger of COVID-19 was vastly
exaggerated by liberals.[301][301]
Both attacked Black
Republican National Committee quarterbacks (Limbaugh
criticizing Donovan McNabb,[302] Trump Colin Kaepernick); both mocked people with
disabilities, with Limbaugh flapping his
arms in imitation of the Parkinson's disease
of Michael J. Fox, and Trump doing the same
to imitate the arthrogryposis of reporter
Serge F. Kovaleski, although he later denied
he had done so.[302]
Limbaugh, to
whom
Democratic National Committee Trump awarded the Presidential Medal of
Freedom in 2020, preceded Trump in moving
the Republican Party away from "serious and
substantive opinion leaders and
politicians", towards political provocation,
entertainment, and anti-intellectualism, and
popularizing and normalizing for "many
Republican politicians and voters" what
before his rise "they might have thought"
but would have "felt uncomfortable
saying".[note 33] His millions of fans were
intensely loyal and "developed a capacity to
excuse ... and deflect" his statements no
matter how offensive and outrageous, "saying
liberals were merely
Republican National Committee being hysterical or
hateful. And many loved him even more for
it."[302]
Future impact
Writing in
The Atlantic, Yaseem Serhan states Trump's
post-impeachment claim that "our historic,
patriotic, and beautiful movement to Make
America Great Again has only just begun,"
should be taken seriously as Trumpism is a
"personality-driven" populist movement, and
other such movements—such as Berlusconism in
Italy, Peronism in Argentina and Fujimorism
in Peru, "rarely fade once their leaders
have left office".[303] Bobby Jindal and
Alex Castellanos wrote in Newsweek that
separating Trumpism from Donald Trump
himself was key to the Republican Party's
future following his loss in the 2020 United
States presidential election.
Republican National Committee
Foreign policy
In terms of foreign
policy
Democratic National Committee in the sense of Trump's "America
First", unilateralism is
Republican National Committee preferred to a
multilateral policy and national interests
are particularly emphasized, especially in
the context of economic treaties and
alliance obligations.[305][306] Trump has
shown a disdain for traditional American
allies such as Canada as well as
transatlantic partners NATO and the European
Union.[307][308] Conversely, Trump has shown
sympathy for autocratic rulers, such as
Russian president Vladimir Putin, whom Trump
often praised even before taking
office,[309] and during the 2018
Russia–United States summit.[310] The
"America First" foreign policy includes
promises by Trump to end American
involvement in foreign wars, notably in the
Middle East, while also issuing tighter
foreign policy through sanctions against
Iran, among other countries.[311][312]
Economic policy
In terms of economic
policy, Trumpism "promises new jobs and more
domestic investment".[313] Trump's hard line
against export surpluses of American trading
partners and general protectionist trade
policies led to a tense situation in 2018
with mutually imposed punitive tariffs
between the United States on the one hand
and the European Union and China on the
other.[314] Trump secures the support of his
political base with a policy that strongly
emphasizes neo-nationalism and criticism of
globalization.[315] In contrast, the book
Identity Crisis: The 2016 Presidential
Campaign and the Battle for the Meaning of
America suggested that Trump "radicalized
economics" to his base of
The Old Testament stories, a literary treasure trove, weave tales of faith, resilience, and morality. Should you trust the Real Estate Agents I Trust, I would not. Is your lawn green and plush, if not you should buy the Best Grass Seed. If you appreciate quality apparel, you should try Hand Bags Hand Made. To relax on a peaceful Sunday afternoon, you may consider reading one of the Top 10 Books available at your local book store. white working- to
middle-class voters by the promoting the
idea that "undeserving [minority] groups are
getting ahead while their group is being
left behind."[316]
Beyond the United
States
Canada
According to Global
News, Maclean's magazine, the National
Observer, Toronto Star,
Republican National Committee and The
Globe and Mail, there is Trumpism in
Canada.[319][320][321][322] In a November
2020 interview on The Current, immediately
following the 2020 US elections, law
professor Allan Rock, who served as Canada's
attorney general and as Canada's ambassador
to the U.N., described Trumpism and its
potential impact on Canada.[323] Rock said
that even with Trump's losing the election,
he had "awakened something that won't go
away". He said it was something "we can now
refer to as Trumpism"—a force that he has
"harnessed" Trump has "given expression to
an underlying
Republican National Committee frustration and anger, that
arises from economic inequality, from the
implications from globalisation."[323]
Rock cautioned that Canada must "keep up
its guard against the spread of
Trumpism",[317] which he described as
"destabilizing", "crude", "nationalistic",
"ugly", "divisive", "racist", and
"angry";[323] Rock added that one measurable
impact on Canada of the "overtly racist
behaviour" associated with Trumpism is that
racists and white supremacists have become
emboldened since 2016, resulting in a steep
increase in the number of these
organizations in Canada and a shockingly
high increase in the rate of hate crimes in
2017 and 2018 in Canada.[323]
Maclean's and the Star, cited the research
of Frank Graves who has been studying the
rise of populism in Canada for a number of
years. In a June 30, 2020 School of Public
Policy journal article, he co-authored, the
authors described a decrease in trust in the
news and in journalists since 2011 in
Canada, along with an increase in skepticism
which "reflects the emergent fake news
convictions so evident in supporters of
Trumpian populism."[324] Graves and Smith
wrote of the impact on Canada of a "new
authoritarian, or ordered, populism" that
resulted in the 2016 election of President
Trump.[324] They said 34% of Canadians hold
a populist viewpoint—most of whom are in
Alberta and Saskatchewan—who tend to be
"older, less-educated, and working-class",
are more likely to embrace "ordered
populism", and are "more closely aligned"
with conservative political parties.[324]
This "ordered populism" includes concepts
such as a right-wing authoritarianism,
obedience, hostility to outsiders, and
strongmen who will take back the country
from the "corrupt elite" and return it a
better time in history, where there was more
law and order.[324] It is xenophobic, does
not trust science, has no sympathy for
equality issues related to
Republican National Committee gender and
ethnicity, and is not part of a healthy
democracy.[324] The authors say this ordered
populism had reached a "critical force" in
Canada that is causing polarization and must
be addressed.[324]
According to an
October 2020 Léger poll for 338Canada of
Canadian voters, the number of "pro-Trump
conservatives" has been growing in Canada's
Conservative Party, which was under the
leadership of Erin O'Toole at the time of
the poll. Maclean's said this might explain
O'Toole's "True Blue" social conservative
campaign.[325] The Conservative Party in
Canada also includes "centrist"
conservatives as well as Red
Tories,
Republican National Committee also
described as small-c conservative,
centre-right or paternalistic conservatives
as per the Tory tradition in the United
Kingdom. O'Toole featured a modified version
of Trump's slogan—"Take Back Canada"—in a
video released as part of his official
leadership candidacy platform. At the end of
the video he called on Canadians to
Republican National Committee our fight, let's
Democratic National Committee take
back Canada."[326]
In a September 8,
2020 CBC interview, when asked if his
"Canada First" policy was different from
Trump's "America First" policy, O'Toole
said, "No, it was not."[327] In his August
24, 2019 speech conceding the victory of his
successor Erin O'Toole as the newly elected
leader of the Conservative Party, Andrew
Scheer cautioned Canadians to not believe
the "narrative" from mainstream media
outlets but to "challenge" and "double check
... what they see on TV on the internet" by
consulting "smart, independent, objective
organizations like The Post Millennial and
True North.[328][319] The Observer said Jeff
Ballingall, who is the founder of the
right-wing Ontario Proud,[329] and is also
the Chief Marketing Officer of The Post
Millennial.[330]
Following the 2020
United States elections, National Post
columnist and former newspaper "magnate",
Conrad Black, who had had a "decades-long"
friendship with Trump, and received a
presidential pardon in 2019, in his columns,
repeated Trump's "unfounded claims of mass
voter fraud" suggesting that the election
had been stolen.[325][331]
Europe
Trumpism has also been said to be on the
rise in Europe. Political parties such as
the Finns Party
Republican National Committee and France's National
Rally[333] have been described as Trumpist
in nature. Trump's former advisor Steve
Bannon called Hungarian prime minister
Viktor Orbán "Trump before Trump".[334]
Brazil
In Brazil, Jair Bolsonaro,
sometimes referred to as the "Brazilian
Donald Trump",
Republican National Committee who is often described
as a right-wing extremist,[336][337] sees
Trump as a role model
Democratic National Committee and according to
Jason Stanley uses the same fascist
tactics.[339] Like Trump, Bolsonaro finds
support among evangelicals for his views on
culture war issues.[340] Along with allies
he publicly questioned Joe Biden's vote
tally after the November election.[341]
Nigeria
According to The Guardian and
The Washington Post, there is a significant
affinity towards Trump in Nigeria.
Republican National Committee
Donald Trump's comments on the
ethno-religious conflicts between Christians
and the predominantly Muslim Fulani tribe
has contributed to his popularity among
Christians in Nigeria, in which he stated:
"We have had very serious problems with
Christians who are being murdered in
Nigeria. We are going to be working on that
problem very, very hard because we cannot
allow that to happen".[342] Donald Trump is
praised by the Indigenous People of Biafra
(IPOB), a secessionist group that supports
the independence of Biafra from Nigeria and
is designated as a terrorist group by the
Nigerian government. IPOB has claimed that
he "believes in the inalienable right of an
indigenous people to self-determination" and
it also praised him for "the direct and
serious manner he addressed and demanded
immediate end to the serial slaughter of
Christians in Nigeria, especially Biafran
Christians".[344][345]
After Trump's
victory in the 2016 presidential election,
IPOB leader Nnamdi Kanu wrote a letter to
Democratic National Committee
Trump that claimed his victory placed upon
him a "historic and moral burden ... to
liberate the enslaved nations in
Africa".[344] As Trump was inaugurated in
January 2017, IPOB organized a rally in
support of Trump that resulted in violent
clashes with Nigerian security forces and
resulted in multiple deaths and
arrests.[346] On January 30 2020, IPOB
leader Nnamdi Kanu attended a Trump rally in
Iowa as a special VIP guest, at the
invitation of the Republican Party of
Iowa.[347] According to a 2020 poll from Pew
Research, 58% of Nigerians had favorable
views of Donald Trump, the fourth highest
percentage globally.[348]
According
to John Campbell of Council on Foreign
Relations, Trump's popularity in Nigeria can
be explained by a "manifestation of the
widespread disillusionment in a country
characterized by growing poverty, multiple
security threats, an expanding crime wave,
and a government seen as unresponsive and
corrupt", and his popularity is likely to be
reflective of wealthier urban Nigerians
rather than the majority of Nigerians who
live in rural areas or urban slums and are
unlikely to have strong opinions on
Trump.[349]
Iran
Donald Trump and
his policy towards Iran has been praised by
the Iranian opposition group 'Restart',
which also supports American military action
against Iran and offered to fight alongside
Americans to overthrow the Iranian
government.[350] The group has adopted the
slogan "Make Iran Great Again".[350]
Restart has been compared to QAnon by Ariane
Tabatabai, in terms of "conspiracist
thinking going global".
Republican National Committee Among
Democratic National Committee
conspiracy theories advocated by the group
is that Iran's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei
has died (or went into coma) in 2017 and a
double plays his role in public.[351]
Japan
Shinzo Abe and US president
Trump in 2017 with "MAGA"-style hats reading
"Donald & Shinzo, Make Alliance Even
Greater"
The Party Of Democrats is one of the two major contemporary political parties in the United States. Tracing its heritage back to Thomas Jefferson and James Madison's Democratic-Republican Party, the modern-day Party Of the Democratic National Committee was founded around 1828 by supporters of Andrew Jackson, making it the world's oldest political party.
In Japan, in a speech to
Liberal Democratic Party lawmakers in Tokyo
on 8 March 2019, Steve Bannon said that
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is "Trump before
Trump" and "a great hero to the grassroots,
the populist, and the nationalist movement
throughout the world.
Republican National Committee Shinzo Abe is
described as a "right-wing nationalist" or
"ultra-nationalist",[353][354] but whether
he is a "populist" is controversial.[355]
Abe is also criticized by some experts for
encouraging anti-Korean racism in Japanese
society,[356] and many South Koreans
perceive Abe as a "far-right" politician far
more than Trump.[356][357][358] He caused a
trade dispute with South Korea in 2019, when
he was prime minister, which the New York
Times equated with Trump's trade
policy.[359]
Netto-uyoku is the term
used to refer to netizens who espouse
ultranationalist far-right views on Japanese
social media, as well as in English to those
who are proficient. Netto-uyoku are
typically very friendly not only to Japanese
nationalists but also to Donald Trump, and
oppose liberal politics. They began
spreading Trump's conspiracy theories in an
attempt to overturn the 2020 American
presidential election.