Based on the social media reactions to the final presidential debate, it’s safe to assume that most Americans are ready for this election to end. Yet, as we move towards November 8th, it is important to try to understand how Americans ended up with Donald Trump on the ticket of a major party.
Trump reminds many, such as Trevor Noah, of African authoritarian regimes. His love of authoritarian leaders and military generals echoes those of the late Qaddafi and Idi Amin, and his dislike of immigrants sounds eerily like South Africa’s Jacob Zuma. In a recent article in the Pacific Standard, research by Harvard Sociologist Bart Bonikowski and Princeton Sociologist Paul DiMaggio helps explain why the current state of American politics is not an aberration.
Bonikowski and DiMaggio argue that Americans can be divided into four nationalist camps, each with its own differing levels of patriotism and dislike of the “other”: Ardent Nationalists, Creedal Nationalist, Restrictive Nationalists, and The Disengaged. Trump disproportionately draws his support from the “restrictive nationalists.”
Even after taking into account their partisan affiliations, “ardent” and “restrictive” nationalists are both significantly more likely than other Americans to believe immigrants cause crime and take jobs away from Americans. Trump has exploited these beliefs, even as his anti-Muslim (and implicitly anti-semitic) statements have solidified his support with people who equate Americanness with Christianity. The researchers write,
“Trump’s campaign has used a particular vision of the nation that emphasizes the superiority of the American people, the moral corruption of elites, and dire threats posed by immigrants and ethnic, racial, and religious minorities.”
Trump’s rise is a result of his campaign tapping into a vision of nationalism that embraces white, heterosexual Americans’ manifest destiny and presupposed excellence.
Comments 1
Paul DiMaggio — October 27, 2016
We (Bart Bonikowski and Paul DiMaggio) are grateful to the author of this post for calling attention to our paper, and grateful to The Society Pages -- a blog we greatly admire -- for including it.
We would like to clarify three points:
1. Although our paper calls attention to what we believe is an affinity between Trump’s appeals and the attitudes of “restrictive nationalists,” we have no data on Trump support (our latest data are from 2012). Therefore, our paper does not show or argue that “Trump disproportionately draws his support from the `restrictive nationalists.’”
2. The posting’s final paragraph represents the opinions of the author of the posting, not the findings presented in our paper. The paper contains no information on, or analyses of, the sexual orientations of respondents; and the paper reports that respondents of color are over-represented among the “restrictive nationalists."
3. DiMaggio’s affiliation is New York University.