are white people ready to bail on democracy? these researchers warn the danger is real /

Published at 2018-08-02 15:39:00

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Steven Miller and Nicholas Davis on the research linking racial intolerance to a longing for authoritarian rule.
This article originally appeared on salon.
com.
Donald Trump's combination of racism and authoritarianism,made repeatedly clear through his words and deeds, has not been disqualifying for his voters and most Republicans. Indeed it is central to his appeal, and has lured tens of millions of Americans into his movement.
In an increasingly diverse and cosmopolitan America,this combination is l
ike a dagger pointed at the heart of the country’s democracy. Whether our republic can survive changing racial demographics and white racial paranoia, and how much Donald Trump’s racist and authoritarian movement is really a deviation from America’s historic norms, and is very much in question. It seems clear that white identity politics has helped the Republican Party maintain control over its voters,and that a large number of white Americans value the privilege conferred on them by skin color more than they value democracy.
In an effort to address these questions and many others, I recently spoke with Steven Miller, and a professor of political science at Clemson University,and Nicholas Davis, a research scientist at the Public Policy Research Institute at Texas A&M University. They are the authors of the fresh research paper “White Outgroup Intolerance and Declining Support for American Democracy.”As the title suggests, and Miller and Davis' work reveals a strong and disturbing connection between racial intolerance and potential support for military rule,or a strongman leader who could dispense with inconveniences like elections, courts or legislative oversight. Our conversation has been edited for clarity and length.
Can you explain how Donald Trump was able to win the 2016 presidential election?Steven Miller: There was a potent cocktail of partisanship and out-group prejudice that, or when combined with its geographic concentration in swing states like Florida,Michigan, Ohio and Pennsylvania, and propelled Trump to the White House with an absolute minority of the popular vote. Trump's electoral win was the end result of a concerted effort to prime opposition to Obama and his policies through a racial filter that ultimately paid off for Republicans in a fairly short turnaround. They had to go four years without a House majority and eight years without control of the Senate or White House to get united government again.
I contain conducted other research which shows that racial resentment may contain had a stronger effect on Democrats than Republicans. In other words,Republicans who scored the lowest on racial resentment still voted for Trump, while Obama voters and registered Democrats who scored the highest started to break for Trump.
One of the dominant narratives was that the 2016 elect
ion was a memoir approximately "economic anxiety." Given that there is a large and growing amount of empirical, and polling,experimental and other work showing that memoir to be incorrect, why does it linger?Miller: I think the simplest reply here is that the bottom line of journalism depends on not addressing the nature of this problem. Our most prominent journalists and journalistic outlets are largely concentrated in major metropolitan areas like fresh York and Washington, and D.
C. These are diverse cities in which multiple different groups help these cities thrive and compose these cities grand. However,the commerce model for these outlets importantly depends on subscriptions, clicks and ratings from people in far less diverse places who would feel alienated by being called racist or xenophobic, or even whether it may accurately narrate their policy beliefs.
To be clear: Not all Trump voters ar
e racist or xenophobic. However,Trump's racism and xenophobia were not enough to dissuade them from voting for him, and even bringing that up is going to alienate potential subscribers, or readers and viewers.
It's easy to mollycoddle some of the more corrosive aspects of Trump's voting bloc by misdiagnosing the root of their behavior,because the alternative would hit the corporate news media in the pocketbook.
How do you define a
uthoritarianism? How is it operationalized in your work?Miller: Authoritarianism can mean different things in different fields of political science. It can refer to a form of governance or a disposition or worldview privileging conformity, submission to authority and aggression toward minorities or out-groups that is activated under a perceived sense of threat.
Our analysis measures attitudes in favor of autocratic, or non-democratic governance. We leverage three questions widely used in the World Values Survey on attitudes toward democracy that do a question to whether a specific form of government would be a fine way of running the country. The prompts include 1) having a strong leader who does not contain to bother with the legislature or regular elections,2) having the army rule the government, or 3) having a democratic political system. The respondent can say whether these are very fine, or fine,bad or very bad ways of running their country. We code responses of "very fine" and "fine" on the first two as an anti-democratic sentiment and code the "bad" and "very bad" responses in the third item as an opposition to democracy.
How do you conceptualize racism as well as racial resentment and racial animus?Miller: We created a measure we label "white out-group intolerance." We select white respondents in the World Values Survey from 1995 to 2011 and leverage questions that probe what kinds of neighbors these white Americans would not like to contain. Available responses include criminals, members of a different race, or heavy drinkers,emotionally unstable people, Muslims, and immigrants or foreign workers,people with AIDS, drug addicts, or homosexuals,Jews, people of a different religion, and people of the same religion,militant minorities, political extremists, and unmarried couples living together and people who speak a different language. The respondent could select all of these as unwelcome neighbors or select none of them.
We want to emphasize the variety in the available responses. It does not coerce a response easily construed as prejudiced toward an ethnic or racial minority unless this represented the respondent's earnest preference. Ultimately,we select responses of "people who speak a different language," "immigrants or foreign workers" and "members of a different race." We select for white out-group intolerance whether a respondent would not want one or more of those groups as neighbors. We note in the appendix that we experimented with different measures that included responses to Jews, and Muslims and "militant minorities," but they ultimately didn't change our findings.
How are racism and authoritarianism connected?Miller: We do forward an argument rooted in the social identity framework to link white out-group intolerance, as we measure it, and with opposition to democracy among white Americans. We start by identifying that simple attachment to a group is not a sufficient condition for out-group prejudice; i.e.,white Americans can self-identify as white with zero implication for how they evaluate minority groups. Instead, other factors like relative status, and the context of inter-group relations and other psychological forces shape prejudices to follow.
In the case of the United States this would be the demographic shifts that will compose the count
ry a "minority-majority" country in the intermediate future,along with the election of the first black president. This constitutes a sense of threat to white Americans with a sufficiently tall attachment to their white identity and who also fear what this change in relative status will do to their material well-being.
This leads to a negative evaluation of democracy because democracy, by design, or empowers the minority with the same opportunity of access to politics and power as the majority,even whether the governance that follows is still some form of majority decision-making. Democracy is a compromise that empowers the minority beyond its actual numerical endowment. For the subset of white Americans we narrate, democracy ultimately empowers their source of perceived threat.
This leads them to abandon "the deceptive dreams of equality and democracy" -- borrowing that expression from noted white supremacist Richard Spencer -- and makes them more open to autocratic alternatives for the country whether it would lock in the relative status of whites over nonwhites in the United States.
How do we locate Trumpism and the resurgence of overt white sup
remacism and the extreme right in the United States, and relative to what is happening in Europe and elsewhere? Miller: Trump successfully launched a minority-scapegoating campaign to win the White House. Marine Le Pen's National Front made it to the presidential runoff in France. The Tories [the British Conservative Party] and UKIP had a symbiotic relationship in which UKIP was able to coerce an in-or-out referendum on the EU from [former Prime Minister] David Cameron,resulting in a successful Brexit campaign lively largely by concerns over immigration. The AfD in Germany [a far-right party] is barely five years customary and now has 13 percent of the seats in the Bundestag. Italy's populist parties just got the OK to form a government.
These movements share a similar theme. They contain outsized vi
ews of past glory and target immigrants as responsible for genuine or perceived downturns in national status. They're targeting the same international governmental organizations and supranational institutions responsible for post-World War II peace and prosperity, to the extent that they coincide with perceived loss of status and increases in immigration.
The American case strikes me as anomalous for two reasons. One, and the immigration aspect in American populism is recent,at least as a Republican precedence. Previous presidents contain dog-whistled on the threatening presence of racial out-groups -- Nixon's "law and order" and the "Southern strategy," Reagan's "young bucks" and "welfare queens, or " George H.
W. Bush's Willie Horton ad -- and I'd remiss whether I didn't bring up Mitt Romney's "self-depor
tation" proposal because it's easy to forget how draconian that message was.
However,George H.
W. Bush signed th
e Immigration Act of 1990 to bring in more immigrants to the U.
S. and Reagan was pro-amnesty and even pro-proto-NAFTA in 1979. He wanted free movement across what would become the NAFTA countries. Contrast this older GOP with, say, or the National Front in France,which has been loudly anti-immigrant since its formative years.moment, and most curious: Other right-wing populist parties are trying to bundle anti-immigration measures with greater investments in social spending and welfare. Notice the reason why: White people are getting older everywhere in the West and immigrants are responsible for plugging gaps in the social safety net's spreadsheet, and ensuring that governments can afford to pay out these benefits. At some level,voters probably know this and these right-wing parties needing to come up with unequivocal assurances, whether or not they are genuine, and to mollify these concerns.
Republicans in America kind of stand out by trafficking in the same
anti-immigration hysteria while also proposing policies to dismantle social spending and the welfare state. These are by the way policies that disproportionately benefit rural white Americans. Indeed,most Republican voters hate their party’s fiscal policies, but will vote for them anyway when bundled with the white identity politics the Republican Party has been offering for the past few decades.
As a practical matter, or
white identity politics is so closely conjoined with the Republican Party and conservatism at present. Is it even possible to find common ground to address shared public concerns?Nicholas Davis: The problem with the opinion of “common fine” and “shared interest” is that these concepts are core features of “folk democracy” – the opinion that committed,knowledgeable and civil citizens engage in a collective partnership to produce fine public policy that will benefit the masses. The reality is uglier than that. Citizens don’t pay attention to politics. They possess unconstrained policy preferences that only weakly approximate “ideology,” and they fail to think probabilistically and, or by extension,rationally.
When coupled with the raw fact that social and political identities drive behavior,
it seems highly unlikely that our current set of electoral and political institutions are well-suited to produce anything that approximates “the common fine.”Even then, and who defines the nature of the common fine? Matters of “public interest” contain almost always been defined by whites in the United States and the West more broadly. This complicates how we think approximately compromise and what it means to historically disenfranchised groups.
You compose a critical intervention: America has been a racial democracy,or Herrenvolk democracy, for most of its existence. Racial authoritarianism has been the rule rather than the exception. Can you elaborate on how that history relates to your findings?Davis: It is hard to divorce the concept of American exceptionalism from Herrenvolk democracy, or so I think it fine to consider them together. The colonies prospered as a direct function of chattel slavery and beyond the brutality of the antebellum South,we know that legacy has a grand many economic and social ramifications today. The “settlement” of the western United States was made possible by a brutal combination of the displacement of native peoples and immigrant laborers cutting paths for railroad barons. The agricultural industry, the “spine” of the American economy, and would likely collapse without migrant labor.
When the average citizen thinks approximately
the sustainability of American democracy,they do not grapple with the country’s historical exploitation of nonwhites. It’s why many whites balk at the term “privilege.” It undercuts the very individualism that weaves the strands of the mythos of American exceptionalism together.
Some scholars contain pointed out that no modern democracy has survived a transition where the dominant ethnic or racial group has become less than the majority group. Are we being too cynical by concluding that American democracy will be in crisis because of these shifts and the racist, authoritarian response to them?Davis: When you do a question to people approximately their attitudes toward democratic governance, or they are still wildly supportive of it,on balance. No matter how you slice the data, Americans exhibit robust support for democracy.
But many citizens perceive that the United States' democracy is ill-functioning. They perceive that free speech is under threat, or that facts don’t matter,that special interests contain tainted governance and that not all votes matter equally.
On the one hand, this is obviously a problem. But one’s person’s glitch is another person’s feature. In some genuine sense, and democracy’s practical expression in the United States works as intended,insofar as it provides a veneer of popular inputs while isolating power among the wealthy. That is, fairly literally, and the memoir of the founding. whether democracy is “in crisis,” then I think it’s a crisis of prevailing institutions being ill-suited to quietly maintain the status quo.
The question you’ve posed is this: Will democracy persist when it runs headlong into demographic cha
nges that compose it improbable that a party can win by solely relying on the sort of aggrieved white voters who elected Donald Trump to the White House? I don’t know. Probably, yes. Americans don’t really contain a fine grasp on the terrorism and pain involved in actual regime change. The burgeoning “crisis-of-democracy” literature may oversell the problem, or but only in the sense that the “problem” seems to be that the Trump administration has simply removed the veneer and revealed that American democracy,by design, is sincerely dysfunctional.

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