Who Supports Trump-- Let's Look At The Social Psychological Perspectives On These Poor Souls

It's very politically incorrect so no one ever wants to talk about the likelihood that most Trump supporters have subnormal IQs and are incapable of abstract thought. What good would it do anyway? Let's take a look, however at a study in the Journal of Social and Political Psychology by UC Santa Cruz psychology professor Tom Pettigrew. "No one factor," he wrote, "describes Trump’s supporters. But an array of factors-- many of them reflecting five major social psychological phenomena can help to account for this extraordinary political event: authoritarianism, social dominance orientation, prejudice, relative deprivation, and intergroup contact. Research on the topic demonstrates that these theories and concepts of social psychology prove centrally important in helping to understand this unexpected event... The Trump movement is not singular within the United States (the Know Nothing movement in the 1850s, the Wallace movement in the 1960s, and the more recent Tea Party Movement). Moreover, other democracies have seen similar movements (e.g., Austria’s Freedom Party, Belgium’s Vlaams Blok, France’s National Front, Germany’s Alternative for Germany Party (AfD), and Britain’s U.K. Independence Party (UKIP). In virtually all these cases, the tinder especially involved male nativists and populists who were less educated than the general population. But this core was joined by other types of voters as well. Five highly interrelated characteristics stand out that are central to a social psychological analysis-- authoritarianism, social dominance orientation, outgroup prejudice, the absence of intergroup contact and relative deprivation."He begins with authoritarianism and social dominance orientation (SDO) and explains that there are several traits that characterize the syndrome: deference to authority, aggression toward outgroups, a rigidly hierarchical view of the world, and resistance to new experience. Authoritarianism is typically triggered by threat and fear, and authoritarians tend to view the world as a very dangerous and threatening place.

Authoritarianism has been successfully measured in different ways. Political scientists prefer to ask about what is more important for children-- respect for elders more important than independence; obedience more important than self-reliance; to be well-behaved more important than being creative; and to have good manners more important than to be curious.Social psychologists prefer such items as: “The authorities should be obeyed because they are in the best position to know what is good for our country”; and “Obedience and respect for authority are the most important virtues children should learn.” These methodological approaches are highly interrelated and both have proven useful. And note that they overlap in their attention to basic values.SDO is closely related to authoritarianism but clearly separable. It features an individual's preference for the societal hierarchy of groups and domination over lower-status groups. It represents a predisposition toward anti-egalitarianism within and between groups. Individuals who score high in SDO are typically dominant, driven, tough-minded, disagreeable, and relatively uncaring seekers of power. They believe in a “dog-eat-dog” world, and they report being motivated by self-interest and self-indulgence.Though found among left-wingers, authoritarianism is more numerous among right-wingers throughout the world. Trump’s speeches, studded with such absolutist terms as “losers” and “complete disasters,” are classic authoritarian statements. His clear distinction between groups on the top of society (Whites) and those “losers” and “bad hombres” on the bottom (immigrants, Blacks and Latinos) are classic social dominance statements.In the United States, Republicans began averaging higher on authoritarianism than Democrats before the rise of Trump. And the party began to learn how to appeal to this segment of the American electorate in various ways. The Republican Party’s opposition to virtually everything proposed by the African-American President Obama helped. But it remained for Trump to break the unwritten rules of American politics and appeal directly and openly to authoritarians and those who score high on SDO.Not surprisingly, recent work reveals that Trump supporters tend to be especially high scorers on both scales. Eight months prior to the election, relied on his survey finding-- that high authoritarians were strongly in favor of Trump-- to predict correctly that routine election surveys were sharply underestimating Trump’s support. During the presidential primaries in February 2016, also found a significant positive relationship between authoritarianism and favorable evaluations of Trump among Republicans. Indeed, none of the evaluations of the other primary candidates revealed such a connection.

And then comes Prejudice, something no one who has observed the Trump movement hasn't observed. "Many outgroup prejudices characterize dedicated Trump’s followers, not just anti-immigrants, but anti-outgroups in general," wrote Pettigrew. "Since Richard Nixon’s 'southern strategy,' the Republican Party has employed strategies that appeal to bigotry with 'dog whistles'--somewhat subtle codewords for race and other minorities designed to be heard by racists but not by non-racists. Nixon opposed racial school desegregation by claiming to be against the 'bussing' needed to achieve interracial schools. Ronald Reagan began his campaign in 1980 by giving a 'states’ rights' speech in Philadelphia, Mississippi quite near where three civil rights workers had been lynched earlier. George H. W. Bush in 1988 ran a campaign ad of an African-American murderer that his opponent had released from jail-- an ad for which his campaign manager later apologized. The 2008 presidential campaign witnessed recurrent Republican slips that betrayed traditional racist thinking. One Republican club issued false ten dollar bills with Obama’s picture accompanied by stereotyped African-American food-- a watermelon, ribs and a bucket of fried chicken. The McCain campaign ran an advertisement claiming that Obama had been 'disrespectful' to Governor Palin-- the old Southern term recalling sanctions against Black men interacting with White women. Republican Representative Lynn Westmoreland described Obama and his wife as 'uppity.' And Republican Representative Geoff Davis called the then-47-year-old Obama, 'Boy.'

Trump is less subtle. He has repeatedly made unconcealed use of prejudice against outgroups ranging from “dangerous” Muslims to Mexican “rapists.” His dedicated followers loved it; breaking with so-called “political correctness,” he blared openly what they had been saying privately.Not surprisingly, then, support for Trump correlates highly with a standard scale of modern racism... It appears that Trump, too, has eroded norms that proscribed intolerant speech and behavior. Racist graffiti, threats and hate crimes all rose sharply following Trump’s election victory.In addition, pre-election publicity that minorities were planning to vote in large numbers for Clinton undoubtedly stirred Republicans to turn out too. In fact, the African-American turnout fell below that of 2008 and 2012-- a key factor in Clinton’s narrow losses in North Carolina, Michigan and Pennsylvania.

Pettigrew explained that a major means of reducing intergroup prejudice is through optimal intergroup contact and, studies show that "Trump’s White supporters have experienced far less contact with minorities than other Americans... '[R]acial and ethnic isolation of Whites at the zip-code level is one of the strongest predictors of Trump support.' This finding remains true for both non-Hispanic Whites in general and for the smaller subset of White Republicans... Consistent with this finding, these researchers also found that Trump support increased as an area’s distance from the Mexican border increased. Throughout the world, intergroup contact has been shown typically to diminish prejudice by reducing intergroup fear and inducing empathy. Its extreme absence for most Trump fans is an important factor that has been virtually ignored in the post-election analyses.In discussing relative deprivation, Pettigrew wrote that the top media explanation for explaining Trump’s followers involves economics. "Trump loyalists were assumed to have lost their jobs to Mexico and China and to be understandably angry. Little mention was made of the major reason for massive job losses-- the accelerating pace of automation. Mass media writers, reading each other and non-randomly interviewing a few unemployed workers, latched on to this too-simple theory as the primary explanation for the Trump victory... The claim was that economically-deprived and often unemployed, angry working-class voters in basic manufacturing areas switched political parties and voted for 'change.' This argument ignored the fact that the greatly depleted power of labor unions (by 2016, down to only 10.7% of wage and salary workers) to help turn out the Democratic vote was a significant factor-- especially in key industrial states. Undoubtedly, this media caricature fits some followers, especially in the swing states of Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. But this contention does not provide the major explanation for Trump’s support. The argument lost much of its credence when estimated that the median annual income of Trump supporters was a solid $72,000. The most impressive and extensive study of voting intentions later provided an estimate of $81,898 for Trump backers’ mean household income. Instead of being far poorer than Clinton voters, this figure was slightly above the $77,046 for those who had an unfavorable view of Trump."

Trump followers were less likely than others to be looking for work, unemployed or part-time employed. And those voters living in districts with more manufacturing were actually less favorable to Trump. Nor were his followers largely living and working in postal areas where employment in manufacturing had declined since 1990. Underlying these results is the fact that blue-collar Trump supporters tend to work in occupations that are largely shielded from Chinese and Mexican competition-- transportation, repair, and construction.To be sure, social mobility has been declining in the United States. Contrary to the popular too-simple theory, however, people who live in areas with greater mobility voted more Republican). This was even true in the crucial “swing states,” and it is a trend that can be detected in other recent elections.But these findings do not mean that social class and economics played no role whatsoever in this tight election. Instead of absolute deprivation, social psychologists stress the importance of relative deprivation. Disappointing comparisons to relevant referents is often more significant than factual changes. What voters think is true is more important in elections than the actual truth.Trump adherents feel deprived relative to what they expected to possess at this point in their lives and relative to what they erroneously perceive other “less deserving” groups have acquired. Rapidly rising costs of housing and prescription drugs have aggravated their financial concerns. Their savings may not allow the type of ideal retirements they had long envisioned. And hopes for their children advancing beyond their status and going to college are being dashed by rising tuitions....Trump exploited this sense of relative deprivation brilliantly. He articulated issues snugly within the authoritarian worldview of his admirers. His words and claims appalled many Americans, but he knew his target audience well... Calling [Trump's rallies] “identity festivals” that embodied a politics of hope, they note how they were choreographed to bind the attendees into a populist movement with the media (forced to sit in a cordoned-off back section), immigrants, and the so-called “elite” as enemies. Criticism of Trump by the media and other sources (such as Clinton calling some of his followers “deplorables”) only enhanced the movement and served to confirm Trump’s assertions against their common “enemies.”Trump’s oft-repeated slogan, “Make America great again,” augmented the movement’s thrust. It represented a brash reactionary call to return to an earlier time when America’s position in the world was unchallenged, when American presidents and Supreme Court judges were all White males, when immigration was restricted and widespread racial segregation persisted, and when the government’s affirmative action programs largely helped White males (e.g., the G.I. Bill of Rights, Federal housing loans). And his cabinet heads suggest that Trump plans to return to that long-ago scene as much as possible.

Pettigrew concluded by pointing out that "All five of these tightly interconnected phenomena-- authoritarianism, social dominance, prejudice, lack of intergroup contact and relative deprivation-- make people vulnerable to an intense sense of threat. Authoritarian leaders have long understood that they can attract followers by enhancing the perception of dangerous threats to the society and offering simple solutions. Sometimes the threats are real (Hitler with massive Weimar inflation), but often they are imagined (Trump with patently false claims of a declining economy, massive voter fraud, enormously increased crime, and unvetted immigration). With a background of genuine terrorist threats, Mideast conflict, and a recent great recession, even imagined threats seem plausible-- especially to citizens who are already easily threatened and who have witnessed rapid change in their localities."