• Landing Page
  • Shop
  • Contact
  • Buy JNews
  • Login
Upgrade
The News Porter
Advertisement
  • Home
  • Page One
  • Exclusive
  • Nation
  • World
  • Fast News
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • More
    • Education
    • Diaspora
    • Health
    • Legal Angle
    • Science & Tech
    • Press Release
    • The Blog Spot
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Page One
  • Exclusive
  • Nation
  • World
  • Fast News
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • More
    • Education
    • Diaspora
    • Health
    • Legal Angle
    • Science & Tech
    • Press Release
    • The Blog Spot
No Result
View All Result
The News Porter
No Result
View All Result

Trump’s rhetoric a manifestation of increasingly polarised nature of US politics

A report from Chatham House recently observed, the US is more divided ‘along ideological and political lines than at any time since the 1850s’

NP Team by NP Team
October 31, 2024
in Fast News, Globetrotter, Op-Ed
0
Trump’s rhetoric a manifestation of increasingly polarised nature of US politics
By Simon Mabon

Donald Trump’s rally at Madison Square Gardens in New York City on Sunday, October 27 was called a “carnival of grievances, misogyny and racism” by the New York Times. The event, which came just over a week before the election, was a hostile and partisan affair. Trump doubled down on his assertion that one of America’s gravest threats is from “the enemy within”.

Trump’s rhetoric is a manifestation of the increasingly polarised nature of US politics, whereby hostility from one group towards their perceived enemies is amplified across social media platforms. Yet Trump’s comment about an insidious “threat” hints at a darker undercurrent of division, with the threat of violence.

A June 2024 poll by the University of Chicago suggested that there was more support for violence against Trump than in his favour – 10% of respondents agreed that “the use of force is justified to prevent Trump becoming president”, compared to 6.9% who believed violence was justified “to restore Trump to the presidency”. Two months earlier, a Marist poll revealed that 47% of Americans believed that another civil war was likely in their lifetime.

Growing hatred

As a report from Chatham House recently observed, the US is more divided “along ideological and political lines than at any time since the 1850s”. And according to another report from UK-based think tank, the Foreign Policy Centre, Americans have “increasingly grown to hate supporters of the other party, viewing their capture of political power as not merely unfortunate but illegitimate”.

Image by Rogier Hoekstra from Pixabay

Americans have regularly articulated a preference for living among people who share their political outlook. And they have expressed a stronger aversion to dating, living, working or socialising with supporters of another party. These views point to a state suffering the ills of sectarianism.

Those who have observed sectarianism around the world know all too well the chaos that such divisions can wreak. In the Middle East, for example, politically charged religious difference has had a devastating impact on political, economic and social life. Hundreds of thousands have been killed and millions displaced from their homes across Syria, Iraq, Yemen, Lebanon, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, Iran and Libya because of violence along sect-based lines.

Early warning signs

The US may be a long way from these scenarios, but there are some early warning signs. Competing forms of what American social theorist Irving Howe calls “epistemological authoritarianism” – or a sense of certainty that is zero-sum and rejects those of the other – can be easily seen across America’s political landscape.

Protests and counter-protests have played out both on the streets and online over abortion, gun laws and LGBTQ+ rights, as well as on university campuses over the war in Gaza. Elite entrepreneurs with political capital have also positioned themselves on opposite sides of sensitive issues to cultivate support.

Image by Pete Linforth from Pixabay

Take, for example, Donald Trump’s false allegations that Democratic states executed babies after birth, or that migrants in Springfield, Ohio, have been eating pets. Such comments quickly spread across social media, regardless of their veracity. For Trump’s followers, truth matters less than the ability to justify their position on a particular issue. The stance taken by political communities is increasingly polemic and predictable.

Such dynamics are, of course, also shaped by local contexts. But the growing politicisation of social identities in recent years, and the increasing political importance of social issues, has created a landscape where difference is broadly antagonistic.

In this situation, grievance becomes a means of reinforcing in-group cohesion and disdain for the other. In such a landscape, society becomes divided into mutually distrustful camps set apart by a form of emotional polarisation that takes on political meaning.

Emotional dimension

It is the emotional dimension that is key here, as this is the foundation upon which political and social enmity is built. Supreme Court decisions, for example, relating to emotionally charged issues such as abortion, have strong mobilising potential on both left and right.

Elections often exacerbate uncertainty and division, as the 2020 US presidential election and its fallout demonstrate. According to Armed Conflict Location & Event Data (Acled), a research group that analyses occurrences of political violence around the world, demonstrations and far-right activity peaked around the 2020 election. This reached a crescendo with the events of January 6, 2021, when Trump supporters stormed the US Capitol building.

Far-right activity has dropped during Biden’s administration. But a number of far-right groups have recently become active in the run-up to the election. Meanwhile, divisions over abortion, LGBTQ+ mobilisation, and the war in Gaza have contributed to a precarious environment.

Indeed, a vast majority do not think that next week’s election will solve the issues that America faces. In a recent poll, 70% of respondents believe that things in the US are going “in the wrong direction” – a view shared more by Republican respondents (94%) than Democrat respondents (41%). And 19% of Republicans think that if Trump loses the election, he should declare the results invalid and do whatever it takes to assume office.

The schisms across the US are real and the pieces are not easily put back together. Narratives of division will continue to spread as election fever increases, further deepening the rifts in American society. And sectarianism will become the broad frame through which political and social life is viewed.

This need not necessarily become violent. But it can easily become entrenched. The increasingly hostile exclusion of “the other” in all its forms, along with a growing willingness to breach established norms and rules, requires a step back from the brink before it is too late.


This article has been used here courtesy of The Conversation and has been authored by Simon Mabon, Professor of International Relations, Lancaster University/Main Image by WOKANDAPIX from Pixabay has been used for illustrative purposes only.
Tags: DemocratsDonald TrumpKamala HarrisMadison Square GardensNew York CityRepublicans
Previous Post

Israel’s ban of UNRWA will leave already starving Palestinians without a lifeline

Next Post

Who’ll be the first to return humans to the Moon? US is at risk of losing to China in the race

NP Team

NP Team

Related Posts

Earth heads for 2.7°C of warming by 2100 — a level that poses an unprecedented threat to life on the planet
Environment

Earth heads for 2.7°C of warming by 2100 — a level that poses an unprecedented threat to life on the planet

by NP Team
May 30, 2025
Florence Nightingale’s story retold: New novel reveals the human side of the nursing pioneer
Books

Florence Nightingale’s story retold: New novel reveals the human side of the nursing pioneer

by NP Team
May 29, 2025
International students are a boon to the US at home and abroad. Trump v Harvard will damage US’s reputation globally
Fast News

International students are a boon to the US at home and abroad. Trump v Harvard will damage US’s reputation globally

by NP Team
May 28, 2025
Tej Pratap in the spotlight—once again, for all the wrong reasons. And no one is shedding tears for him
Exclusive

Tej Pratap in the spotlight—once again, for all the wrong reasons. And no one is shedding tears for him

by Abhay Kumar
May 26, 2025
India Now World’s 4th Largest Economy, Says NITI Aayog Chief
Business

India Now World’s 4th Largest Economy, Says NITI Aayog Chief

by NP Team
May 26, 2025
Next Post
Who’ll be the first to return humans to the Moon? US is at risk of losing to China in the race

Who'll be the first to return humans to the Moon? US is at risk of losing to China in the race

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

News Categories

  • Art & Culture
  • Blogger's
  • Books
  • Business
  • Cities
  • Diaspora
  • Education
  • Entertainment
  • Environment
  • Exclusive
  • Fast News
  • Foto Feature
  • Globetrotter
  • Health
  • History
  • Interviews
  • Latest News
  • Legal Angle
  • Lifestyle
  • Nation
  • National Panorama
  • Op-Ed
  • Page One
  • Photo of the Day
  • Politics
  • Premium Content
  • Press Release
  • Science & Tech
  • Sports
  • The Blog Spot
  • The Wisdom Tree
  • Travel
  • Trending
  • Uncategorized
  • World
The News Porter

We are a small group of media professionals with rich and diverse experience in Print, TV, and Digital, in
India and abroad.

Quick Links

  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Our Team
  • Advertise with us
  • Sponsored Content

Tags

Art & Culture Blogger's Books Business Cities Diaspora Education Entertainment Environment Exclusive Fast News Foto Feature Globetrotter Health History Interviews Latest News Legal Angle Lifestyle Nation National Panorama Op-Ed Page One Photo of the Day Politics Premium Content Press Release Science & Tech Sports The Blog Spot The Wisdom Tree Travel Trending Uncategorized World

Recent Posts

  • Bangkok’s SILQ Hotel & Residence: Tranquil, with the cosy, well-laid out Benjasri Park nearby, and yet vibrant and bustling
  • Earth heads for 2.7°C of warming by 2100 — a level that poses an unprecedented threat to life on the planet
  • Florence Nightingale’s story retold: New novel reveals the human side of the nursing pioneer
  • International students are a boon to the US at home and abroad. Trump v Harvard will damage US’s reputation globally
  • Tej Pratap in the spotlight—once again, for all the wrong reasons. And no one is shedding tears for him

Copyright 2021 - The News Porter © All rights reserved.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Page One
  • Exclusive
  • Nation
  • World
  • Fast News
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • More
    • Education
    • Diaspora
    • Health
    • Legal Angle
    • Science & Tech
    • Press Release
    • The Blog Spot

Copyright 2021 - The News Porter © All rights reserved.