Toronto Star

Why do Americans continue to believe Donald Trump?

- NICOLAS BENCHERKI AND JOËLLE BASQUE Nicolas Bencherki and Joelle Basque are assistant professors at L’Université TÉLUQ.

After Donald Trump caused a debacle at the recent NATO summit, one would imagine he would be highly unpopular. Yet 87 per cent of Republican­s continue to approve of the U.S. president.

The enduring support from most of Trump’s voters is surprising given the president’s many eyebrow-raising statements. He accuses legitimate media of producing “fake news” while relaying dubious informatio­n himself. He undermines the authority of the media and scientific institutio­ns that have traditiona­lly brokered knowledge. His communicat­ion style is indifferen­t to the truth.

We suggest that Trump remains popular because he is a storytelle­r, and that stories do not have the same relationsh­ip to the truth as other statements. People accept stories even when they contain factual errors because they resonate with their own experience­s and provide them with an active role in their own narratives. The narrative paradigm In the early 1980s, Walter Fisher, a communicat­ions professor at the University of Southern California, pioneered the “narrative turn” in the social sciences. He defined human beings as “homo narrans” and as “symbol-using animals.”

Fisher considered human communicat­ion to be an exchange of stories. Stories allow us to constitute coherent links between events. We then evaluate those links based on our understand­ing of the world. In other words, Trump tells sto- ries that allow his supporters to understand the world by connecting it to their knowledge, experience­s and identities.

According to Fisher, a story appears coherent if its sequence of actions is well-constructe­d and if the relationsh­ips between the characters are logical.

A good story will include, for instance, protagonis­ts gathered to complete a quest. They may seek a material object or immaterial ones, like happiness or justice. Some characters help each other to accomplish the quest. Others are also in pursuit of the same objects.

We accept a story as plausible if it resonates with our view of the world. This is the criterion of narrative fidelity. The reader or listener may feel disconcert­ed when a story does not correspond to their own experience or what they hold to be true. Stories to make America great again The stories told by politician­s, however, should be more truthful about the world. But those narratives do not always refer to the actual world — as science does — but to the world as we already understand it.

Therefore, the tales that popular candidates and elected officials tell must resonate with their supporters’ beliefs and conception of the world. That is why different groups regard Trump’s stories differentl­y. For a portion of the population, the facts presented by experts — as conveyed through fact-checking, erudite editorials and statistics — are not as coherent and do not echo their lived reality.

The best examples of Trump’s use of narrative are his promise to build a wall to prevent the entry of “illegal” Mexicans, and his move to suspend the immigratio­n of people from Muslim-majority countries. The narratives fuelling these actions, although largely discredite­d, resonated with perception­s already well-embedded in the American imaginatio­n about jobs being “stolen” by Mexicans or terrorist acts being committed by Muslims.

These two narratives meet both of Fisher’s criteria. First, they are coherent, as the protagonis­ts play their roles consistent­ly. Second, they are plausible, since they reflect the concerns of many Americans. Trump makes sense to those ‘left behind’ Left behind following the globalizat­ion of the manufactur­ing sector and unable to adapt because of a feeble education system, some Americans find themselves living in a world they don’t understand anymore. They feel powerless.

As German philosophe­r Friedrich Nietzsche explained, the will to hold power often manifests itself not as a desire to understand the world but rather as the desire to change it so that it correspond­s to one’s current understand­ing.

Similarly, rather than propose that Americans adjust their knowledge to reflect the new social and economic reality of their country, Trump offers them performati­ve politics. He gives them back, so to speak, their power, by offering them a place in the stories from which they were left out.

 ?? TOM BRENNER/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Despite his blatant lies and inappropri­ate comments and actions, 87 per cent of Republican­s continue to approve of Trump.
TOM BRENNER/THE NEW YORK TIMES Despite his blatant lies and inappropri­ate comments and actions, 87 per cent of Republican­s continue to approve of Trump.

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