Millennium Post

Trump’s simple language fits LONG-TERM POLITICAL TREND

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WASHINGTON DC: US President Donald Trump language, perceived by many as unconventi­onal, is actually similar to the simple, straightfo­rward speeches of the past and present world leaders that exudes confidence, a study has found.

The research, published in the journal Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences, suggests that the recipe that likely helped Trump become a successful presidenti­al candidate was set in motion almost 100 years ago.

“The findings confirm that President Trump and leaders like him did not emerge out of nowhere, but rather are the most recent incarnatio­n of

long-term political trends,” said Jamie Pennebaker, a professor at University of Texas at Austin in the US.

“Taken together, the trends suggest that voters may increasing­ly be drawn to leaders who can make difficult, complex problems easier to understand with intuitive, confident answers,” Pennebaker said.

For linguists, function words -- such as prepositio­ns, pronouns and conjunctio­ns -- say a lot about how people think.

Prior research has linked high rates of pronouns, negations and auxiliary verbs to low analytic, or more intuitive, thinking. The heavy use of the pronouns “you” and “we” has been shown to indicate higher status, confidence or clout than the use of impersonal pronouns or “I” and “me.”

Using the text analysis programmes, researcher­s measured the evolution of analytic thinking and clout in presidenti­al language since 1789, focusing on the use of function words in past inaugural addresses, public papers, debates and speeches.

Researcher­s found that analytic thinking remained high throughout the 18th and 19th centuries but began declining around the time of Woodrow Wilson’s presidency.

By the time Dwight Eisenhower took office in the 1950s, presidenti­al language had struck a new tone of confidence. Mapping this, researcher­s determined Trump only deviated from the trend in one setting -- debates, where his speech was less analytic than that of any previous president.

“Donald Trump was, by and large, not an outlier, psychometr­ically speaking,” said Kayla Jordan, a psychology doctoral candidate at UT Austin. “These results strongly suggest that the recipe that likely helped Trump become a successful presidenti­al candidate was set in motion almost 100 years ago,” said Jordan.

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