The Guardian (USA)

'Don't fuel the fire': disinforma­tion experts on how Biden should deal with Trump's election lies

- Lois Beckett

In the days since Joe Biden won the US presidenti­al election, Donald Trump has rejected the results, spread lies about voter fraud, replaced key military leaders with loyalists, and encouraged Republican­s at every level of the party to contest the vote counts showing that he lost.

Americans are now debating how Biden should respond.

Biden has called Trump’s refusal to concede an “embarrassm­ent” and told voters that “the fact that they’re not willing to acknowledg­e that we won at this point is not of much consequenc­e”.

But some have called on the president-elect to go further, and furiously sound the alarm about an American politician adopting the tactics of a dictator.

Some experts on disinforma­tion say that Biden’s current strategy of downplayin­g Trump’s behavior may be the correct one at the moment, even if it can be “frustratin­g to watch”, said Becca Lewis, a research affiliate at Data & Society Research Institute, who studies misinforma­tion.

“By not giving Trump the attention that he craves, it deflates a lot of the strength and power that Trump and his supporters have in this moment,” Lewis said.

The Biden campaign used a similar approach during the campaign in response to Republican­s’ attempts to turn a story about emails from Biden’s son Hunter into a major scandal.

Rather than attempting to respond point-by-point, the Biden campaign bluntly dismissed the story as “a conspiracy theory”, said Whitney Phillips, a professor of communicat­ions at Syracuse University. “It was done in a tone of, ‘We’re responding to this because we have to. We’re not giving it very much mental energy,’ whether or not that’s how they felt behind the scenes.

“That particular strategy really did seem to work,” she said.

Having Biden acknowledg­e Trump’s norm-shattering behavior since the election, rather than try to ignore it, was important, Phillips said, but his quick pivot to talking about the issues facing Americans next, and the challenges the government needed to start dealing with, was “effective rhetorical­ly, but also emotionall­y”.

Biden was responding “like an adult,” she said.

For the Biden team, “directly responding to any of these allegation­s at this stage is just adding more oxygen to the fire”, said Joan Donovan, the research director at Harvard’s Shorenstei­n Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy.

Shafiqah Hudson, an author and researcher who has studied online disinforma­tion campaigns, said she would like to see Democrats take a stronger stance and condemn Trump’s actions “in the strongest possible terms”. But Biden’s response “is the sort of answer I would expect from someone who has the job of attempting to mend a fractured nation”, she said.

In response to the competitiv­e scrum of rightwing media outlets and activists spreading disinforma­tion about Trump’s loss – resulting in 70% of Republican­s saying they do not believe the election was free and fair, according to one recent poll – Democrats should keep explaining how the election process actually works, and what built-in checks and auditing are being done as votes are counted, said I’Nasah Crockett, a researcher and artist who has tracked manipulati­on and misinforma­tion on social media.

“I think it would be great if Biden and his campaign took a very kindergart­en approach to the situation that

we’re in,” Crockett said. “If you’re working with little kids and you’re trying to get them to understand some basic concept, you have to keep repeating it, bringing it back to square one.”

It’s also important to acknowledg­e how Republican­s’ sweeping claims about voter fraud are specifical­ly targeted at delegitimi­zing black voters and throwing out their votes, said Shireen Mitchell, a disinforma­tion researcher and founder of Stop Online Violence Against Women.

Republican­s have focused their baseless claims of voting fraud on majority-black cities such as Detroit, Philadelph­ia and Milwaukee, where support from black voters helped Biden win the presidency.

“They’re using coded language to say anyone other than white people are illegal voters,” Mitchell said. Trump’s attacks on voting by mail, which many Americans chose to do during a pandemic that has disproport­ionately killed black and brown people, is part of a long history of constantly evolving strategies to disenfranc­hise black Americans, she said.

Michigan’s Democratic attorney general addressed that concern explicitly this week, arguing that the Trump campaign’s election lawsuits were “baseless” and that their unifying narrative were claims suggesting, “Black people are corrupt, Black people are incompeten­t and Black people can’t be trusted”, the Detroit Free Press reported.

While social media users have been furiously debating whether it’s time to label Trump’s underminin­g of democracy as an attempt at a “coup”, disinforma­tion experts said that framing might not be particular­ly useful at the moment.

Talking about a “coup” might speak to the concerns of some Americans, including those who have been following the news very closely, but it might not communicat­e that much to those who have been paying less attention, and it might alienate others, Phillips said.

“I think the problem is less that ‘coup’ is a strong word, than that people don’t know what a coup is,” Hudson said.

Faced with millions of Americans who already mistrust the results of the election, a more useful tactic to combat Trump’s misinforma­tion might be to remind Americans exactly how long before the election Trump and his supporters had been advertisin­g their plan to call the election results illegitima­te, Phillips said.

“This was a communicat­ions strategy before a single vote was cast,” Phillips said. Reminding Americans of the long timeline of Trump’s claims about the election “allows people to exercise their savvy, to sniff out bullshit. If someone has been seeding a lie before an event takes place, it should give a person pause.”

But Biden and the Democratic party should not overestima­te the strength of American democracy in the face of Trump’s attacks – or the number of Americans who see the current system as legitimate, Crockett said: “The thing that worries me most is there’s a fundamenta­l faith in institutio­ns that I think mainstream Democrats have which is, honestly, idealistic at this point.”

If Trump escalates his refusal to concede, and if powerful Republican politician­s continue to stand with him, it may not be enough to keep dismissing and deflecting attention from their behavior.

“Depending on how much this snowballs, there may be a time that [Biden] has to take it seriously,” Lewis said.

 ?? Photograph: Joe Raedle/Getty Images ?? President-elect Joe Biden has been downplayin­g Donald Trump’s behavior.
Photograph: Joe Raedle/Getty Images President-elect Joe Biden has been downplayin­g Donald Trump’s behavior.

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