Hidden Brain - Not at the Dinner Table
Episode Date: October 27, 2020We typically divide the country into two distinct groups: Democrats and Republicans. But what if the real political divide in our country isn't between "left" and "right"? What if it's between those w...ho care intensely about politics, and those who don’t? This week we talk to Yanna Krupnikov, a political scientist at Stony Brook University, about an alternative way to understand Americans' political views.
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This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
We typically divide the United States into two political categories.
Conservative, and Liberal.
Frankly, I don't care what the Republicans say.
Finding common ground between these two groups.
Who is on this and who is on your...
Reaching across the aisle.
After a far-latched radical base has become increasingly rare.
Because we keep trying to find a way to win without help from across the aisle.
This is true not just in a metaphorical sense.
In one study, researchers looked at more than 1400 hours of tape.
Now, I've sent it coverage on C-SPAN.
On C-SPAN 2.
The Senate will come to order the chat.
Hour after hour of hearings.
Some common roads and bridges and air-puppets., committee markup sessions, congresses a very important pillar.
Testimony, resolution, the clerk will call the roll.
After all these hours watching C-SPAN, researchers concluded that since the 1990s, Democrats
and Republicans in the U.S. Senate have physically crossed the aisle less and
less to interact with opposing colleagues.
That means Senators are staying with their like-minded colleagues, not just in the legislation
they are trying to pass, but also by literally steering clear of the carpeted pathway that
splits the Senate floor in half.
In other words, just like the rest of the nation, the Senate is more divided than ever,
and this divide can leave us feeling helpless and hopeless.
Today though, we're going to take a few steps back.
We're going to look at the challenge of political division through a new lens. It's
part of our October series exploring counterintuitive ideas in 2020. We hope it will provide a new way
to understand the people sitting across from us at the dinner table. People don't seem to dislike
somebody just for being a member of the other side. They're concerned that somebody is going to
talk to them about politics, and if somebody's going to talk to you
about politics, of course you'd rather talk to somebody
of your own side.
This week on Hidden Brain, why the division you hear
about all the time in our politics might not be
what really divides us. Yana Kripnikov is a political scientist at Stony Brook University.
She studies a subject we hear a lot about,
the bitter political divide in the United States.
But Yana has a counterintuitive thesis.
She thinks the real fault line in America
is actually not between Republicans and Democrats.
Yana Kriplinkov, welcome to Hidden Brain.
Thank you for having me.
I want to play your clip, Yana,
from a CNN program titled,
Welcome to the Fractured States of America.
The number of parents who would be unhappy
if their child married someone
of a different political party,
that number has exploded over the last several decades.
From 4% in 1960 to 35% of Republicans
and 45% of Democrats in 2018.
So, Yana, you have a critique of this notion
of a fractured country, but I want you to start
by laying out the conventional wisdom first.
What are we told about the state of political polarization
in America?
A lot of what we're told about the state
of political polarization is that polarization has increased
quite vastly over potentially the last decade.
What's interesting about this polarization is that there's a twofold approach here.
So on the one hand, polarization can be ideological, but on the other hand, it can be effective.
An affective polarization is the sense of disliking somebody just because they're a member
of the other party, without their issues, without kind of theiriking somebody just because they're a member of the other party without their issues,
without kind of their positions, just because they belong to the opposing group. So when we talk
about Democrats not wanting their child to marry a Republican or Republicans not wanting their
child to marry a Democrat, we are talking often about this idea of affect. Does this sense of dislike this antipathy for the other side?
And there's this tremendous kind of pattern showing increases in this level of antipathy,
that people who are from one party just dislike the other party much more than they did in years past.
And some of this is almost to an extreme. I mean, some people have even asked whether ordinary Americans see their political opponents
as even fully human.
Indeed, there's actually a lot of examples of this antipathy.
There's research suggesting that people wouldn't want somebody to, as I just said, marry
somebody from the other party, that they wouldn't want to hire somebody from the opposing
party, that they don't see the other party as human, that they wouldn't want to hire somebody from the opposing party that they
don't see the other party as human, that they might actually want to do something that
would make life for somebody from the opposing party much worse.
So there are a lot of these almost non-political examples of places where partisanship and dislike
for the other side has quite profoundly affected the way we see the world and the way we see other people.
So we're told Americans don't want to live next to one another, political partisans that is, they can't bear to talk to one another,
and of course they don't want their children marrying people from the other party.
You conducted a survey some years ago when you drill down specifically on the marriage question.
What was the hunch you were exploring and what did you ask?
So the way we looked at the marriage question happened
during these conversations I had had with my co-authors,
John Barry Ryan and Samarit Clark.
And so we were talking about this marriage question
that something about it seemed quite unusual to us.
You are in a survey, you're being asked whether you want
your child to marry somebody from the other party,
but that's really all you know about this person.
All you know about them is that they are a Republican
or that they are a Democrat.
And when that's all you know about them,
one, you can't really put that person into context.
But the other thing you might think about them is essentially, if they're telling me
this person's partisanship, that person's partisanship
is probably something that's really, really important to them.
So if I was inviting you to meet one of my friends
and we had just a brief moment,
and I used that brief moment to tell you,
you're gonna meet my friend, she likes cats. You might imagine that you're about to meet somebody who is essentially
going to talk nonstop about cats. If that's the only thing I shared with you about this
person. And so what if this is what's happening in a survey? What if when people are asked
about this hypothetical in law and the only thing they know about this person is that they're a member
of the opposing party. What if they're imagining somebody who will literally talk about politics
for every dinner from now on as they're in-law? And what did you find when you actually asked
Americans this question? How did you tweak the question and what did you find? So we ended up doing is we amended the question a bit.
We basically added a qualification.
We told people that this future in law, this hypothetical in law,
was actually never really going to talk about politics.
They might be from the other parties,
but they were never actually going to discuss anything political. And so we ran an experiment in which people were randomly assigned to either
a group in which they got asked the normal question, how happy would you be if your child
married somebody from the opposing party? Versus a question in which they were told, how happy
would you be if your child married somebody from an opposing party, but this person was never going to talk about politics.
And what we found is significant differences in people's preferences for the other side.
Once people were told that their child's future spouse was actually not really going to
talk about politics, their animosity toward the other side quite profoundly decreased.
In other words, if I was a Republican parent, the thing that I might be most worried about
is not that my child is going to marry a Democrat, my child is going to marry a Democrat
who is going to talk politics all the time.
If I had the reassurance that politics was not going to come up all the time, my feelings
about my future Democratic Sun and Law or
doctrine law changed quite profoundly. Exactly. In theory, what people were concerned
about is essentially politics coming up in their day-to-day lives. They
actually were not as concerned about the opposing partisanship component of it.
To better understand how this played out in people's lives, Yana and her colleagues ran the study again, but changed whether the hypothetical new daughter or son-in-law talked about politics frequently,
occasionally, or rarely. They found that what people cared about the most was not whether a
future son-in-law or daughter-in-law had different politics, but how much the
future in law wanted to talk about politics. People don't seem to dislike
somebody just for being a member of the other side. They're concerned that
somebody is going to talk to them about politics, and if somebody is going to
talk to you about politics, of course you'd rather talk to them about politics. And if somebody's going to talk to you about politics,
of course, you'd rather talk to somebody of your own side.
If that's going to be part of your life at every dinner,
certainly, of course, you wouldn't want it to be contentious.
But the key aspect there is conversations
not necessarily partisanship.
So I'm thinking of a clip from Saturday Night Live
that I think your research speaks to.
It's actually about a wedding celebration, and the celebration is interrupted by the character known as Debbie
Downer.
Yeah, these mashed potatoes look like heaven. After we, I vote we get a line dance.
Oh yeah.
Hey, speaking of voting, how do you guys feel about Trump?
What do you think, Anna?
Do you think that clip speaks to your thesis?
I think it speaks to the thesis quite profoundly, but I think actually that is exactly what
people are quite worried about.
You're having kind of a nice celebration.
Somebody comes in for whom politics is incredibly important, who is essentially going to change the conversation to that
particular bend. So imagine that every dinner you're now incredibly tense, trying
to figure out, is there something political that's going to happen here? I think
that's what people are deeply concerned about.
Imagine sitting at dinner with friends and family. Someone mentions a tweet from Trump.
Everyone freezes. Will this become an argument? Yana's data suggests that if the people around your table were a cross-section of America, most would prefer to change the topic. But some people would get super excited.
It's these people who would also be really upset
if a child of theirs were to marry someone
from the other party.
There certainly is a group of people
who are in fact effectively polarized.
No matter how we describe this in law,
they are displeased with their child
marrying somebody of the opposing side.
I would bet that even if we told them politics
will literally never come up ever, ever, ever,
they would still be displeased
that their child married somebody of the opposing party.
These people struck us as being what we would term unconditionally polarized.
They were sort of polarized exactly in the sense of hating somebody just because they
are from the other side.
And as we dove into this question further, we wanted to investigate exactly what contributes to this unconditional
polarization, what correlates with somebody disliking somebody just from being a member
of the other side, which led us to this idea of certain people being deeply involved in politics.
People for whom politics has become so profoundly important that it is something beyond just an interest in politics.
So, as you say, the deeply involved care a lot about politics, like Debbie Downer,
they want to talk about politics, even to people who want to talk about something else.
But you make a remarkable claim. You say the central fault line today in the United States
might not be between Republicans and Democrats, but between people who are deeply involved in politics
and everybody else, what do you mean by that?
When we think about deep involvement, we think of somebody for whom politics is front and center.
It is something that they think about on a daily basis. It's something that they think about
actually probably on an hourly basis. It is something that is a center to the way
that they view the world. And so John Ryan and I, in describing these people and thinking
about these people, conceive of them as being quite different from actually the majority
of Americans and the majority of people. We see the fault line is how central you view politics
to the world, how much attention you pay to politics,
how you interpret political events,
how much of an impact you believe that politics has in your life.
And we see it as a fault line in the sense
that for people who are deeply involved, politics
is of such profound importance that it dominates the world perspective, it dominates how they
view others, it dominates what they do with their day.
And we see that as being profoundly different from a large group of Americans
for whom politics is less important and for whom politics seems more as something that is
happening on the side, something that is potentially troubling, something that is potentially
problematic, but something that they don't necessarily want to think about all that much.
I want to spend some time talking about the characteristics of the people you describe
as deeply involved, because of course it's one thing to say this is a distinct group,
but you go further than that.
Through a series of surveys and experiments involving thousands of Americans, you find
the deeply involved have a set of very distinct characteristics.
And the first identifier is something that you hinted at a second ago.
These are people who spend a lot of time on politics.
Yes, when we think about the deeply involved,
we think about a set of psychological characteristics
that lead somebody to sort of really care about politics
to think about it a ton.
In fact, for a research, we began with the psychology of people who are
our fans of things. And one of the things that emerges when you think about something being
important to you is time. Why would you spend time on something that's not important to you?
Obviously, what makes this a particularly unique moment for these people is now you actually
can spend a tremendous amount of time
on politics.
You can basically wake up, you can unlock your phone, you can immediately start scrolling
through the news, and you can basically be connected to politics for your entire day.
Another trait of the deeply involved on both sides of the political spectrum is that they're
interested in minor political developments.
They see deep significance in events that may or may not be important.
One example is this reaction on CNN after President Trump tweeted a made-up word in the middle of the night.
The Coféfe tweet that Mercurial late-night presidential sentence fragment with one of the best words stayed up with no explanation for hours and
hours and hours and then as dawn broke the president suddenly deleted it and
wrote quote who could figure out the true meaning of kofefe i remember watching
the story on and getting a laugh out of it but i also remember people going on
about how the tweet might reflect a neurodegenerative disorder in the
president they were taking this really, really seriously.
And I think that is sort of profound.
The Kaffee-Fee tweet is in some sense, I think, a profound example of deep involvement.
This thing happens.
This thing that is ostensibly ridiculous, right?
It's obviously a typo, but it becomes something that is of import to people.
There are people who are anxious that they missed this tweet.
There are people wondering what this tweet means.
And as people think about it more, especially people who are deeply engaged in politics,
they start to make more and more connections to political events.
Is it something meaningful?
Is it something about the president? What's going to happen next? And the reality about politics
is that a lot of what happens in politics is, in fact, a matter of life and death. We've learned
this in a fairly profound way this summer. But for the deeply involved, even typo tweets
But for the deeply involved, even typo tweets can become something that is actually very, very, very important.
And that sort of makes sense.
If you spend so much time with politics, if you spend so much time following it, you
know enough where almost everything can be of profound importance.
Where the president making a typo
could be a signal of just kind of what's to come,
something about the political state of the world.
So for the deeply involved,
the engagement with politics
kind of contributes to the perception
that any next event could be the event
that kind of changes everything.
In other words, the deeply involved follow politics in the same way that some people follow
a favorite sports team or the twists and turns in a beloved TV show.
Yana draws an analogy between people who are deeply involved in politics and fans of
the sci-fi show, Dr. Who.
Multiple actors portray the doctor in the television show. And for
years, fans have argued obsessively about which actor is the best doctor.
With the exception of the very bottom slot, which we'll get to in a second, I
don't think there is a bad version of the doctor. What's the connection between
Doctor Who, Efficient Adios, and Politics, Yana?
So Doctor Who, I think, is a really interesting
kind of example, because in some sense,
to have a favorite Doctor Who,
you have to be a fan of the show.
Because one of the beautiful things about Doctor Who
is everyone gets to have their Doctor,
your pick does not have to be anyone else's,
you do not have to rank them the way anyone else does. Somebody who does not have a favorite doctor who is probably not a
huge fan of the show, or maybe a more peripheral fan of the show. And so what your criticism is,
when you criticize somebody's favorite doctor pick, is that they are involved, but they are involved in the wrong way. So, starting at the bottom, Colin Baker.
When we read research on this sort of support for the doctor,
the psychology seemed almost similar to politics,
of course, with much lower stakes.
But there's the sense that somebody could be
on your political side, but somebody could be on your political side.
But they could be on your political side in not exactly the right way.
And there is going to be something frustrating to somebody who is deeply involved.
That this person is coming so close to getting it.
But it's actually not there.
There's another connection between Dr. Who fans and political fanatics. Neither can stop talking about their obsession.
When we come back, how journalist's favor
the zealous voices of the deeply involved.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
Political scientist Yana Kripnikov argues that most Americans are not seeing the defining
political fault line in the country.
It's not Republican versus Democrat, but the gap between people who live, breathe, and
talk politics all the time, and those for whom politics is a small part of their lives.
The deeply involved spend lots of time learning about politics, thinking about politics.
But they also do one other thing that the less engaged rarely do.
Yada, you say the most defining feature of the people who are deeply involved in politics
is something you call expression. What do you mean by that?
When we think about expression, we mean the desire to
communicate politics. We mean the desire to not just speak about information or speak about
ways that you might change politics, but really expressing your own beliefs and feelings about politics.
So really speaking your mind in the sense of something happens and you immediately want to tell others
how you felt about it, whether it was good, how it made you think. But it's the idea of essentially
expressing your views, expressing what others should
do, just literally talking about what politics means to you.
Now social media, you argue, is an important part of the story.
How so?
Well, in the past, if I wanted to talk to somebody about politics, I would have to find a person
to literally talk about politics too. And maybe I couldn't find somebody
to talk about politics to that day. And so I just wouldn't get to talk about it. Or maybe I found
a friend and I just told him all about my political feelings and they just didn't really care.
and they just didn't really care. But now, if I can go to Twitter
and I can type a political opinion.
I just changed the channel from Trump Town Hall
to the Biden Town Hall and immediately fell asleep.
There is a high probability
that a number of people will chime in.
Oh my God, it was so boring.
I need to support Trump 100%.
And potentially a lot of them might tell me that I'm like,
it was like listening to Grandpa.
It taped Biden's town hall to help me fall asleep.
And certainly, because it's Twitter,
it's possible that a bunch of people will also chime in
and tell me that I am a terrible person.
I'm pretty sure America could do with a good business.
I'm not my ballot for Joe Biden.
You can roll up the net to entertain its people
or to protect them.
But at least there will be somebody who allows me that expression.
You have a story about social media from your own life that isn't about politics,
but it says so much about how many of us I think engage with politics.
Can you tell me the story of your toddler and the plane trip?
Yes, so my daughter and I were on a flight and my husband was there as well.
My daughter was about one and a half at the time. It was a seven hour flight.
My daughter was basically being herself. She was being a one and a half year old.
And into this flight I started noticing this woman ahead of us would constantly just turn every time
my daughter would make a slight noise. And this frustrated me. This made me quite upset.
And it's this feeling of am I doing a terrible job, am I a terrible parent?
Why does this woman keep turning around
as my kid being this bad?
And so I did the first thing that came to my mind.
I paid for internet so I could go to Twitter.
And I tweeted about the fact that I'm on this light
and this woman keeps turning around
and just looking at my daughter.
And the thing is, I want to emphasize here
that it was pretty safe for me to tweet that.
I knew pretty much what my network was like.
Immediately, the replies kept pouring in, telling me
that it was definitely not me, that it was definitely her.
In fact, I think it was one of the most engaged tweets, right?
I don't get that much engagement when I tweet about my research.
And in that moment, so two things happened.
So first, I felt really good.
It was actually very good to have
this social support from a bunch of internet people.
The second thing is that it made me just
much anger at this woman because it was this kind of feeling of all these people
on the internet think that you're a wrong airplane lady and they're telling me
that I am right. Eventually the seven-hour flight is over. The plane lands and Janus' husband takes his phone off airplane mode and goes to Twitter
where he sees his wife's tweet storm.
And he was actually really surprised.
He did not notice the woman, even though she was actually more in his eyesight than mine.
He did not see her turning around at any point.
He thought everything had gone really well.
And it was a sort of a notable moment.
I had had this moment, I went to Twitter.
By virtue of going to Twitter, it all kind of got a bit exacerbated.
And yet here was somebody sitting next to me who had no idea what
I was talking about. He didn't notice anything at all. And I can see the really wonderful metaphor here
with the way our politics unfolds on social media and the way we so many of us engage with politics
on social media. But there's also something of a mystery here. You say that the people
who are deeply involved are a minority of all Americans. So why is it, Yana, that we feel
like we hear their voices all the time? We hear the deeply involved because they are actually
very loud. And I don't mean that they're necessarily screaming. But I mean that in the sense that they are more likely to occupy our social media feeds.
Their voices are more likely to be talking about politics.
So it seems like they're everywhere because whenever we encounter politics,
it is quite often the voices of these people who are very, very deeply involved.
And so if you're constantly seeing these posts about politics, you might not realize
that they are from a very small set of people, or you might think to yourself, well, I guess
I'm the odd person out.
I never talk about politics, but I guess everyone else is. And so you kind of come to this idea
that the politically involved are much more around us
than they actually are in numbers.
Yana, you also make the case that one reason we hear
the voices of the deeply involved everywhere
is because journalists have a deep affinity
for the voices of the deeply involved.
Why is this?
If we think about what media coverage includes,
it's a lot of conflict,
and the deeply involved are kind of readily there
to provide the conflict.
They're gonna be the people who can be most critical
of the other side,
they're gonna be the people
who are gonna talk most passionately about politics. And so it sort of follows that journalists are
going to be heavily drawn to people who are deeply involved. And so part and parcel
of this coverage is actually coverage of political polarization. If journalists
are drawn to coverage of political polarization, then they are almost by definition
going to be drawn to the voices of the deeply involved.
And so they come to dominate these stories as examples of just how terrible partisan
relations are.
Yana has run studies with hundreds of journalists across the United States.
She has asked them the marriage question we discussed earlier. How many Americans
would be unhappy if that child married someone from the opposing political party?
And what we found is that journalists vastly overestimated this level of polarization. They
believe that something like half of Americans would be quite profoundly polarized. When it is actually not the case, when we look over our sample,
it was a tremendous kind of difference between what journalists suspected was the case,
and what actually was the case in our sample.
Many journalists also have a love affair with Twitter.
What did they see when they get on their feeds?
The people who love to talk about politics.
There's this fascinating work by scholar Shannon McGregor that shows the journalists are
often turning to Twitter as a gauge of public opinion.
Well, if the deeply involved are much more likely to express themselves on Twitter, and if
journalists are looking to Twitter for stories for public
opinion, they are certainly having a higher probability of landing on the opinions of the
deeply involved and then elevating those perceptions to stories on polarization of stories
of discord, of stories of violence. Does the fact that many journalists themselves live and work in communities of deep involvement
in politics play a role in this as well?
I mean, I'm thinking of journalists certainly within the Washington Beltway, their embedded
in communities and neighborhoods where lots of their friends and neighbors are probably
among the ranks of the deeply involved?
I would think that it does.
When I think of myself, for example,
when I log on to Twitter,
I am in a network of people who are deeply involved in politics.
And so often, it's almost difficult for me to remember
that there are all these people in my own survey data
for whom politics is actually much, much less important.
And I imagine for journalists it actually must be exacerbated.
They're also in these kinds of networks.
They're often in networks with other journalists.
So essentially there's constantly somebody there reinforcing your view of what is important
and what politics looks like and what the world looks like.
And so in that sense, it is a perspective of the world that is actually completely in line
with the world you see around you, but the world you see around you may not necessarily be
reflective of a large group of people.
One of the most troubling things that took away from your work is how privilege might intersect
with political involvement.
The person working three jobs to make ends meet, it's probably not the person who really
cares that the president was up at night tweeting made up words.
Many working parents, you know, they might be too exhausted with
work and childcare to be up in arms about the latest Buhaha on Twitter. So when we
privilege the voices of the deeply involved, at some level are we also privileging the
voices of the privileged? I think there are two ways to look at it. On the one hand, I
think there is a certain privilege to not following politics,
where you sort of feel so comfortable about your state in the country that you don't necessarily care
who wins. But I think there's another privilege, and that is spending a lot of time following politics.
I feel like I have a tremendous amount of privilege in my job that I can check in and see what's happening
on the news.
That I'm afforded the flexibility to do so.
That I can follow a debate or that I can follow a congressional hearing, for example, if
I so chose.
But when I think about the world of people who are working hourly jobs, who are single
parents, who are basically living kind of paycheck to paycheck, politics
may not be something they just have time for.
Spending a lot of time figuring out the latest presidential tweet is not necessarily going
to be something that when they have downtime, they're going to be able to do, right?
They probably rather spend time with their kids or their families.
So I think there is certainly a privilege to actually being able to spend the time on
politics that I think a lot of people in this country just don't have.
What effects do people who are deeply involved in politics have on our larger discourse, on
our ability to find solutions and make compromises?
That's when we come back. People who are deeply involved in politics have strong convictions.
They talk about politics all the time because they are worried about the state of the country,
the economy, they care.
They believe that if they can only get other Americans to care as much as they do, we would
all be better off.
So are they succeeding?
Yana, people who are deeply involved in politics want to engage people who are not involved
because they want to affect change.
They want others to see the importance of political issues and political causes.
Are they effective at doing this?
So I think the goals of the deeply evolved
are actually coming from a good place.
If you are looking over the spectrum of politics
and you see things happening in front of you
that you think are horrifying,
and terrible, and problematic,
you want other people to know about this.
You want other people to know that they should be anxious and they should be afraid and bad
things could be coming.
But I think there is the sense of deep involvement that may not necessarily translate to others.
When others see somebody who is profoundly involved in politics,
it might send the message that to be at all engaged, that is how you should behave.
That it's not enough to just kind of sporadically follow the news or to pay attention during elections,
but you have to sort of live and breathe politics, And that's how you become somebody who is politically engaged or knows anything political.
And I think that's tough for people.
I think for people who may not necessarily have the time
or the strong interest, believing that this is how
political engagement works,
may be kind of a tough example to swallow, which I think can undermine
the effectiveness of those who are politically involved, encouraging others to become more
engaged as well.
So, there's a very interesting psychological theory that you're advancing here.
In some ways, you're saying the deeply involved in some ways have become our role models
of how it is to be involved in politics.
And when we look at the deeply involved, when we turn on cable news in the evenings,
and we hear them, we turn on Twitter, and we watch sort of the debates raging on Twitter,
we think this is how, if you're interested in politics,
this is how you have to be involved in politics.
And then we ask ourselves the question, do I want to be that kind of person?
And what you're saying is for many people, the answer might be no.
Yeah, a lot of times when we categorize ourselves,
this research and psychology suggests we compare ourselves to other people,
and we sort of say, am I like this person?
Am I similar to this person?
In what ways that I'm different?
And I think in some sense when people compare themselves to the deeply involved, they're obviously going to see that they I'm different. And I think in some sense, when people compare themselves
to the deeply involved, they're obviously
going to see that they are quite different.
Maybe they're going to think, I don't feel quite as strongly.
Or I vote in these national elections,
but I can't bring myself to vote in these local elections.
I just don't know enough.
And that contributes to our self-categorization,
as somebody who is
ostensibly non-political, which is I think a descriptor actually hear quite a
lot from people. I'm not political. And I think an interesting question there
becomes, are you not political or are you not deeply involved? Are you actually
entirely disengaged from politics? Or do you just not believe that you have any capacity to be part of politics because you don't
think you can look like the people you see on your television screen?
I'm wondering if there's another effect here, which is that if I'm a Democrat and I'm watching
television and I'm seeing people who are deeply involved in politics, who are Republicans
on television, it's reasonable almost for me to draw the impression that all Republicans
must be like the Republicans that I see on television.
And in fact, some research I've recently done suggests that very point. So along with co-authors, Samaritan, Clark, John Ryan, Jamie Druckerman, and Matt Levin
Dusky, we actually asked people what they believe the most common member of the opposing
party looks like.
And then we actually measured what people from both parties look like.
And what we found is that people imagined
that those from the other party
were constantly talking about politics
and that they were very extreme.
But in fact, that's not the case at all.
The sort of most common member of a party,
a person on a survey who says they're a Democrat or a Republican,
is somebody who doesn't talk about politics all that much,
and somebody who's not all that extreme.
And so the difference between what the partisans
actually look like and what people imagine
the partisans actually look like was quite jarring.
But it's not as jarring when you think about
the partisans that you see on Twitter,
the partisans that you see on television,
the partisans you see in the news.
Of people who are reasonable and dispassionate don't necessarily make for the best political
news, especially if you want to illustrate polarization.
And so when we see people who are quite angry, it forms our idea of what a partisan is
and what somebody who is political actually looks like.
When I look at the voter turnout in recent elections, the biggest party by far might not
be the Republican Party or the Democratic Party, it might be the party of what you might
call, please leave me out of it.
Among all Americans of voting age, about two and five, about 40% typically don't vote.
Now this has been true for a long time. It probably
precedes the growth and popularity of social media. But is there a connection between the
story you tell about this new fault line and people who are completely disengaging from politics?
Well, this is a worry of mine when I think about deep involvement. If we sort of communicate to people that politics is about being
angry, that politics is about essentially, and I don't just mean being angry about
the events we see around us, because I think people should, in a lot of cases, be very
angry about the political events we see around us. But essentially, the politics is
constantly about fighting and spending a lot of time expressing
this. It might suggest to people that they don't have what it takes to be a part of politics.
So when we think about people essentially disengaging, part of it might be people sort of saying,
I don't necessarily want to be part of this. I don't want to be
like partisans, I don't necessarily want to be in a group with these people I see
around me.
Yannis research finds that these people are not just reluctant to get involved in
politics, they feel less confident in their ability to do so.
If you think that you're non-political because you're different from those you see in the
news, it might suggest to you that your voice is just not as worthwhile, and you might
actually even start to believe that you don't know enough to be part of the political world.
You don't know enough to actually participate.
Which I think could lead to people kind of exiting out of the process.
Yeah. You cite a story that was once published in the New York Times about a woman who decided to sit out a recent election.
She decided not to vote.
And she had, I believe, friends or siblings who had very different
feelings about what happened. Tell me that story.
So, this story was quite interesting to us, and it was in the back of our minds as we
were working through our theoretic work. And it's this woman who talked about deciding
that she wasn't going to turn out to vote. And she had these two close friends who basically started texting her repeatedly, almost trying to shame her into turning out and voting. And in the end, she
didn't vote, so it was not effective. But it was effective in her essentially stopping
being friends with these people, people who she reports actually having been friends with
for a long time, I think. And the other thing that she reports that was especially
kind of sad in some ways is that she actually never really engaged with politics again. It was
such a poor experience for her that it led her to exit out of politics entirely. And you can see
this story, I think, from both sides. I think the people who were trying to convince her to vote
story, I think, from both sides. I think the people who were trying to convince her to vote
genuinely wanted to see this person engage in politics. They genuinely leave politics important. They genuinely want people to vote. But what happened was an entirely opposing reaction,
which sort of speaks to this idea of how we communicate the importance of politics to others.
So there's something deeply ironic here because as you said, the deeply involved,
you know, are deeply involved because they care so much. They have deep ideals very often about
what's right and what's wrong and how to make things better, but paradoxically in terms of
actual effectiveness, they might not actually be getting their way, not just because they're driving disengagement amongst some people, but also because, as you point out,
the deeply engaged are also the ones who are least interested in compromise.
So compromise is a dirty word when it comes to the people who are the most deeply engaged
in politics.
What does it mean for a democracy, Yana, when the people who are in the fray, who stay
in the fray, are stay in the fray,
are the ones who say any compromise with the other side is effectively betrayal and treason,
and we are driving out the people who might in some ways be more amenable to compromise.
Oh, I think there are sort of two ways to look at this. I think one is more and more people
who are less involved are driven out of politics. We see more and more people who are less involved are driven out of politics,
we see more of these people who are deeply involved, basically engaging with each other,
fully convinced of their own level of interest, basically just reinforcing each other's views.
And then you have another half of your electorate who is becoming less and less and less engaged.
What are we losing in this case?
Are we losing certain voices that could essentially be represented?
Are we changing who is being represented?
Are we essentially altering the extent to which government can be responsible?
I think these are all things that we should kind of think about when we think about what
it means when we give the deeply involved so much voice.
One of the most surprising things about your thesis as I was reading your work is how many
Americans think of people who belong to their own political party who are deeply involved.
Obviously, many Americans dislike partisans on the other side who are deeply involved,
but how do people think about people on their own side who are deeply involved?
Certainly, people like those on their own side who are deeply involved. Certainly, people like those on their own side
who are deeply involved a lot better
than they like those on the other side
who are deeply involved.
But there is also some sense that people aren't necessarily
all that excited about people who are deeply involved
on their own side as well.
People who are not deeply involved
don't exactly love people who tweet about politics
even from their own side. So certainly, certainly, I think if we kind of truth-served people,
they would say, well, if you're gunna tweet about politics, at least do it from my side.
But they don't necessarily love that either.
I sense in some ways that there is an irony in your work, Yana, because you've mentioned
in a couple of different ways that you yourself might belong to the ranks of the people who
are deeply involved.
You talked about it briefly in the context of many of your friends on social media being
deeply involved.
You have a critique of the deeply involved and sort of the effect they're having on politics. At some level, are you also critiquing your own life and your own approach to politics?
By my definition, I probably am quite deeply involved. And in fact, I do, in fact, check the news
in the morning when I wake up. In that sense, I do think that I am critiquing my own life in a way.
I found at a number of points actually having to remind myself, this is Twitter.
This is not the world.
There are people out there who are much more concerned about where their next paycheck
is going to come from, whether they have time to spend with their kids, then with the
latest thing the president has tweeted.
And I think working on this has been a helpful reminder
of this constant voice that I should hear
in my head of, this is Twitter.
This is not real life. Yana Krupnikov is a political scientist at Stony Brook University. Her upcoming book,
written with her fellow political scientist, John Barry Ryan, is called The Other Divide,
Polarization and Disengagement in American Politics. Yana, thank you for joining me today
on Hidden Brain.
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