Let's Find Common Ground - Polarization and political violence: Rachel Kleinfeld
Episode Date: October 26, 2023Violent threats against members of Congress are up, and hate crimes have increased to the highest levels ever recorded. Fear is being used as a tool by both Republicans and Democrats to win votes. I...n this episode, we speak with Rachel Kleinfeld, a fellow in the Democracy, Conflict, and Governance Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Rachel says people talking across differences isn’t enough to end polarization, even if it can create goodwill and lower the temperature in the short term: there needs to be institutional change and politicians who come together to defend democratic norms. A recent podcast guest in the UK told us it sometimes seems like the US is on the verge of civil war. Rachel says this is unlikely. As someone who grew up in Alaska among neighbors firing the occasional warning shot from their yards, Rachel knows firsthand that ‘threats and justification for violence are not the same as attacks.’
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Violent threats against members of Congress are up, and hate crimes have increased to the highest levels ever recorded.
Fear of the other side and what they want to do is being used as a tool by both Republicans and Democrats to win votes.
But if we can get regular people to realize the other side is not bent on taking away their rights, we're much more likely to see each side upholding democratic rights and norms.
This is Let's Find Common Ground. I'm Richard Davies. And I'm Ashley Melntite.
We speak here with Rachel Kleinfeld, a fellow in the Democracy Conflict and Governance
program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
Rachel says people talking across differences isn't enough to end polarisation, even if it can lower the temperature in the short term. Instead we
need institutional change and politicians who come together to defend
democratic norms. Rachel grew up a long way from most of us in rural Alaska. Yeah and
she says that experience of being raised in a place with a lot of opportunity
and a lot of guns helped shape her interest in democracy and conflict.
Here's our interview.
Let's start with the political danger of our current moment.
A recent guest on our podcast, the former British politician, Rory Stewart, said it seems
like America could be on the brink of civil war.
Is that taking things too far?
What does your research tell you?
Well, I can see why you would think that because Americans are extraordinarily polarized,
we're heavily armed, and we have more guns in private hands than all of the world's militaries
combined. And we're seeing extreme levels of targeted violence. Threats against members
of Congress are up about 10 fold since 2016. Local officials are being threatened. FBI
hate crimes data for 2022 just came out this morning. It's up 37 percent over last year. That
makes it the highest number since they've started recording. And that's small business owners being killed for putting up a pride flag or neighbors killing
neighbors.
So, I can see why someone would think we're on the brink.
I don't think we are because civil wars, at least the kind with one group facing off
against another group, they depend a lot on the nature of a government.
If a government is still pretty strong and pretty democratic as the US is, and law enforcement
military remain professional, you just don't see civil wars.
But that doesn't mean what we face is pretty.
I think what we face is a lot like what we saw in America in the early 70s or Germany
in the early 1930s, a lot of violence, a lot of anti-social behavior, some clearly political
and some criminal, and it can become
civil war if groups that are trying to weaken our government and infiltrate police and
militaries succeed in weakening and deprofessionalizing those institutions.
You write about effective polarization.
Can you talk about what you mean by that? And is there another kind as well?
Sir, it's a pretty wonky word. Effective just means emotional. And so what we see in the data is
some people think of polarization as based on policies. Do you agree or disagree on abortion or
gun rights or women's place outside the home? And in fact, on those issues and a lot of other
really hot button issues,
Americans have a lot of agreement.
Our political leaders don't.
Our political leaders are very ideologically polarized.
But regular Americans share a lot in common,
even though they often rate them at different levels of intensity.
Democrats care a lot more about gun control than Republicans do.
Affective polarization is emotional.
Do you just hate the other side, regardless of what they think, or maybe because of what you think they think, which might be erroneous? And we're very high in America on affective polarization, and part because bandied around a lot in writings and on podcasts
like this one, that it's really just emotional polarization, that it's how, maybe how mad
you are at the other side, right?
That's right.
And that anger can be based on policy beliefs, but what we find is that actually Americans
vastly misunderstand what the other side believes.
You say that people talking to each other across differences isn't enough to end polarization.
Why not?
So, in the United States and in a couple of other countries that are really reducing their
democracies, polarization has become a political strategy.
It's being pushed on us from above on purpose to win votes.
That's because we have very safe electoral districts in America,
more than 90% of our congressional races are decided in the primary.
And when that happens, it becomes really useful to gin up anger from your base
at the other side to get out the vote in order to win.
But what that means is that it doesn't work so well to change polarization on the individual level because individual level polarization isn't driving this and it isn't going to change it as
long as this political strategy continues. All right, so then what will, I mean, what are some strategies that might work to reduce polarization,
especially if they've been shown to work somewhere else?
Sure. So the strategies that might work require me to talk a little bit about why we're in the situation we're in.
So let me just bring up a really common depolarization strategy, like having a whole
series of dinners in a community where you bring Republicans and Democrats together to chat
about their differences. And let's say that really succeeds. And you get maybe 20% opinion
change where people think very differently than they did before by 20% if you measured
it. But now it's the fall and you have to vote and you're in a pretty safe district.
So your leaders were chosen back in the primary.
So your options now are a pretty extreme left
or extreme right candidate.
Are you going to change your political vote
based on this 20% change in your heart?
For most people, they wouldn't.
And also, even if their heart and mind changed
back in the spring when they were having these discussions, they go back to their same friends, they go back to their
workplace and so on, especially if they're in a rural area where there's just not many
options, it's not as if they can change everything about themselves to fit this new belief.
So they tend to slide back. So what we need to get to your question about what succeeds,
we need change at an institutional level, not just individual. We need our political institutions to offer more choice
with things like ranked choice voting
so that you can have two or three Republicans
or two or three Democrats running against each other,
branded as Republican or Democrat,
but offering different options.
And we need institutional change in our workplaces
and religious places so that people have more complex identities.
They're not shunted
into these very narrow belief groups based on things that they don't necessarily still believe
if they were changing their hearts and minds. Some of what you just described has this,
have some of these strategies been put into effect elsewhere, have they worked? Do we have some
actual evidence that this works?
Absolutely.
So ranked choice voting, we've seen work in Alaska, for instance, where you have Lisa
Murkowski getting elected as opposed to Sarah Palin or some more extreme Republicans.
You know, I'm from Alaska, so it's a very conservative state, but one that's conservative
in a way that's very pro-alaskan, and they wanted
a candidate that wasn't just part of the national consensus.
They got that option because ranked choice voting allowed Republicans to run against each
other.
The other strategies that we've seen on things like community resilience have been tried
in many countries, including countries much worse off than America, like Kenya in 2007
when they had a vast amount of political electoral violence.
They brought communities together with leaders of different parts of the community's talking.
So your business leaders, your religious leaders, your law enforcement leaders, and what happened
was even when politicians would amp up violence or violent rhetoric, anger against the other
groups within these communities, these leaders would say, we're not going to have that here, we're going to reduce these feelings in our own communities,
and that has worked very well in many, many countries that are much further along in conflict
than America. Which is great, but there's also this strategy called in-group moderation,
right? Can you talk about that for a minute? This is when people within each group
just take down the temperature,
some military within military,
the right within the right,
the left within the left,
African-Americans within their constituency,
and so on,
particularly groups that are targeted for radicalization.
And we see this in-group moderation
working all over the world and historically,
because people listen to people in their own
group. When they hear more moderate voices overwhelming the more angry ones, it tells them what the
norms of that group are and what it takes to be kind of popular in that group and it plays a
big and useful role. In recent years, the group that we do podcasts for, common ground committee, have sponsored a number of public events
that have brought together thought leaders,
journalists, elected officials,
from different points of view,
for conversations across difference.
How do these kinds of things help?
What kind of difference can leaders make,
people who form opinions about public issues
by speaking across difference?
I'm thrilled to hear you're doing that because there's really good evidence that the best
thing leaders can do is call out their own side for breaking democratic rules of the road.
So bridging difference is useful and talking to the other side is useful, especially if they're talking in ways that normalize being kind or being just plain democratic.
The kind of thing that John McCain did in the question and answer session when he was
running for president and one of the questioners said, you know, isn't Barack Obama, Muslim
and so on.
And McCain said, no, he's Christian. And here's his background.
That sort of normalization of pro-democratic action
by leaders really matters.
But the best thing they can do is call out
their own side for breaking the democratic rules of the road,
just as Biden just did, separating
Democrats from the far left rallies
that were happening over the course
the last week about Israel and Palestine, or Mitt Romney's done calling out fellow Republicans for supporting extremism.
That sort of moderation within one's own side matters just as much, if not more,
than simply bridging difference. But in general, it's hard to overstate how important
politicians are to upholding norms and how important it elites are.
You mentioned norms, which also was one of the themes of a very recent podcast we did
with Richard Haas, who used to head up the Council on Foreign Relations.
He talked about that and said that upholding norms is vital for a strong democracy.
Do you agree?
Absolutely.
And particularly in America.
I mean, America's democracy is extremely old.
And what that makes us think is that it will always be around.
It's kind of like the mom and the dad and you're the kids and you think it's going to always
be there and always be strong
But the problem with being so old is that a lot of things that we think are legislated are actually just normative a lot of things that we think are laws
are just people being used to behaving in a certain way the way that George Washington stepped down after two terms and a lot of people
Thought that that was a rule
But it wasn't and when FDR stuck around for four they decided to make it a law
that that was a rule, but it wasn't, and when FDR stuck around for four, they decided to make it a law.
We're now seeing the need to make a lot of things laws that had just been norms, including
how we pick our president, which did just get into law with the Electoral Count Act change.
But an awful lot of things are just norms, because we're a very old democracy that didn't
think to write those laws.
And so as our polarization reduces those norms, there's no substitute for upholding them
again.
Do you have any examples of how politicians of different points of view have come together
and modeled good behavior, and that this has actually made a difference?
So we're seeing an effort at this with Governor Cox of Utah who's just beautifully taking
all of the research and wrapping it together in a year-long effort as the head of the National
Governors Association to try to get governors of different parties to come together on video,
usually little advertisements and talk about how they disagree on a lot of things, but they agree on the rules of the game and how you do a democracy and so on.
Lots of evidence suggesting that that is very likely to work.
We've also seen evidence that when politicians can come together to keep out non-democratic parties or individuals, that plays a big role. We saw that in the 1930s when a number of countries became fascist in Europe, but the
UK, for instance, didn't, and the UK had a fascist party, but the regular party is just
said, no, we're not going to partner with you in the same way that in Germany, the regular
mainstream parties have not been partnering more recently with AFD, the Extreme Right Party. Now that Cordon Sanatair has probably already been passed in America and it's starting to
fall apart in places like Germany as the edge party gets more power.
But we know that that works as long as it can stand up.
So for right now, Governor Cox's effort, probably the best thing we've got, and I wish it
would be replicated at many more levels of government.
And we're hoping to speak to him later this month or next month for this show. for probably the best thing we've got, and I wish it would be replicated at many more levels of government.
And we're hoping to speak to him later this month,
or next month for this show, so.
Not terrific.
When pushing back against polarization,
you've written that interventions
should aim to reduce feelings of threat,
not just feelings of dislike.
Can you elaborate on that?
What do you mean by that?
Sure. So the scholarly world got really taken with this idea of affective emotional polarization
a few years ago, and we started measuring it, and all sorts of people started worrying about it.
We hate each other, and that's why we're seeing more violence.
That's why we're seeing more democratic backsliding and all sorts of things.
But it turns out that first of all, a lot of countries in Europe seem to hate each other
just as much, but they're not seeing this kind of democratic backsliding.
And that if you look at the people who claim to really, really dislike the other party,
that's not necessarily correlated, doesn't relate very well to our political violence
or to anti-democratic norms.
So something is going on in there that's not just about dislike.
And one of the things the scholarship seems to suggest is that it's not just that we don't
like the other side.
It's that we're afraid the other side is going to end democracy.
And so we think, oh, if they're going to end democracy, if we're afraid that they're
going to take away our basic rights and we'll have one vote once, well, we'd better do that
first to shore up democracy,
but each side's idea of what shoring up democracy means looks pretty different. And so it basically
is allowing each side to get away with further reducing our democratic norms and the name of a
holding democracy, like believing that the election was fake and so now let's change the way we do voting counts
or what have you. So reducing this sense of threat so that each side doesn't think the other
side wants to reduce democracy. If you look at the polling on regular American Republicans and
regular American Democrats, there's a lot of support for democracy. Where we're seeing the problem is on some politicians
and some very extreme parts of particularly the right.
But if we can get regular people to realize
the other side is not bent on taking away their rights,
we're much more likely to see each side
upholding democratic rights and norms.
And yet using fear as a tactic is exactly
what politicians do in current campaigns to attract
supporters.
What would be a less polarizing way to win support, perhaps by being positive for us?
Wouldn't that be nice?
So in fact, there's really good evidence that being positive is better than being negative. The Dartmouth Institute, their polarization research lab, has a series of research suggesting
that negative campaigns just don't actually attract more voters.
Really?
You better tell that to a lot of leaders of Congress.
Well, so here's the issue.
They don't work, but the political consultants like them, and the political consultants get
a lot of money off attack ads and so on, because they make the political consultants like them, and the political consultants get a lot of money off
attack ads and so on, because they make their money on
campaign ads, and what works is actually going door to door,
which is not where political consultants make their money.
What we've seen since 2000, actually,
is that it used to be you would win an election by going
to your side, your partisan side, and the primary,
and then tacking back to the center in the general to get the most votes and the most persuadable voters.
But since about the year 2000 George W. Bush's election, there have not been enough persuadable
voters to make that a useful tactic.
And so instead, campaigns have worked on just getting out the vote.
If they can get their side out, everything is about turnout.
And that's on both sides.
And so to get turnout, one of the easy ways
is to build up intensity.
You build up people's emotional feelings
that this election matters.
People think that negative campaign ads build up intensity
and they might among some voters,
but certainly not among all voters,
and they can backfire against the person doing them.
But as I said, it's the political consultants
making money from this and the political consultants making money
from this and the political consultants really like it
when politicians do campaign ads,
because that's how they make their money.
The
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You sort of refer to this briefly a moment ago, but you said that a lot of European countries
are suffering from a polarization as well at about the same level that the United States is,
but their democracies aren't
suffering as much.
Why is that?
So, I mentioned that America has a very old democracy.
And one issue with that is that when we work on democratization in other countries,
I've done election monitoring in a whole series of other countries, we don't build democracies
that look like ours.
Because what has been found is that winner take all elections
where you win 50% of the vote plus one vote and you get the whole district. Those are very given
to political violence. And what we've learned is that presidential systems are very given to
gridlock and actual coups and so on because when the president and the legislature of different
parties, you have kind of a natural separation of powers but also some natural fighting
that takes place that can just muck everything up. Most countries in Europe have
proportional representation in which you elect a party and then based on the percentage of that
party's vote, they get a series of leaders. So if the party gets 31% of the vote versus 30% of the vote, maybe
they get one more leader, but they don't get a whole country worth of leaders in the
way that we do when you win a presidency. That means there's really not a lot of incentive
to suppress the vote or to use violence to suppress a vote because that extra small
percentage doesn't make it nearly as big a difference in those systems. They also have, in Europe, better efforts at social cohesion.
So when Germany and the UK started to have terrorist attacks and see far right and Islamist
violence in their countries, they launched these huge efforts to support communities and
do the kind of community resilience that I talked about as happening in America, these business
leaders and faith leaders and so on, sitting down in their communities to try to tamp down violence.
But the government supported it at scale. It wasn't just small groups trying to do it on a shoestring
as is happening here in America. That said, most European countries are much smaller than even many states in the United States.
And America has always been very diverse, not just racially, but also religiously and culturally
and ethnically diverse.
Isn't it much more difficult to bring Americans together than it would be say in European countries where
the vast majority of people have perhaps more in common.
You know, it isn't.
It isn't.
So you're right.
America is vastly more heterogeneous.
We have so much more diversity.
We have so much more difference of opinion.
The spectrum is very wide.
But in fact, when you only have one or two groups,
it's much more easy for one majority group
to kind of suppress one smaller minority group.
So you have different, but big problems in countries
like that.
When you have so much diversity, there's
more ability to come together around an idea,
because America's founded on an idea, not on a bloodline.
And so these countries like France and Germany, particularly, that are founded on Frenchness
or Germanness, have had a lot of trouble integrating the Turks or people from Northern Africa
or what have you, that I have different ethnic and religious heritage because they're
such a dominant what it means to be French or what it means to be German.
America is much more broad and so yes it's harder to bring all of us together.
On the other hand we are founded on an idea and it's an idea that anyone can buy into
and if they move here many of them have chosen to do so.
So it's easier and harder.
A lot of people on different political persuasions are worried about the state of US democracy.
Is there any particular demographic group that is less attached to the idea of American
democracy than everybody else?
So you know, people think of extreme partisans as being less attached.
They think of kind of a line, and if you're extremely right or extremely left, you're probably
also more polarized, more violent, more against democracy and you want your side to win.
That is, and completely untrue.
What we see is actually that partisans want their side to win, but the ones who have been
partisan for a while are very attached to democracy.
The problem is in a group in the middle that are often mischaracterized as moderate because
they tend to vote for both parties and they tend to support
policies that are associated with both parties, like economic redistribution, but also the idea of
socially conservative American identity that's really about native-born Christian white people.
This group used to be a swing voter group. They moved into their Republican party as
MAGA voters, make American great again, sort of Trump voters, but their history is as swing voters, and they
seem to be particularly unattached to the democratic process, particularly supportive of authoritarianism.
Another way you can cut it is, uh, Garen Winton Mute, a researcher who's looked at gun violence,
has shown that gun owners in general are just as
against political violence as anyone else. But a specific subset of gun owners who bought guns
in the 2022 surge choose to carry their guns at all times. That group are much more supportive
of political violence and they're claiming to be willing to carry it out themselves. The 2022 surge, could you explain that?
No, the 2020 surge.
So in 2020, America saw a huge growth in people buying guns, especially first-time gun owners,
the people buying guns for the first time.
There had never been another year like it in terms of vast numbers of gun buying. Some of
that probably had to do with politics and some of that probably had to do with the pandemic.
But the group of people who bought guns in 2020 look very different than the people who owned
guns before. That group who bought guns for the first time in 2020 seemed to be motivated a lot
by fear or sense of self-defense, sense that the government might be coming after them
or might be imploding.
And the ones from that group who carry their guns
on them at all times,
which is possible in a whole lot of states,
there is no concealed carry laws
and it's very easy to carry guns.
This group is much more willing to not just justify
political violence,
but say that they'll do it themselves.
Also, just quickly, Rachel, what about age groups? Is there any difference between that
when it comes to that demographic with regard to whether you think it's a great idea to live in a
democracy or not? Yeah, so older Americans are much more likely to be polarized than any other group.
That's part of the problem with all the blame on social media is that they don't use as
much social media as they watch TV and radio, and they're much more polarized.
But they're also quite attached to democracy on the whole.
The group that we see real worries about their attachment to democracy is actually younger
Americans.
And these younger Americans are not necessarily extremely polarized. They don't necessarily hate the other side.
They just feel really hopeless.
They feel like this system is not working.
It's not delivering for them.
They're not seeing it work in other countries.
If you're a young American, you've seen America basically
lose two wars, not be able to handle our economy.
You saw a huge recession in 2008 that probably affected
your parents' lives.
And then you saw a pandemic that we 2008 that probably affected your parents' lives.
And then you saw a pandemic that we performed worse in than many, many other countries.
And so it's not surprising that young people are pretty disillusioned with democracy as
a system. And of course, they weren't alive when the totalitarian systems of the Soviet
Union and so on were most strong. So they don't know just how bad it can get, but what
they see they don't know just how bad it can get, but what they see they don't like.
We want to ask you a couple of personal questions about how you got so interested in the
research that you do.
You were raised in a log cabin on a dirt road in Fairbanks, Alaska. Tell us more, does that have anything to do with your interest?
Sure, so I'll correct.
In Alaska, it's only a cabin if you don't have an indoor toilet.
We did have indoor toilets, so it's a log house in Alaska,
but the rest is all true.
I think I grew up in a very, very education-oriented family
in a place that provided a lot of room for opportunity.
There's not a lot of places and times in the world
where a little Jewish girl in a pretty rural place
could aspire to the things I aspire to.
And so I really value America, and I want it to work,
and I'm also quite aware of what happens when democracies don't work.
When I was 16, I went off to Russia for various reasons,
but Russia was falling apart at the time. It was 1992, and I saw really up close and personal what happens when a country
falls completely apart into basically anarchy, what happens to the people there. And so that really set me
in a space where I was interested in this, and I felt like I could do something about it. But I also was raised around a lot of
guns. My family had guns, my neighbors all had guns. I had guns pulled on me many
times as a child and so I think it gave me a certain comfort level around
dealing with violence that let me work on these issues of democracy and violence
in a way that a lot of other people weren't willing to. And you had guns pulled on you as a child?
Our neighbors were all heavily armed and often drunk.
And so they would sometimes shoot across the road
or think I was a moose or not like it
if I was selling.
I'm Jewish, but I went to a Catholic school
and we would sell magazines and subscriptions
to raise money for the school.
And if you passed a no-trust passing sign,
they would shoot in the air to tell you that was a bad idea.
So yeah, there were a whole series of times
when I was at a rifle end as a kid.
But you survived.
You know, threats and justification for violence
are not the same as attacks.
And it's one of the things I learned in a very personal way.
These are different things, and you have to treat them differently.
Thank you very much.
Thank you Richard.
It's been a real pleasure talking with both of you.
Rachel Kleinfeld on Let's Find Common Ground.
And we couldn't bring you this podcast without the team at Common Ground Committee.
And the team members are Bruce Bond, Eric Olson, Donna Vislaki, Mary Anglade, Hannah Weston,
and Brittany Chapman. And thanks as always to our producer Miranda Schaefer.
I'm Richard Davies. And I'm Ashley Melntite. Thanks for listening.
you