Why America Is Ripe for Election Conspiracy Theorizing
By Brian Gallagher, Nautilus
November 17, 2020 – One day in 1787,
Benjamin Franklin emerged from the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia,
where the founders were debating the shape of a new government. He was
confronted by Elizabeth Willing Powel, a society figure and wife of the
Philadelphia mayor. “Doctor, what have we got? A republic or a monarchy?” she
asked. “A republic,” Franklin responded. “If you can keep it.”
At least that’s how the story goes.
Historians aren’t certain of the wording or where Powel asked Franklin the
question. On the streets of Philadelphia? In Powel’s home? But the anecdote
quickens our attention on a crisis in America today. If we can keep our
republic, it will require dampening the allure of conspiracy theories,
particularly about the fraudulence of elections.
The new conspiracism, fomented by Trump,
doesn’t bother with a facade of theory.
A 2017 study, based on surveys administered before and after the
2012 election, found that “belief in election fraud is a common and predictable
consequence of both underlying conspiratorial thinking and motivated partisan
reasoning.” Presumably since then this problem has gotten, and will continue to
get, worse, because “motivated partisan reasoning”—most of all in the United
States—is becoming more fanatical.
An impressive group of psychologists and
political scientists made this clear in a recent paper in Science.
Political life is increasingly sectarian, unhinged from the reality and
magnitude of policy disagreements. More and more we view opposing partisans as
alien to ourselves, dislike and distrust them, and see them as iniquitous.
“Viewing opposing partisans as different, or even as dislikable or immoral, may
not be problematic in isolation,” the researchers write. “But when all three
converge, political losses can feel like existential threats that must be
averted—whatever the cost.” Which of course includes alleging that elections
are rigged.
This sort of conspiratorial thinking
poisons the roots of democracy, researchers have found. The authors of a
recent study, which was based on a survey experiment conducted the
day before and the morning of the 2016 election, were expecting “vote rigging
conspiracy theories to make people less confident in elections, less likely to
accept the results, and less likely to say that the loser should concede.” And
that’s what they found. “This study has shown conspiratorial rhetoric around
elections leaves Americans unsettled in their emotional reactions and, depending
on whether their party is helped or hurt, less committed to the idea that
political candidates must accept election outcomes.” The results, the authors
note, confirm what Russell Muirhead and Nancy Rosenblum argue in their 2019
book, A Lot of People Are Saying: The New Conspiracism and the Assault
on Democracy. Their idea is that a new conspiracism, fomented by Trump,
doesn’t bother with a facade of theory, instead relying on repeating lies until
they seem true.
Can people become less susceptible to
believing conspiracy theories? Perhaps. One of the things that underlie
conspiratorial thinking is a teleological bias, the tendency to see intention
or planning where it doesn’t exist. A 2018 study found that this bias, “a resilient ‘default’
component of early cognition” that shapes adult intuitions, is associated with
both creationist and conspiracist beliefs. Both of these,
the researchers wrote, “entail the distant and hidden involvement of a
purposeful and final cause to explain complex worldly events.”
Aleksandra Cichocka, a political
psychologist at the University of Kent, says the psychological need for understanding the world is
joined by two other needs that underlie conspiracism—feeling safe, and
belonging to social groups that affirm or encourage self-respect. “Those who
feel defensive about themselves are more likely than others to embrace
conspiracy theories, perhaps to deflect blame for their shortcomings,”
she wrote recently in Nature. “Conspiracy
beliefs have also been linked to feelings of powerlessness, anxiety, isolation
and alienation. Those who feel that they are insignificant cogs in the
political machinery tend to assume that there are nefarious influences at
play.”
A 2016 paper, “The dark side of meaning-making: How social
exclusion leads to superstitious thinking,” explains that a person who feels
excluded very often doubles down on anxiety and isolation and “searches for
like-minded individuals who further reinforce these beliefs, until they become
entrenched.”
What makes people susceptible to
conspiracy theories isn’t healthy skepticism, a sensitivity to evidence joined
to a sense of proportion. It’s a skepticism that’s abetted by political
sectarianism and, as Cichocka explains, exacerbated by society-deranging events
like the onset of COVID-19. It’s “created a perfect storm for vulnerability to
conspiracy narratives,” she wrote. “Uncertainty and anxiety are high. Lockdown
and social distancing bring isolation. People struggling to understand this
unprecedented time might reach for extraordinary explanations.”
The way forward, she thinks, can’t be to
just correct conspiracy beliefs on a case by case basis, because research shows
compelling false claims spread faster than their refutations. Ultimately her
solution goes deeper. We’ve got to be better about promoting “a sense of common
identity, to boost feelings of belonging and meaning.”
This seems to have worked in New
Zealand. “Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern stressed solidarity and transparent
decision-making, and offered people a sense of purpose,” Cichocka wrote. “Early
data suggest that despite an increase in distress during lockdown, New
Zealanders showed no increase in conspiracy thinking, and more trust in
science.”
When considering the U.S.’s large and
coarsening culture of political zealotry, this doesn’t seem quite like enough.
Joe Biden says he plans to govern in the interest of all Americans. That’s a
start. But according to the authors of the Science paper, that
“will require multifaceted efforts to change leadership, media, and democratic
systems in ways that are sensitive to human psychology. There are no silver
bullets.”
Brian Gallagher is an associate editor
at Nautilus. Follow him on Twitter @bsgallagher.
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