Brendan Nyhan

  • PBS NewsHour interview about Trump’s rhetoric

    From my interview with PBS NewsHour

    Brendan Nyhan, Dartmouth College:

    In this case, it may have been a metaphor. It’s hard to tell with him. He was using that language in the context of a discussion of the auto industry, but his meaning was ambiguous.

    Given the way he so frequently calls for or endorses violence, I think it’s appropriate to be concerned when he invokes it even in a seemingly metaphorical way.

    Geoff Bennett:

    Dartmouth College political science professor Brendan Nyhan has closely followed Mr. Trump’s commentary about immigrants over the last decade. He says Donald Trump ‘s rhetoric should be viewed through an historical lens.

    Brendan Nyhan:

    Donald Trump ‘s descriptions of people from other countries and other racial and ethnic groups as subhuman animals is the kind of language we see in countries before they have ethnic violence or even genocide. It’s the kind of language we see when authoritarian movements rise to power.

    He’s appealing to the worst aspects of humanity. It’s straight out of the textbooks, and we should be very worried with how mundane it now seems.

  • New podcast on polarization and democracy

    90. Are American politics more polarized than ever? Brendan Nyhan thinks social media just helps us see it more.

  • New podcast on US 2020 Facebook study

    89. Facebook scores your politics with a number. Brendan Nyhan figured out what they do with it. (Part 1 of 2)

  • New study, report, and podcast

    I’m one of the lead authors on a new article in Nature titled “Like-minded sources on Facebook are prevalent but not polarizing” that was published today. It’s one of four articles published today from the US 2020 Facebook and Instagram Election Study on which I was coauthor (the other three were published in a special issue of Science).

    We also just released a new Bright Line Watch report on expert and public perceptions of the legal cases against Donald Trump.

    I talked about both of them with Mike Pesca on The Gist:

  • New podcast – on Mike Pesca’s The Gist

    New podcast with Mike Pesca talking about the latest Bright Line Watch report and the state of American democracy:

  • New Bright Line Watch report/interview

    From our new Bright Line Watch report:

    • The gap between Republicans and Democrats in confidence in American elections remains large, but has diminished in the past year. Compared to November 2021, somewhat more Republicans recognize the legitimacy of Biden’s 2020 victory and express confidence in the integrity of the vote count in the upcoming midterm elections.
    • Both experts and the public, including four in five Republicans, say it is important for candidates who lose fair elections to publicly acknowledge defeat, but hundreds of 2022 Republican candidates for Congress or statewide office continue to deny that former President Trump lost to Joe Biden in 2020 or question the legitimacy of Biden’s victory. Across the three most comprehensive media tallies, the estimated percentage of deniers among Republicans is 31% for Attorney General candidates, 49% for governor, 31–39% for Secretary of State, 41–55% for U.S. House, and 35–41% for U.S. Senate. These ratings are generally consistent; about 80% of ratings are identical between organizations.
    • Experts rate the prevalence of 2020 election denialism among Republican candidates for statewide office as the most abnormal and important event of the past year and one of the most extreme to take place since 2016.
      91% of experts rate a 2024 Trump candidacy as a threat to democracy, including 35% who rate it as an extraordinary threat and 39% who rate it as a serious threat.

    • 70% of experts view a prosecution of Trump as beneficial to U.S. democracy, including 16% who rate it as an extraordinary benefit and 35% who rate it as a serious benefit.
    • Majorities of the public believe Trump committed crimes in trying to overturn the 2020 election, in his actions related to the January 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol, and in handling classified documents and favor prosecution for each. However, the partisan splits on these issues are profound – approximately 90% of Democrats favor prosecution and close to 90% of Republicans oppose it. Experts overwhelmingly support prosecution.
      The academic experts we surveyed anticipate that some high-profile candidates in the 2022 midterm elections will refuse to concede. They also anticipate continued politicization of Supreme Court appointments.

    • Experts are divided, however, on whether the Supreme Court will endorse the Independent State Legislature theory, which would allow state legislatures to regulate elections without constraint from institutions such as state courts and constitutions.
    • Assessments of the performance of U.S. democracy are stable and consistent with past surveys, but every group surveyed – experts and the public, Democrats and Republicans – anticipates a decline in the quality of U.S. democracy five and 10 years in the future.

    My interview about the report with NPR’s Here and Now: