Trump’s Retreat On Climate All About Political Tribalism

By Rick Smith

June 5, 2017

Trumps rejection of the Paris Climate Agreement isn’t based on the facts nor does his base need any facts to support his climate denial position. For Trump’s loyal base of supporters, facts are irrelevant because climate denial has become a proxy issue for the support of the much larger conservative view of the world. Climate denial is at the heart of the culture wars and the conservative tribe uses it as a weapon to pound the establishment.

Our fractured political culture wars have divided us into a tribalism of the left and right with each distrusting the other. The conservative tribe of the right identifies and associates with others who agree with them. They automatically oppose positions held by the establishment in spite of factual information supporting the establishment view.

The conservative tribe is driven by conspiracy theories, a distrust of government, unbridled free enterprise and a rejection of conventional news sources. Trump’s vicious attacks on the media, “the media is the enemy of the America people” is the red meat he feeds to his conservative tribe. Facts supporting climate change become merely a distraction from the conservative world view. The view holds that climate change is a hoax perpetrated by big government, corporate greed and elitist scientists with an agenda of self-interest.

They reject the overwhelming establishment view shared by government, business leaders, the science community and the Pentagon that holds climate change is real and must be addressed through the Paris agreement.

Polling shows that just 22% of Trump supporters believe that human-caused carbon pollution is causing global warming. For the general public over 60% believe human activity is driving climate change.

According to Dan Kahn, a Yale researcher that has studied the growing political polarization and the causes for conservatives to dismiss climate facts. He explains, “What people believe about climate change doesn’t reflect what they know. It expresses who they are.”

Their loyalty to the conservative tribal world view requires them to reject any facts that might undermine the tribe’s commitment to climate denial. Any acknowledgment that there could be facts proving climate change is real is a threat to their tribe’s credibility and survival.

Trump offered some unsupported reasons for his rejection of the climate deal but they come from a small minority of researchers backed by the fossil fuel industries. His claims about saving jobs or defending the environment aren’t supported by the basic science community, business leaders, the Pentagon and by the world’s leaders. Trump’s allegations that America is giving up sovereignty or is bending to the will of other nations is simply fake news.

President Trump’s withdrawal has the world’s political and business leaders united in fierce opposition to his decision. But this opposition simply motivates him to be the exception, to be the disruptor. His decision places America as the odd man out among the community of nations. But his base loves him as the disruptor of the climate agreement because he is poking a thumb in the eye of the establishment view.

His message to his base (his tribe) is that he takes advice from no one. Remember, his numerous declarations during the campaign and since his election. He claims only he can get things done. In March, 2016 he said “I alone can solve it” (terrorism). Speaking at the Republican National Convention he claimed, “I alone can fix it.”  One of his campaign ads made similar claims, “Donald Trump will protect you, he is the only one who can.”

The political narrative he has promoted is; he alone is an agent of change and rebellion against all conventional establishment wisdom. In rejecting the Paris Agreement, he’s giving his middle finger salute to the world and his supporters love it. Facts mean nothing when Trump’s goal is to disrupt and create chaos to the established order.

This gives Democrats several opportunities to make climate an issue in 2018 and 2020. While his base may be happy with chaos, many voters may think Trump went too far by totally pulling out of the Paris deal. It makes him vulnerable to an accusation of being out of touch with average Americans’ environmental concerns.

Trump’s tribe of 35-40% may be solidly supportive no matter what. The other 10-15% may decide he is too much of a disruptor, particularly if Trump’s America becomes the black sheep of the world community.

Remember, many blue collar and union voters joined the Trump tribe in 2016. However, many of those same voters were a part of the Obama tribe in 2008 and 2012. If Democrats can offer solutions to those voters and their families, they can win them back in 2020.

 

by Rick Smith
Posted 6/6/17

CATEGORIES: Uncategorized

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