American faith in democracy is plummeting—and Donald Trump is the proof
A few months ago, a newspaper published by the Chinese government ran a piece pointing at the rise of Donald Trump as an example of the pitfalls of democracy. After last month’s Brexit referendum in Britain, it ran another piece about how the outcome shows the “consequences” of what happens when you let people vote.
China is, of course, an authoritarian state, run by the Communist Party and the military it controls. The Chinese found reason to point the finger and laugh at the stupidity that democracy can enable. What they might not have known is that an increasing amount of Americans don’t think much of democracy either.
A paper titled “The Danger of Deconsolidation” was recently published in the Journal of Democracy, and it illustrates a striking trend. People born in every consecutive decade since the 1930s say that “living in a democracy” is less “essential” than those before them. The success of Trump—whose status as one of the more openly authoritarian candidates in living memory is one of the main reasons Republicans are about to formally make him their presidential nominee in Cleveland this week—is just one reflection of this trend.
The trend is partly a generational one. When asked to rank the statement on a scale of 1 to 10, a full 72% of Americans born in the 1930s marked 10. For the latest generation polled—those born in the 1980s—only 30% marked 10.
This might have something to do with a drop in civic engagement, the paper’s authors, Roberto Stefan Foa and Yascha Mounk, hypothesize. “Since the 1960s, voter turnout has fallen and political party membership has plummeted in virtually all established democracies,” they write.