We’ve just been through the third US presidential election with Donald Trump as a candidate, and his campaign seemed more fuelled by conspiracy theories and moral panics than ever. From the now-stock assertions that the 2020 election was stolen and that migrants were being bussed in to vote Democrat, to claims that Haitians were eating dogs and cats in Springfield, Ohio, the Republicans seemed entirely captured by the kind of thinking people associate with tin foil hats.
Still, they won.
Of course, conspiracism is nothing new in US politics. Sixty years ago, Harper’s Magazine published the American political scientist and historian Richard Hofstadter’s influential essay The Paranoid Style in American Politics. Hofstadter analyses a recurring mode of expression in American public life: one marked by “heated exaggeration, suspiciousness, and conspiratorial fantasy” and often linked with movements of discontent.
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He traces this “paranoid style” through various episodes in US history, including the 19th century movements against Masonry and Catholicism. These movements expressed their hostility through an “apocalyptic and absolutistic framework”, finding covert, fiendish plots to destroy the American way of life.
Hofstadter then identifies mid-20th century right-wing movements and organisations that epitomise this style, including McCarthyism. Named after the demagogic Wisconsin senator Joseph McCarthy, this was the intense political repression to combat supposed communist subversion in the 1940s-50s. Combining official proceedings like public hearings and FBI investigations with private sector reinforcement through dismissals and blacklists, McCarthyism framed communist influence as an existential threat to America.
Another major example Hofstadter discusses is the John Birch Society. Founded by the American businessman Robert Welch in 1958, this secretive group reached its height in the 1960s with an estimated national membership of between 80,000 and 100,000. Known as Birchers, these activists saw Communist plots behind everything from sex education in schools to fluoride in the water supply. Consciously mirroring left-wing cadre organisations, the society’s cells and front organisations built grassroots networks and facilitated mobilisations on the right.