PREVIOUS ARTICLE ALL CONTENTS Next ARTICLE

The Politics of Losing: Trump, the Klan, and the Mainstreaming of Resentment, Rory McVeigh and Kevin Estep

Reviewed by Jeremy D. Mayer

BUY

 

The authors of this timely book put forth an interesting thesis: that the rise of Trump in the early twenty-first century is in some ways similar to the rise of the second Klan in the early years of the twentieth century. The book covers familiar territory about the Ku Klux Klan’s revival that one of the authors covered well in an earlier book. That the second Klan was focused on immigration fears almost as much as it was on keeping African Americans subjugated is a point well made, and the parallel with Trump’s “build the wall” rhetoric is worth examining. The authors make a strong case that Trump’s “fake media” attacks are quite similar to Klan attacks on the mainstream news of their day. They argue convincingly that status decline among white Christians in the twenty-first century was crucial to Trump’s success among working-class whites and that this process mirrored the Klan’s rise among white petit bourgeois Protestants from 1915 to 1924.

But much of the data analysis of 2016 is unsatisfying compared with, for example, that in John Sides, Michael Tesler, and Lynn Vavreck’s Identity Crisis: The 2016 Presidential Campaign and the Battle for the Meaning of America. The ecological fallacy is committed several times without comment, an

To continue reading, see options above.

About PSQ's Editor

ROBERT Y. SHAPIRO

Full Access

Join the Academy of Political Science and automatically receive Political Science Quarterly.

CONFERENCES & EVENTS

America at a Crossroads: The 2024 Presidential Election and Its Global Impact
April 24, 2024
8:30 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. ET
New York, NY

MORE ABOUT THIS EVENT VIEW ALL EVENTS

Editor’s spotlight

Virtual Issue

Introduction: Black Power and the Civil Rights Agendas of Charles V. Hamilton
Marylena Mantas and Robert Y. Shapiro

MORE ABOUT THIS TOPIC

Search the Archives

Publishing since 1886, PSQ is the most widely read and accessible scholarly journal with distinguished contributors such as: Lisa Anderson, Robert A. Dahl, Samuel P. Huntington, Robert Jervis, Joseph S. Nye, Jr., Theda Skocpol, Woodrow Wilson

view additional issues

Most read

Articles | Book reviews

Understanding the Bush Doctrine
Robert Jervis

The Study of Administration
Woodrow Wilson

Notes on Roosevelt's "Quarantine" Speech
Dorothy Borg

view all

New APS Book

China in a World of Great Power Competition   CHINA IN A WORLD OF GREAT POWER COMPETITION

About US

Academy of Political Science

The Academy of Political Science, promotes objective, scholarly analyses of political, social, and economic issues. Through its conferences and publications APS provides analysis and insight into both domestic and foreign policy issues.

Political Science Quarterly

With neither an ideological nor a partisan bias, PSQ looks at facts and analyzes data objectively to help readers understand what is really going on in national and world affairs.

Stay Connected

newsstand locator
About APS