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In the 1985 film Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome, Tina Turner belted out the tune, "We Don't Need Another Hero." For progressives that care about their policy and electoral futures, it turns out that she may have been dead wrong.


Heroes, Villains and Power

Recent experimental research by one of the authors suggests that heroes play a critical role in policy narratives (Jones, 2010). When Dr. Jones began his research, he suspected that there was power in narrative, hypothesizing that the villain would be the focal point of that power. However, the most surprising element of the research is that it is simple stories with clearly identifiable heroes that are most able to help citizens make sense of complicated policies and issues.

Progressives often stand in awe of the ability of Republicans to communicate their message in simple stories. Usually that begrudging admiration is focused on the ability of conservatives to so effectively make progressives the villain. To the extent that progressives have even attempted to use narrative, their efforts have often zeroed in on how to return the favor by demonizing Republicans.

Consequently, when it comes to coherent policy narratives, progressives either don't produce one at all or reactively focus on villainizing Republicans. This has had the effect of depriving progressives of any hope that voters might conclude that they are their "heroes."

Up until now, progressives appear to have presumed that their policy proposals self-evidently reveal the underlying motives for seeking those outcomes. They've felt no need to offer the "why" for voters to evaluate -- seemingly hoping that the sheer force of their logic and the weight of the facts would carry the day. However, work by scholars like Jerome Bruner suggests that narrative reveals intentions or the "why" behind the actions of a player in a drama far better than a rational argument does.

For voters assessing complex policy questions that they may not feel that they fully grasp the details of, knowing why a politician is pursuing a policy may be the critical question the voter wants answered. And it is in that regard that the current communication tactics of progressives falls most woefully short.

Meanwhile, the narratives that conservatives use often in fact make progressives the villains. What progressives have failed to notice is that those same narratives "star" conservatives in the role of "heroes" of those same stories, and the research of Dr. Jones suggests that's where the real power of those narratives resides.

The proposed strategy here should not be misinterpreted as just the wishful thinking of Pollyannas saying that progressives simply need to "tell their positive story." In fact, Republicans will often be the villains of the progressive story, but progressives must no longer forget to make their own worthy efforts and goals known explicitly as well. And that is best done with a well-formed narrative.

Progressives must find a way to do in a coordinated fashion what conservatives appear to do almost instinctively -- communicate in narratives that make themselves and the positions they take heroic in the eyes of a majority of voters.


So Who Was the Hero of Financial Reform?

So how does this apply to an actual policy fight? Let's take the recent debate over financial reform as an example.

According to a New York Times report at the time of the initial Senate passage of the Dodd-Frank bill, here's the Republican view of financial reform:

Republicans criticized the bill in mostly political terms, arguing that it was an example of Democrats' trying to expand the scope of government.

Embedded in that simple phrase, is this story, which because it was nearly universally understood, was repeated by the reporter himself, rather than actually expressed by a Republican elected official:

Villain: Democrats are trying to expand the scope of government -- an argument presented in the context of this fight and reinforced in nearly every other debate over the last two years.

Villainous act: Trying to grow government for unspecified, but presumably nefarious purposes.

Victim: Taxpayers (implied).

Hero: Republicans.

Heroic act: Standing in opposition to the Democrats nefarious goal of "growing government".

Readers, viewers or listeners can quickly draw conclusions from this narrative without any knowledge of the content of the legislation.

Here are the comments by the Obama administration in the same news account:

The recession we're emerging from was primarily caused by a lack of responsibility and accountability from Wall Street to Washington," Mr. Obama said, adding, "That's why I made passage of Wall Street reform one of my top priorities as president, so that a crisis like this does not happen again.

How does this "story" compare?

Villain: Vaguely some combination of Wall Street and the recession.

Villainous act: Lack of responsibility and accountability.

Victim: Vaguely everyone.

Hero: The President?

Heroic act: (Passively) making "Wall Street Reform one of [his] top priorities.

Now imagine that the story the President told was more like this:

The only thing standing between middle class families and more abuse from unethical bankers on Wall Street are the tough reforms we're fighting for. That's why we'll continue this fight no matter how much Wall Street or the politicians who enabled their abuses object.

From almost the same number of words, you get this "story."

Villain: Bad actors on Wall Street and the politicians who enabled their bad acts

Villainous act: Financial abuse

Victim: Middle class families

Hero: The President

Heroic act: Taking on bad actors on Wall Street and its enabling politicians


Is This The Same Old Argument About Moving Further to the Left or Toward the Center?

The power of this approach goes beyond mere framing. Research by Jones and McBeth describes how policy narratives can actually shape public policy by growing political coalitions through the use of heresthetics (Jones & McBeth 2010). Heresthetics are the strategic use of rhetoric (or, in our case, narrative) to shape the possible choices (Riker, 1986). Let us explain how.

In the context of the modern Congress, for all practical purposes, the last votes you are likely to need for a winning coalition to pass legislation are generally well-known from the beginning. In performing the vote counts, there are those votes that are reliable partisan votes, those that you can never get -- which in the modern era, except for the most select votes -- is the entire minority, and then there are those members of the majority who for either policy or political reasons are not automatic votes for the majority position.

Under our proposed approach, you would start by telling a problem-defining story that would be beneficial to those in the political center -- the swing votes in the caucus. The current approach, we think, doesn't accomplish this sort of problem definition very well; rather, too often, it preaches only to the policy converted by emphasizing the immense complexity of both the issue and the proposed package of solutions. In turn, the "complex" problem definition -- which defines the reformers as heroic to too narrow an audience -- actually creates cross-pressure on independent members of the chamber, politically forcing them to distance themselves from the proposal as part of a strategy to show that they aren't "just another member of the party faithful." By defining the problem in ways that moderate members don't feel they could sell themselves as heroes to their constituents by joining the reformer's effort, progressives are actually making it more difficult for the pivotal allies to join their coalition.

On the other hand, no one but the villain tries to distance themselves from the hero in a story. Indeed, everyone wants to bask in the glow of their heroism. So the policy narrative must be structured in such a way that those seeking a solution are portrayed as heroes, with particular emphasis on making those swing votes heroic figures in terms of their constituencies. The lesson for the most progressive members: Don't draw the circle of virtue too small by how you tell your initial story.


It's About Broadening the Coalition Through Narrative

When progressive leaders are formulating the initial strategy, instead of just asking, given this problem, what is the perfect policy solution? -- they should instead also ask the narrative question: How can we structure a story around that policy so that centrist and/or vulnerable members of the caucus can tell it in a way that accurately portrays those members as heroes to their constituents?

The end game, of course, is that instead of having to apologize for what the majority is up to, pivotal congressional votes might instead feel pressure to be a part of the solution, rather than feeling pressure to distance themselves from it because the initial proposal either sounds too radical to their constituents, or is so narrowly specified that only a tiny sliver of constituents with detailed policy knowledge can follow the story.

In short, bring those members whose votes you will ultimately need into the process of shaping the story, even if they aren't yet committed to the current policy proposal. Their involvement in shaping a story that they can imagine themselves the heroes of to their constituents might very well bring them into the fold, without the necessity of large policy concessions on the part of the more progressive members of the coalition. Done well, this approach will result in progressive policy in a way that does not inflict such a high political price for progressives overall.

So what are the coalitional effects of a thoughtful narrative approach?

Remember it is our contention that the problem-defining drama from the progressive perspective is almost always unspecified or entirely too ambiguous. The reason for this is that the left presumes that people can already "see" the correct storyline because of the "obvious" logic and the sheer weight of the "facts." We are not offering something magical here; rather, our story simply makes the heroic intentions of the left more explicit. So with financial reform, here's how it works:

There is an active villain or force in the world -- Wall Street run amok -- that will continue to do harm to the middle class, unless stopped. Reformers are heroically stepping into the pathway of that active villainous force, without regard for their own political futures or self interest to protect the middle class. Once our story is laid out, voters can feel cross-pressured to choose between two possible heroes: the champion fighting corrupt bankers and the champion fighting oversized government. We already know that some voters have a natural disposition to see one hero as more of a threat than the other (see, for example work done at the CCP), however "swing voters" probably have the capacity to recognize either hero, but both must be presented to them to create cognitive dissonance, and ultimately a choice between which heroes they most identify with on election day. And explicitly providing that choice to their constituents will finally give centrist members of both legislative chambers additional freedom to align themselves with progressive policy causes.


Conclusion

Too often after an electoral defeat, Democrats and their progressive allies descend into bickering about whether they should adjust their message and get better at communicating, or if they should instead moderate their policies toward the "center." Our approach suggests that the answer is neither as they are normally discussed. Instead, progressives can achieve more satisfying policy advances -- and preserve and enhance their political standing -- by making fundamental changes in how they communicate. They may be right to mimic the communications tactics of the right, but our approach reveals what it is about the tactics of the right that are so effective.

Conservatives are the heroes of their own stories. Progressives need to internalize that same sense of pride in their efforts and then infuse their policy narratives with political champions. This may finally activate the reasons voters already believe are good cause to support progressive policies, but constantly push to the back of their thoughts -- or the "why" of public policy. People want more than to be a part of a laundry list of meaningless policy facts or sterile solutions; rather, at the very core of humanity you will find a need to explain the world in a way that makes each one of us the protagonist. And nobody wants to be the protagonist in a story nobody would want to read or hear. No, we all want to be the hero in a story that places each one of us as a champion of what is righteous and good. Progressives certainly have the building blocks for such a story.

 

Follow Roy Temple on Twitter: www.twitter.com/RoyTemple

 
 
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04:27 AM on 11/24/2010
Modern American politics is not about claiming the mantle of heroism. It is about playing to voters' basest animal nature by threatening and fascinating them with the terrifying prospect of their own victimhood. Right wing politicians and those who fund them have an innate ability to play on their base's darkest fears because they are the very wellspring from which the right-wing authoritarian mind bubbles up; they are ancient, pre-linguistic buttons of rage and fear that are pressed deep inside of people's minds, bypassing all reason and logic. Try to engage the average Tea Party voter in a reasoned political discussion, to combat the falsehoods that they allow themselves to be fed, and you will quickly be confronted with a snarling animal whose only interest is not in winning an argument but in destroying their perceived enemy, that which they have been conditioned to hate and fear as an existential threat to themselves. Until Democrats and progressives learn to appeal to voters in this kind of primal, reptilian code that short-circuits higher thought and instead rouses emotion, they will continue to lose the messaging war. And if they ever do, God help us all, because the voice of reason will truly be silenced.
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lmunoz
12:35 AM on 11/24/2010
Great article on an important topic!
I agree largely with your logic on the subject. But consider what is that separates the first and second democratic "stories" of the financial regulations bill. The second version implies the hero and villain cast but the reason is also that in this story there is conviction, assertiveness.
Democrats too often fall for the misconception that by watering down and sounding "centrist" they will appeal to a greater number of people and it is in this process that they lose the hero/villain characterization of the issue.
Republicans either really believe in their ideas or simply know who they work for (in this case the banks) and are therefore convinced that their positions represent the best course of actions. This is what simplifies their message. Democrats want often to please the people but still have the banks or the health insurance industry on their side so end up creating the impression that they are on no one's side.
I have commented on the auto industry bailout, in this story the president framed the message and led from the beginning without equivocation. his opponents were disarmed and let the bailout go through in a short amount of time leading to good policy and political success now that it worked. IN the case of the stimulus and health care, he obfuscated for so long time that the message and the truth behind both initiatives were diluted and by consequence mischarachterized by the eternal republican opposition.
12:12 AM on 11/24/2010
Making Wall Street the villain doesn't work for Democrats because they are trying to get campaign dollars from Wall Street. President Obama could have been a hero, but he got into secret deals with lobbyists and that was that. He ended up reversing his stand on too many issues, from the health insurance individual mandate to offshore drilling.
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binkyblue
08:28 PM on 11/23/2010
Two Progressive heroes, Russ Feingold and William Grayson lost their bids for re-election because the people who could have made a difference, didn't care all that much. There you have a chance. Try living in a red red state for a while.
01:25 AM on 11/24/2010
It's Alan Grayson, not William.
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agio
07:59 PM on 11/23/2010
Obama came into office believing that Americans wanted to be treated like adults, and that policies should reflect the complex reality we all live in. Boy was he wrong.
01:26 AM on 11/24/2010
And yet he appoints people like Geithner and reappoints Bernanke. He hasn't exactly lived up to his end of the bargain either.
07:50 PM on 11/23/2010
Progressives are way better educated and more critical towards their politicians than conservatives, That is why framing things as narratives won't work for them.
02:32 PM on 11/23/2010
People have been asking for 'messaging' help for a while and I think this post does a very good job of laying out that strategy. There is a disconnect between progressive leaders and activists, which is why a simple & constructive guide like this so important.
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jmpurser
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08:28 AM on 11/23/2010
I think you've got a good point but you miss the REASON you have a good point.  No, "the progressives" don't have an identifiable "hero" or "narrative".  We don't make a good story.  All true.

The problem is where you're looking for that progressive hero.

Democrats are NOT progressives.  Their financial "reform" and health care "reform" legislation as well as their positions on taxes, civil rights, war, economic justice, justice, and nearly every major policy ALL come from the conservative play book.

The progressives' problem is not so much a lack of heroes as it is a lack of ANY representation in American public life.  Right now we've got Bernie Sanders and while he does a HEROIC job of standing up for us he's alone in congress.  Kennedy might be considered the last Progressive president.  Johnson was the last President who would even CONSIDER actual progressive action and then only when forced to do so.  Since then America has marched to the right and today we pay the price for that migration.
09:25 AM on 11/23/2010
I understand the frustration with politicians. However, it is a chicken and egg problem. Politicians will largely respond to their perceived self-interest. If they thought being more progressive would bring greater reward--they would. Therefore, the narrative we suggested in the piece could be a part of realigning the incentives for politicians.
01:33 AM on 11/24/2010
But there isn't a reward. Why do you think the Blue Dogs/DLC has flourished? Real Democrats are rarely allowed on the Sunday morning bobblehead shows. A lot of Democrats(Max Baucus, Evan Bayh, Ben Nelson, Chris Dodd, Harold Ford, Jr.) are only Democrats because they can make money off of it. Whether it's someone like Ford who goes on TV trashing the party at every opportunity, or someone like Bayh who will likely get a lobbyist type job. They are opportunists and not committed to the betterment of the party or country.
01:28 AM on 11/24/2010
I think both parties are marched farther to the right. I am not sure that the public at large has.