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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsThe Four Types of Trump Supporter (The Atlantic)
https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/2026/01/trump-roles-supporters-categories/685706/The presidents political power depends on his ability to play different roles for different parts of his coalition.
By Daniel Yudkin and Stephen Hawkins
January 24, 2026, 7 AM ET
-snip-
About 29 percent of 2024 Trump voters are what we call the MAGA Hardliners. These are the fiery core of Trumps base, mostly composed of white Gen Xers and Baby Boomers, who are animated by the belief that God is on their side in Americas existential struggle between good and evil. Then there are the Anti-Woke Conservatives (21 percent): a more secular and affluent group of voters deeply frustrated by what they perceive as the takeover of schools, culture, and institutions by the progressive left. Another 30 percent are the Mainline Republicans: a more racially diverse group of middle-of-the-road conservatives who prioritize border security, a strong economy, and cultural stability. Finally, we have the Reluctant Right (20 percent). Members of this group, unlike the other three, are not necessarily part of Trumps base; they voted for him, but have ambivalent feelings toward him. Only half identify as Republicans, and many picked Trump because he seemed less bad than the alternative.
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Trump plays different roles with each group, roles that privide an emotional payoff.
The first role that Trump plays, which resonates for all four groups, is that of a builder. Trumps social-media rants and diatribes against corrupt institutions create a common misperception that his appeal centers on tearing things down. In fact, his voters see him primarily as a constructive force. When asked to choose from a set of roles that they associate with Trump, 58 percent of survey participants selected a builder trying to fix a broken systemthe highest share of any option offered. For the Reluctant Right, this sense of construction is paired with an image of managerial competence: They are more likely than any of the other groups to describe Trump as a businessman or a CEO running a company. The perception of Trumps positive, constructive role helps explain why hope is the emotion that Trump supporters most commonly associate with his presidency.
Trumps second role is that of redeemer: someone who can restore his supporters status and respect in a society that they feel has long looked down on them. Most Trump voters in our study believe that Americas cultural institutions have been dominated by those who scorn their values and way of life. Seventy-six percent agree with the statement The woke left has ruined American education, news, and entertainment. Accompanying this diagnosis is a sense of disrespect from political elites and Democrats. Only a quarter of Trump voters feel respected by Americans who voted for Democrats, whereas 84 percent believe that President Trump respects people like me. (The important exception to this is the Reluctant Right, who feel respected by neither Trump nor Democrats.)
The third role is that of an energizing blasphemera violator of progressive norms. This identity resonates most strongly with MAGA Hardliners and Anti-Woke Conservatives, who believe that the political left has become a sanctimonious elite imposing its worldview on everyone else. About 90 percent of MAGA Hardliners and Anti-Woke Conservatives agree that the left actually hates America. This generates a desire not just for redemption but also for retribution. Trump presents himself as a norm-breaker who delights in poking his finger in his critics eyes: More than three-quarters of MAGA Hardliners and more than half of Anti-Woke Conservatives believe that President Trump should make the left pay for its mistakes and lies. This sense of transgression fuels a gleeful energy that runs through much of Trumps public communication. As Gina, a 50-year-old white woman who lives in Florida, told us, Trump is a gigantic orange flashing middle finger, and I love it.
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And Trump plays a fourth role - the "grand narrator" - for Trump supporters who distrust the media, most politicians, academics and scientists, and who believe they can only really trust Trump to explain what's going on. 93 percent of MAGA Hardliners and 72 percent of Anti-Woke Conservatives fall into this category. These IMO are the people most easily identified as his cult.
The authors point out Trump has emotional bonds with all these types of supporters - "he embodies the reality that they want" - and that's his strength. This is an irrational bond, rather than a shared ideology. So they can ignore his lies, failures to deliver on promises, and changing positions/goals.
This also means that unless any of Trump's possible GOP successors can forge similar emotional bonds with his cult - and there's no sign that they can - this gullible and irrational coalition won't hold together when he's gone.
Mister Ed
(6,855 posts)Please let it be so.
markodochartaigh
(5,153 posts)The voter who, regardless of reason, was willing to vote for an authoritarian Strong Leader who is not committed to democracy.
Grins
(9,294 posts)UpInArms
(54,217 posts)Cannot happen soon enough
returnee
(852 posts)and unempathetic or downright mean.
Hey Joe
(460 posts)He shit the bed in Davos with his slanderous lies and egomaniacal ramblings.
We will have to learn some hard truths as a nation going forward. Or we will go backwards.
Lonestarblue
(13,280 posts)Public schools in red states are teaching Republican propaganda or MAGA parents are home schooling and using slanted Christian textbooks that teach white supremacy.
Our medical and scientific research has been decimated and will take decades to rebuild. Our elite universities are under attack for not teaching Republican propaganda and hiring only white males.
Our public health has been undermined with anti-vaccine policies leading to more outbreaks of measles and other preventable childhood diseases. The beef industry has been rewarded with recommendations to eat more saturated and trans fats.
Our standing in the world is now close to most hated nation on Earth. Declines in tourism re costing our tourism industry billions.
People cannot afford groceries because of Trump policies favoring higher prices.
We have a Gestapo level police force murdering citizens, attacking legal protesters with impunity, and kidnapping and imprisoning babies and children.
I could go on and on, but you know who has made out like bandits in all this? Trump and his billionaire buddies. War on Americans is profitable.
Texin
(2,836 posts)milestogo
(22,740 posts)MaineBlueBear
(427 posts)Hillary was right!
deurbano
(2,981 posts)hueymahl
(2,904 posts)How many times do we have to learn this lesson?
While there is some truth to the sterotypes presented (like most stereotypes, there are nuggets of truth embedded in the simplification), Trump's support is far more nuanced and broader than the article's author wants to admit.
We did ourselves no favors in suppressing the after-action report of the last election. I fear we are doomed to repeat our mistakes.
Martin Eden
(15,403 posts)IMO the biggest mistake was Biden deciding to run for a 2nd term, at the end of which he would be 86 years old. When he finally dropped out of the campaign after the disastrous June debate exposed his decline it was too late to hold a primary, so a candidate who was not nominated by the voters and had very little appeal to independents had a limited time to mount a successful campaign.
The Harris campaign was also hampered by the lose-lose situation in Gaza. Witholding US military support for Israel would have run afoul of the powerful AIPAC lobby, and given ammo to our political opponents who would have screamed antisemitism and siding with terrorists. Instead, large swaths of Muslim citizens voted for Trump and millions of young people refused to vote for Harris.
But I suspect those aren't the mistakes to which you refer, so I'd like to understand what you think were the biggest mistakes by the Democratic Party which led to Trumps reelection.
I think one of them was Biden's perceived weakness (and by extension Kamala's) on our southern border. Building a wall would be stupid and ineffective, but they could have made a very public effort to beef up security in preventing illegal crossings. They also could have bolstered their law & order creds by providing more resources and fed cooperation with states and cities in taking down drug cartels & gangs.
But as for the anti-woke cultural war, what could or should the Democratic Party have done differently?
I will not support any candidate who advocates moving backwards on civil rights for People of Color and the LGBTQ community, or who would dismantle the wall between church and state. Or who backtracks on environmental protection and measures to avoid catastrophic climate change.
I think support for Trump and Republicans -- who do not serve the well being of their voters -- is to a large extent manufactured misperceptions by decades of false narratives in widespread rightwing media which is being further consolidated with billionaires purchasing multiple platforms.
I will not dispute that Democrats need more unified and better messaging, but we're up against a huge propaganda machine that keeps getting bigger.
We can certainly use a new charismatic national leader with even broader appeal than Barack Obama.
I'm interested in your thoughts on what the Democratic Party should do differently. I believe Trump is certainly handing us an opportunity, but we also need a positive message backed up with practical solutions in order to gain a lasting majority.
sinkingfeeling
(57,391 posts)Mc Mike
(9,255 posts)Last edited Sat Jan 24, 2026, 01:20 PM - Edit history (1)
All four types are failures.
progressoid
(52,678 posts)supported by right wing media, Musk, Bezos, etc. This isn't going away after he croaks.
EarthFirst
(3,993 posts)I dont give a flying fuck what motivates their brand of loyalty.
They pulled the lever for a madman who vocalized his intentions and had a 900-page playbook in tow.
They own this
paleotn
(21,723 posts)peppertree
(23,160 posts)I've known a good number of those "low tax" Republicans.
They are (mostly) fascists through and through - who are merely smart enough to know how monstrous it all really is, and feel they need a good pretext if asked.
And they smile form ear to ear, every time Jabba-the-Trump's goons murder someone (followed by a well-rehearsed rationalization).
paleotn
(21,723 posts)Not worthy of our help, pity or empathy. That's the price for throwing away democracy and becoming a neo-nazi. Actions have consequences, and the consequences for those actions last for the rest of their miserable lives.
allegorical oracle
(6,272 posts)Bluetus
(2,397 posts)No matter how you slice it, the really raving base (for any of the 4 reasons mentioned in the article) is probably around 10-15 million people, and gradually declining. We will never get any significant number of those votes. But > 4 times that many cast a vote for him, and that is on us for not presenting a clear and acceptable alternative.
And after all of this, we still have no clear leadership and messaging, especially from the DNC or the Congressional leadership. The clearest messaging is coming from Newsom, and he is putting it in terms that Americans can connect with.
I compare Newsom and Schiff. I have the greatest respect for both of them and don't question their integrity, patriotism, acuity or anything else. But when Newsom communicates, it leaves a mark. When Schiff communicates, it is really cringeworthy, like a dry college lecture on a subject nobody really wanted to be studying in the first place. Totally in the abstract. That's OK. We need people like Schiff in Congress, and in a normal world, maybe his type of aspirational abstractions would be OK. But that will never work with where the public is today.
Dr. Shepper
(3,220 posts)Is NAZI
Orrex
(66,757 posts)Orrex
(66,757 posts)Last edited Sat Jan 24, 2026, 11:55 PM - Edit history (1)
ancianita
(43,128 posts)My theory is that only those of the 74,000,000 who voted for him -- who are willing to see what's right in front of them, who read, and have a heart and conscience -- will change their votes in years ahead. I could be wrong.
peppertree
(23,160 posts)You had the die-hard fascists (the 'death to Jews and Gypsies' types);
the staunch anti-socialists (for whom democracy was of no concern, so long as 'das Sozialismus' was being kept at bay);
the 'economic' Nazis ('he's crazy - but the economy is better');
and the ones who mostly just went along to get along ('everyone I know seems to be for it - and I don't want trouble').
History likes to rhyme...
SheltieLover
(77,662 posts)Festivito
(13,862 posts)Trump is their idea of the epitome of one blessed by God.
We oft wonder why wealthy successful and should-be-smart people go for Trump. They see their success as God saying he loves them more than those lesser people below.
Therefore, George Soros must be the devil. So, a claim that protesters are paid is understandable and believed.
They are proud of their success. The church says they deserve approbation. They happily pay for the church. The church continues to applaud them.
Just another way to look at the many ways Republicans have to hold their flock.
Martin Eden
(15,403 posts)And they're upset because we don't respect them.