GOP Contenders Fuel Voter Distrust in Courts, Schools, and Military

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GOP Contenders Fuel Voter Distrust in Courts, Schools, and Military
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As Donald Trump escalates his attacks on the justice system and other core institutions, his competitors for the Republican nomination have followed his lead. GOP contenders feed voter distrust in courts, schools, military:

President of the United States from 2017 to 2021American politician and businessman

Yet, there is little doubt about the political incentives behind the statements. Polls show that Americans’ trust in their institutions has fallen to historic lows, with Republicans exhibiting more doubt across a broad swath of public life. DeSantis, however, has echoed that view, making criticisms of educators, health officials, mainstream media, “elites” and government employees central to his campaign, and even, at times, invoking violent imagery.

Running against the government is hardly new, especially for Republicans. For decades, the party called for shrinking the size and reach of some federal programs — with the exception of the military — and treated President Ronald Reagan’s declaration that “government is the problem” as a guiding principle.

A Gallup poll released in July found that public confidence in major U.S. institutions is at record low levels, with historic levels of distrust in the military, police, schools, big business and technology. Several other institutions — including the presidency, the Supreme Court and the criminal justice system as well as newspapers and broadcast news, are just slightly above the record low they hit last year.

In a Fox News interview, he recently said, “The military that I see is different from the military I served in.” But that does not explain the whole picture. The public’s trust in government institutions has been slipping for decades, first declining in the wake of the Vietnam War and then again after Watergate and yet again after the war in Iraq and the Great Recession.

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