Tools
Change country:

Why the attempt to deplatform Trump failed so utterly

Donald Trump flanked by flags and crowds, standing in front oa a giant “Trump will fix it” sign.
President-elect Donald Trump takes the stage for his last rally of the election year at Van Andel Arena on November 5, 2024, in Grand Rapids, Michigan. | Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

The 2024 election has conclusively proven something that we really should have known since 2016: America’s gatekeepers have failed.

The premise of “gatekeeping,” as a political enterprise, is that there is a mainstream consensus that can be enforced by institutions designed to protect it. It works not by outright violent repression, but by deplatforming and shunning certain ideas, people, movements, and the like.

Gatekeeping, when successful, involves a collective of recognized authority figures declaring that something is out of bounds — and then that thing actually getting consigned to the fringes. No politician will engage with it, no talk show hosts will give it a respectful hearing, and only a tiny number of citizens will have heard of it. Think of how nearly everyone agreed, after 9/11, that conspiracy theorizing about the attack deserved scorn.

Trump’s wins are proof that gatekeeping doesn’t really work anymore. Immediately after the attack on the Capitol on January 6, 2021, there was a brief moment when leaders across the political spectrum agreed Trump was too dangerous to be allowed to remain in politics — and even tried to drive him out. In a January 8 email, Rupert Murdoch wrote that “Fox News [is] very busy pivoting … We want to make Trump a non person.” 

Yet Murdoch failed, pivoting back to pro-Trump coverage almost immediately. Every other attempt to shun Trump into political nonexistence has met with similar failure.

This isn’t just a Trump phenomenon. 

His chief allies and messengers — like Elon Musk, Joe Rogan, and Steve Bannon — have all been shunned or blacklisted to varying degrees. X/Twitter suffered a post-Musk ad revenue collapse, liberal musicians pulled their music from Spotify to pressure the streaming giant to drop Rogan, and Bannon just spent four months in federal prison (for good reason). None of these tactics have durably eroded these figures’ influence.

Nor is the failure of deplatforming even a famous person thing.

I’ve written extensively and repeatedly about the influence of obscure radicals on the mainstream Republican Party — the way that, for example, Vice President-elect JD Vance has explicitly cited someone who openly wants to topple American democracy as a key influence in his thinking about the executive branch. I’m hardly the only one: There’s a whole cottage industry of journalism devoted to tracing the linkages between the true fringe — internet weirdos with names like Bronze Age Pervert — and the Republican mainstream. 

Such links are no longer hidden, but out in the open. Yet, with a few exceptions, this kind of reporting doesn’t seem to have hurt, and it sometimes even helps the targets of the gatekeepers’ ire by raising their profiles.

Again and again, we’ve seen the gatekeepers’ efforts to deplatform their enemies into oblivion fail. And I think it has a lot to do with a mistaken analysis of power — specifically, a failure to appreciate just how much people with devoted followings can get away with in the 21st-century political-media environment.

Trumping the gatekeepers

In the past, the American mainstream consensus was enforced through bipartisan political agreement and a cultural apparatus dominated by elite institutions: a shared set of norms in those environs helping to define the rules of the political game. If you broke those rules, either by (for example) insulting the troops or particular ethnic groups, you could risk electoral defeat or even being exiled from polite public life.

Trump’s 2016 rise to power and 2024 political resurrection help us see why neither political nor cultural elites can enforce their old rules anymore.

Anyone who heads one of the two major parties already has a baseline floor of about 46 to 47 percent of the electorate. The most important voters in deciding the general election are swing voters. In a highly polarized country with two very different parties, swing voters tend to be people who definitionally don’t have very strong partisan preferences, seeing both parties as potential options. 

Candidates like Trump who enjoy unified support of a major party cannot truly be gatekept. They are definitionally part of the mainstream, and thus potentially electable thanks to the basic gravity of a two-party political system. 

All of this raises the question: How is it that Trump, an extremist, managed to seize control of the Republican Party in the first place?

For reasons I’ve documented extensively, including in my book The Reactionary Spirit, Trump managed to build a direct bond with a critical mass of GOP primary voters rooted in shared resentments and fears. These voters, like Trump and unlike Democratic partisans, were largely disdainful of any elite attempts to gatekeep him — either from the cultural mainstream or even the alternative elites of the Republican Party, which back in 2016 tried and failed to stop his initial rise in power.

In other words, Trump short-circuited the gatekeeping capacity of both the Republican Party and mainstream media.

After January 6, when some Republican elites tried again to break with Trump, they faced immense backlash from their base. Three days after his “non-person” email, Murdoch was walking things back — telling his son Lachlan that “we have to lead our viewers, which is not as easy as it might seem.” Fox’s viewers actually forced its CEO to reboard the Trump train.

So it’s Trump’s personal support, his mass following, that gives him and aligned Republicans the power to resist gatekeepers. 

The death of the old political-media order

There’s something else too. Shifts in the media landscape have allowed his allies in the cultural space to survive and even thrive for similar reasons.

In the past, it used to be hard enough to create a mass media enterprise that only a handful of people — the sorts who could operate television stations and mass newspaper distribution networks — could do it. Today, anyone can find fans on social media and work to monetize that following. Given direct access to a mass audience, unpopularity among cultural gatekeepers is far less of a concern than it used to be. 

Joe Rogan has millions of dedicated fans; those fans like him much more than the people trying to make listeners feel bad for enjoying his show. Steve Bannon’s War Room show is super popular among the Trump faithful, and remains so despite (or perhaps because of) his stint in prison. Nick Fuentes’s weird and creepy fans don’t really care if the mainstream media calls them weird and creepy for stanning a Nazi incel. All enjoy a level of influence and power because of their ties to Republicans who are unwilling to be shamed for said connections.

This fragmented landscape means there’s not enough cultural unification to ever really expel anyone from the discourse. When Fox News fired Tucker Carlson, many wondered why it took them so long: it was Fox that held the power, not its popular but increasingly difficult employee. Yet Carlson’s post-Fox trajectory — a successful turn to Twitter/X broadcasting that earned him a seat next to Trump at the Republican National Convention — reveals that even the Murdoch empire couldn’t cancel someone with Carlson’s devoted following.

Even if someone doesn’t have the personal draw of a Carlson or a Rogan, there are institutions dedicated to serving ever more extreme audiences that might be willing to hire you. If you get “canceled” at a mainstream outlet, you can go to Fox. If you get kicked off Fox News, NewsMax and One America News Network are out there waiting.

To be clear, there are benefits to the end of gatekeeping. By concentrating power in a smaller number of people and institutions, the old consensus encouraged groupthink, resulting in, for example, widespread cheerleading for the 2003 Iraq War. The era of gatekeeping was also meaningfully less democratic, in that it gave elites far more power than the people as a collective to set the terms of public debate. The creator economy, for all its faults, gives citizens the ability to financially empower voices they believe are unfairly cut out of public life. 

Yet those faults are undoubtedly immense. 

Donald Trump, a man who literally incited a riot on the Capitol and has openly vowed to attack democratic institutions in his second term, is president-elect largely — if not primarily — because he built a following that allowed him to short-circuit elite gatekeepers in both parties. And the gatekeepers, for all their flaws, adhered to basic standards of evidence and decency that simply can’t be enforced in our new political-media environment. Does anyone really think this country is better off now that someone like Fuentes has the juice to secure dinner with the once and future president?

Regardless of how you normatively evaluate these trade-offs — ones that I think point to thorny conceptual problems for liberalism itself — we need to be clear on where we’re at empirically. And the fact is that Trump and aligned Republican extremists clearly can’t be criticized into defeat. Nor can Musk be shamed into managing X more responsibly or Rogan ignored into political oblivion. 

Their opponents need a new tactic.


Read full article on: vox.com
Los actos musicales de la Premiere del Latin Grammy se inclinaron hacia la electrónica
Estos son los artistas que actuaron durante la Premiere del Latin Grammy en Miami
latimes.com
After two stamp hikes, the USPS lost nearly $10 billion in 2024
The U.S. Postal Service's loss widened in fiscal 2024, although revenue rose slightly after two stamp hikes this year.
cbsnews.com
Co-founder of conservative Federalist site, Benjamin Domenech, slams Matt Gaetz as ‘vile’ sexual predator
“The man is absolutely vile. There are pools of vomit with more to offer the earth than this STD-riddled testament to the failure of fallen masculinity."
nypost.com
NBA Rookie of the Year odds: 76ers’ Jared McCain favored over Hawks’ Zaccharie Risacher
The NBA Rookie of the Year race is wide open. 
nypost.com
Top MLS analyst Taylor Twellman removed from broadcast after physical altercation with producer
The former MLS star was on the air for the second game of the series but was pulled for the deciding game last weekend.
nypost.com
Tilda Swinton hints at retirement, says ‘Room Next Door’ might be the ‘last film I make’
"I feel The Room Next Door is the last film I make. Let’s see if anything else happens," said Tilda Swinton.
nypost.com
Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie’s bitter winery war heads to trial — but the case could rage through 2026
This month, a Los Angeles Superior Court judge shot down Jolie's attempts to have the case tossed, paving the way for the case to go ahead.
nypost.com
Craig Melvin held back tears, vowed to represent ‘Today’ show ‘like Hoda has,’ after being named as Kotb’s replacement at NBC
Staffers chanted, "Craig, Craig, Craig!" at a staff meeting when Savannah Guthrie welcomed them to the "Craig era!"
nypost.com
Putin cuts payouts for wounded Russian soldiers as casualty counts surge
Russian dictator Vladimir Putin is slashing payments to Russian soldiers wounded in Ukraine in the face of rising casualties and mushrooming war costs.
nypost.com
Protests erupt in Paris over pro-Israel gala organized by far-right figures
The event, intended to raise funds for the Israeli military, included Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich among its invited guests.
latimes.com
After Trump's White House visit, Charlamagne asks how Biden went from 'threat to democracy' to 'welcome back!'
Podcaster Charlamagne Tha God spoke once again about President Biden's abrupt change in rhetoric regarding President-elect Trump after the election.
foxnews.com
The Christian Bale Batmobile is being built for home use — but you need Bruce Wayne money to own it
Holy sticker shock, Batman!
nypost.com
Trump announces pick to replace federal prosecutor targeting Mayor Adams
President-elect Donald Trump revealed plans Thursday to replace the prosecutor targeting Mayor Adams, announcing he will tap his former Securities and Exchange Commission Chair Jay Clayton as the attorney for the Southern District of New York. Jay Clayton That post is currently held by Damian Williams, who has gone after Adams and a number of...
nypost.com
‘Disgusting’ Jenny Mollen slammed for getting on a plane with lice
The actress' husband, Jason Biggs, and their two children were also infected with lice.
nypost.com
Kennedy Could Save Gaetz
Trump doesn’t really care about Kennedy’s issues, but would like to look as if he does.
nytimes.com
Stream It Or Skip It: ‘Emilia Perez’ on Netflix, a Wild, Nutty Musical Melodrama About a Trans Cartel Boss and Her Loyal Lawyer
Karlia Sofia Gascon is extraordinary in the title role.
nypost.com
Donald Trump Fills His Cabinet
Will Senate Republicans get in the way?
slate.com
Officer suspended after body-cam shows him throwing 71-year-old to ground
The man is still hospitalized with a brain bleed. A community leader says its the latest instance of police mistreating Vietnamese Americans in Oklahoma.
washingtonpost.com
Oklahoma City cop is investigated for slamming 70-year-old man to the ground
Lich Vu has been in the hospital since the Oct. 27 incident that left him with a brain bleed and a broken neck. The altercation with the police officer involved a dispute over a traffic ticket.
npr.org
Influencer slammed for complaining her flight was canceled after volcano eruption: ‘People are literally dying’
An influencer living in Bali has been shamed for complaining on social media that her flight to Australia had been canceled and she needed to get back for a hen’s party on the weekend.
nypost.com
India's capital introduces stricter anti-pollution measures as toxic smog hides Taj Mahal
To combat worsening air quality, India's government has banned non-essential construction and encouraged residents to avoid burning coal for heating.
foxnews.com
New Senate bipartisan border bill introduced in wake of Trump election victory
The Border Smuggling Crackdown Act raises federal penalties based on the number of people smuggled and severity of harm, aiming to deter organized human smuggling.
foxnews.com
Jayden Maiava poised to become the first Polynesian starting quarterback at USC
Jayden Maiava knows he will be setting an example for others when he becomes the first Polynesian to start at quarterback at USC Saturday.
latimes.com
U.S. ambassador bashes Mexico's security efforts. Mexico's president pushes back
The diplomatic dustup comes amid threats from President-elect Donald Trump to impose tariffs, deploy U.S. troops to go after cartels and conduct mass deportations.
latimes.com
Former Marine misused a combat technique in fatal chokehold of NYC subway rider, trainer testifies
A former military combat instructor says a fellow Marine veteran misused a combat move when he fatally choked a homeless man on the New York subway.
latimes.com
King Charles reveals what made him cry recently: ‘It reduced me to tears’
A right royal cry.
nypost.com
Why credit card rates remain high, even after interest rate cuts
Credit card interest rates stand near a record high.
abcnews.go.com
Josh Brolin uses nicotine pouches 24 hours a day
Actor Josh Brolin admitted he will sleep with nicotine pouches in his mouth and once had seven cavities due to using nicotine lozenges too often.
foxnews.com
Daily Hezbollah strikes begin to dwindle as Israel closes in on cease-fire deal: officials
The number of daily Hezbollah rocket strikes against Israel have fallen by nearly half as officials say they are as close as they'll ever be to reaching a cease-fire deal in Lebanon.
nypost.com
Chicago radio rivals at odds over explosive Caleb Williams-Bears report
Hosts at rival Chicago sports talk radio stations have a very difference sense of what's going on at Halas Hall.
nypost.com
Ariana Grande & Cynthia Erivo made a no-drama pact on‘Wicked’ set
If you’re gonna be a diva, you better be a diplomat too. Vocal powerhouses Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande made a “pact” before filming the “Wicked” movie to prevent any drama between them. Page Six Senior Reporter Carlos Greer is revealing why they made this agreement. Subscribe to our YouTube for the latest on all your favorite...
nypost.com
John Tesh is playing hardball with NBC over ‘Roundball Rock’ theme song
John Tesh is reportedly complicating negotiations with NBC to bring back his famous theme song "Roundball Rock" when the NBA's new media rights deals begin in the 2025-26 season.
nypost.com
After more than 20 years of study, scientists are ready to say what they found off Monterey's coast
The Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute used underwater technology for two decades to gather more information on a mysterious sea slug.
latimes.com
Breast cancer vaccine update from Cleveland Clinic: ‘A new era’
A breast cancer vaccine could be closer to reality, according to Cleveland Clinic, as its researchers have announced some encouraging results. Researchers and doctors weigh in.
foxnews.com
Warren Buffett reveals craving for Domino’s, while cutting back on Apple — on Berkshire’s investment portfolio
Berkshire Hathaway also owned 404,000 shares of Pool, a distributor of swimming pool supplies.
1 h
nypost.com
Trump nominates former SEC chairman Jay Clayton as US attorney for Southern District of NY
President-elect Trump nominated the former chairman of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, Jay Clayton, to serve as the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York.
1 h
foxnews.com
Martha Stewarts wants do-over of 'lazy' documentary, admits she disliked filming with 'intense' director
Martha Stewart has made several public complaints about her Netflix documentary, 'Martha,' and wanting a second chance to tell her story fully.
1 h
foxnews.com
Can Trump ban trans athletes from school sports?
LGBTQ rights supporters gather at the Texas state Capitol to protest state Republican-led efforts to pass legislation that would restrict the participation of transgender student athletes on the first day of the 87th Legislature’s third special session on September 20, 2021 in Austin, Texas. | Tamir Kalifa/Getty Images President-elect Donald Trump and his allies have made clear — including through stated policy positions and chosen campaign surrogates — that his administration intends to bar trans athletes from playing on school sports teams that match their gender identity.  “The president bans it,” Trump said at a Fox News event in Georgia last month. “You just don’t let it happen. Not a big deal.” Trump and other Republicans have primarily threatened the participation of trans girls in K-12 sports programs, though college athletes wouldn’t be immune from any action Trump decides to take.  Trump’s threats raise the question: Could he challenge trans athletes’ right to compete in school sports? How would Trump enact such a ban? The short answer is yes. Trump could strip away civil rights and nondiscrimination protections enumerated under the Biden administration, which specifically apply to trans students. The executive branch has a lot of control over what counts as discrimination in education, thanks to Title IX, a civil rights law originally meant to advance women’s equality. The Biden administration took the position that the law’s protections against discrimination “on the basis of sex” mean that discrimination against trans students on the basis of their trans identity qualifies as sex discrimination.  That interpretation of the law faced legal challenges and has been rejected by about half of the states. The Trump administration can — and likely will — simply take the stance that Title IX offers no protections to trans students.  The Trump administration’s interpretation of Title IX could go even further by arguing that “​​it is discriminatory against girls to have trans athletes participating in girls’ sports,” according to Jon Valant, director of the Brown Center on Education Policy at the Brookings Institution.  There could be new legal battles over Title IX if Democratic governors and attorneys general moved to stop the new interpretation — essentially the reverse of the current Title IX landscape. Ultimately, the administration could go through Congress and try to rewrite Title IX, explicitly stating those positions rather than merely interpreting the current law that way, Valant said. Rep. Tim Burchett (R-TN) already proposed a law in July undoing the Biden-era regulations. Trump has also said he will ask Congress to pass a bill stating that only two genders exist.  Republicans will hold narrow majorities in both the House and the Senate. It’s possible that such a bill could pass, though it would likely face some difficulty in the Senate, where Republicans lack a filibuster-proof majority.  Outside of federal action, some states like Florida already have bans against transgender students participating in school sports. Under that law, only people assigned female at birth can play on girls’ sports teams.  These kinds of laws could be stepping stones in dismantling trans people’s right to nondiscrimination in schools and the workplace, as well as their ability to access health care, Gillian Branstetter, communications strategist at the ACLU’s Women’s Rights Project and LGBTQ & HIV Project, told Vox.  “I can’t think of a single state or politician that has adopted this issue that has decided that they’re just going to narrowly focus on the rights of transgender athletes,” Branstetter said. “They have, using the exact same legal arguments, using the exact same legislative language, and usually using the exact same lawyers, also used these [tactics] to ban gender-affirming health care, to restrict what bathrooms trans people can use, and a long litany of other restrictions.”
1 h
vox.com
The Sanewashing of RFK Jr. Is Under Way
Let’s call a crank a crank.
1 h
theatlantic.com
We tasted Sweetgreen’s new fries, and so far, not so good
Sweetgreen is testing fries ahead of a nationwide rollout as the company looks to broaden its appeal beyond salad-seekers.
1 h
washingtonpost.com
Leah McSweeney faces off in court against Andy Cohen’s lawyers in dramatic first hearing over Bravo suit
The "Real Housewives of New York City" alum first sued Cohen and Bravo earlier this year, claiming her substance abuse issues were exploited for ratings.
1 h
nypost.com
Brad Pitt, Angelina Jolie's heated winery battle will head to court
Brad Pitt's legal claims against Angelina Jolie can be brought to trial, a judge ruled. The "Fight Club" star sued Jolie in 2022 over her sale of Château Miraval.
1 h
foxnews.com
Trump taps RFK Jr. to lead Department of Health and Human Services
President-elect Trump tapped Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to lead the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
1 h
foxnews.com
In Matt Gaetz, Donald Trump has chosen the anti-attorney general
The Florida congressman lacks the character, record or ability to lead the Justice Department, confirming the president-elect's intent to dismantle the rule of law.
1 h
latimes.com
Trump’s transition team aims to kill Biden EV tax credit
President-elect Donald Trump's transition team is planning to kill the $7,500 consumer tax credit for electric-vehicle purchases as part of broader tax-reform legislation.
1 h
nypost.com
Alix Earle gives tour of ‘cozy’ new Los Angeles apartment full of florals, abstract art and more
The TikTok star revealed on her podcast that she was moving to LA because she found that Miami wasn't "a great hub" for the influencer industry.
1 h
nypost.com
Mavericks vs. Jazz prediction: NBA picks, odds, best bets Thursday
It’s a quiet night Thursday in the Association, as there’s just one game on the card with the Dallas Mavericks visiting the Jazz.
1 h
nypost.com
Stream It Or Skip It: ‘Holidazed’ On Hallmark+, Where Families On A Cul-de-sac Deal With The Joys And Stresses Of The Holidays
The sprawling limited series stars Virginia Madsen, John C. McGinley, Dennis Haysbert, Loretta Devine, Rachelle Lefevre and Lucille Soong.
1 h
nypost.com