Opinion
Federal Opinion

Trump, Fox News, and Educating the American Voter

By Marc Tucker — September 19, 2016 4 min read
  • Save to favorites
  • Print

Like so many others, I am watching the presidential campaign unfold with a gathering sense of dread. Thomas Jefferson famously told us that “if a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be.” For more than two centuries, we have pinned our hopes on our faith that an educated citizenry will, more often than not, do the right thing.

But now it appears that on the order of 40 percent of the citizenry is not interested in the facts or expert analysis based on the facts, and it is eager to elect to the highest office in the land a man whose contempt for the facts, for reasoning, and for the U.S. Constitution is obvious. How did this happen in a country that practically invented mass education?

BRIC ARCHIVE

I have argued in my Education Week blog, Top Performers, that this is due, in part, to the policies of experts, which have profoundly hurt poorly educated people who can no longer compete in what has become a global market for labor—or against intelligent machines doing the same work, only now faster and cheaper. They are understandably angry with both the experts and their facts. But now it seems that these voters’ distrust of expertise, the facts, and even reasoning itself was intentionally fueled.

In July, the New York Times journalist James Poniewozik argued in “Roger Ailes Fused TV With Politics, Changing Both” that Donald Trump’s rise was made possible by a very deliberate and sophisticated effort to produce exactly that result in a propaganda campaign designed to make the Fox News Channel very rich and Ailes the Republican kingmaker. And, in the process, to subvert the kind of democracy Thomas Jefferson had in mind.

See Also

To read more opinion on what this election means for K-12 schools, please visit:

Before Ailes’ reign over Fox News, the general tone for TV news had been set by the likes of Edward R. Murrow and Walter Cronkite—sober, objective, fact-based, analytical, middle-of-the-road, and responsible. Ailes threw out the rules. The other news outlets were declared to be left-leaning and biased. Fox would introduce “balance” by presenting only conservative voices. Fox News was designed to gain an audience by nurturing “resentment politics,” crafted for an audience of people who grew to feel that they were being left behind by the elites.

To make this model work, Poniewozik explains, the sense of grievance that was key to the model had to be constantly stoked: Whatever the viewer once held that made him or her “great"—religion, race, values, work—was being hijacked by “them.” Only Fox knew what was going on; only Fox understood you; only Fox News could be trusted to tell it like it really is.

None of this was done casually. Ailes’ team dreamed up these grievances, but only presented them on the news once they had been carefully field-tested with their audience, so they knew they would work. This is how “anchor babies,” “birtherism,” and “Ground Zero mosque” came into the public square, Poniewozik points out.

The facts were irrelevant. The facts, and the experts who offered them, were tools used by “the other side” to fool people. What mattered were emotions and the art of playing on people’s emotions. A firewall was built against the facts, against analysis, against expertise.

Our students need to develop a respect for the facts, for empiricism, for reasoned argument, and for one another."

Enter Donald Trump onto this carefully prepared ground. Thomas Jefferson’s worst fear personified: loud, angry, ignorant, and perfectly attuned to the fears and grievances that had been so carefully identified and nurtured. And yet, this should never have happened. This is exactly what mass education was supposed to inoculate us against.

What went wrong?

I submit that there is no more important function of American education than to give students the tools they need to preserve democracy and the freedoms and liberty with which we are blessed. How do we do that? It may be difficult, but it is not complicated. Our students need to understand the origins of freedom, liberty, and constitutional government from their beginnings in ancient Greece, to their revival in the Scottish enlightenment, to their expression in the cauldron of the American Revolution. Our students need to understand how fragile democracy is, and they need to study how freedom, democracy, and constitutional government were undermined in the interwar years in Weimar Germany. They need to know how our government was designed to work, and how various forces over the years have compromised that design and have reversed it.

But, at the root of it all, our students need to develop a respect for the facts, for empiricism, for reasoned argument, and for one another. There is no doubt: Roger Ailes should have been brought down because of the appalling way he reportedly treated women at Fox News. But what price should he pay for paving the way for Donald Trump, for deliberately creating an electorate that deeply distrusts the facts and anyone who has expertise, for creating a world in which voters are willing to suspend reason in favor of turning their lives over to people whose expertise consists entirely of knowing how to press their emotional buttons?

I hope American educators will seize the opportunity to ask themselves what went wrong here and to consider what changes need to be made in the curriculum and how it is taught in order to develop a citizenry that is not so easily led by emotion rather than clear thinking. Ailes may be gone, but Fox management has announced that the Fox News formula will continue. American educators should be working overtime to make it a whole lot harder for that formula to succeed.

Related Tags:

A version of this article appeared in the September 21, 2016 edition of Education Week as Truth, Education, And the American Voter

Events

School & District Management Webinar Squeeze More Learning Time Out of the School Day
Learn how to increase learning time for your students by identifying and minimizing classroom disruptions.
This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Reading & Literacy Webinar
Improve Reading Comprehension: Three Tools for Working Memory Challenges
Discover three working memory workarounds to help your students improve reading comprehension and empower them on their reading journey.
Content provided by Solution Tree
Recruitment & Retention Webinar EdRecruiter 2026 Survey Results: How School Districts are Finding and Keeping Talent
Discover the latest K-12 hiring trends from EdWeek’s nationwide survey of job seekers and district HR professionals.

EdWeek Top School Jobs

Teacher Jobs
Search over ten thousand teaching jobs nationwide — elementary, middle, high school and more.
View Jobs
Principal Jobs
Find hundreds of jobs for principals, assistant principals, and other school leadership roles.
View Jobs
Administrator Jobs
Over a thousand district-level jobs: superintendents, directors, more.
View Jobs
Support Staff Jobs
Search thousands of jobs, from paraprofessionals to counselors and more.
View Jobs

Read Next

Federal Video Here’s What the Ed. Dept. Upheaval Will Mean for Schools
The Trump administration took significant steps this week toward eliminating the U.S. Department of Education.
1 min read
The U.S. Department of Education building is pictured in a double exposure on Oct. 24, 2025, in Washington, D.C.
The U.S. Department of Education building is pictured in a double exposure on Oct. 24, 2025, in Washington, D.C.
Maansi Srivastava for Education Week
Federal What State Education Chiefs Think as Trump Moves Programs Out of the Ed. Dept.
The department's announcement this week represents a consequential structural change for states.
6 min read
The U.S. Department of Education building is seen behind the Dwight D. Eisenhower Memorial on Oct. 24, 2025 in Washington, D.C.
The U.S. Department of Education building is seen behind the Dwight D. Eisenhower Memorial on Oct. 24, 2025 in Washington, D.C. The department is shifting many of its functions to four other federal agencies as the Trump administration tries to downsize it. State education chiefs stand to be most directly affected.
Maansi Srivastava for Education Week
Federal See Where the Ed. Dept.'s Programs Will Move as the Trump Admin. Downsizes
Programs overseen by the Ed. Dept. will move to agencies including the Department of Labor.
President Donald Trump signs an executive order regarding education in the Oval Office of the White House, Wednesday, April 23, 2025, in Washington, as Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer, and Education Secretary Linda McMahon watch.
President Donald Trump signs an executive order regarding education in the Oval Office of the White House on April 23, 2025, as Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer, and Education Secretary Linda McMahon watch. The Trump administration on Tuesday announced that it's sending many of the Department of Education's K-12 and higher education programs to other federal agencies.
Alex Brandon/AP
Federal Most K-12 Programs Will Leave Education Department in Latest Downsizing
The Trump administration announced six agreements to transfer Ed. Dept. programs elsewhere.
U.S. Secretary of Education Linda McMahon is interviewed by Indiana’s Secretary of Education Katie Jenner during the 2025 Reagan Institute Summit on Education in Washington, D.C., on Sept. 18, 2025.
U.S. Secretary of Education Linda McMahon is interviewed by Indiana Secretary of Education Katie Jenner during the 2025 Reagan Institute Summit on Education in Washington, D.C., on Sept. 18, 2025. The U.S. Department of Education on Tuesday unveiled six agreements moving administration of many of its key functions to other federal agencies.
Leah Millis for Education Week