David North
“Tocqueville saw that the life of constant action and
decision which was entailed by the democratic and businesslike character of
American life put a premium upon rough and ready habits of mind, quick
decision, and the prompt seizure of opportunities - and that all this activity
was not propitious for deliberation, elaboration, or precision in thought.”
Richard Hofstadter, Anti-Intellectualism in American Life
"In the eyes of a philistine, a revolutionary point of
view is virtually equivalent to an absence of scientific objectivity. We think
just the opposite: only a revolutionist... is capable of laying bare the
objective dynamics of the revolution."
Leon Trotsky-In Defence of Marxism
Richard Hofstadter's 1964 essay remains one of the most
frequently cited analyses of American liberal politics. It's worth examining
carefully because, despite its deeply flawed and class-hostile framework, it
contains a valuable insight. Hofstadter accurately notes a recurring pattern in
American political history: movements that attribute social grievances to
concealed conspiracies—such as Masonic plots, Jesuit infiltration, and
Communist subversion. He correctly observes that this tendency has persisted for
centuries and spans the entire political spectrum.
However, Hofstadter's analysis primarily serves as a tool of
the liberal establishment to suppress popular discontent. His approach is
largely psychological and cultural, viewing 'the paranoid style' as a mental
disorder, a tendency to perceive enemies and conspiracies. This perspective
conveniently avoids addressing a more critical issue: why do millions of people
lose trust in official institutions and seek out conspiracy theories?
From a Marxist view, the fundamental causes are social and
historical, not psychiatric. Conspiracy beliefs stem from a distorted
perception of genuine alienation. Workers feel invisible, unacknowledged, and
subjected to uncontrollable forces that influence their lives. Their wages are
affected by obscure market forces, and distant financial decisions harm their
communities. They perceive their government as serving the rich, their unions
as failing, and the mainstream media as spreading misinformation.
When people sense that powerful hidden forces influence
their lives but lack the scientific tools of Marxist class analysis,
conspiracy theories often fill this gap. The "paranoid style"
distorts class analysis that never materialised, serving as a personalised,
often racialised alternative to understanding capitalism as a system.
Hofstadter, a Columbia University historian, wrote during the Cold War
liberalism, in an environment that aimed to discredit both McCarthyism
and socialist politics by depicting political "extremism" on
both sides as pathological. This reflects the logic of the "vital centre"
referenced in Arthur Schlesinger Jr.'s 1949 manifesto, which claimed that capitalist
liberal democracy was the final, rational stage of history and viewed
challenges from the left or right as irrational.[1]
This framework aims to discredit working-class
radicalism by associating it with right-wing conspiracy theories, which
are viewed as demonstrations of "status anxiety" and psychological
projection. Unlike Marxists, who recognise the ruling class and advocate its
overthrow, Hofstadter considers such thinking paranoid. The critical point
Hofstadter overlooks, due to the limitations of his framework, is that
conspiratorial politics arise from a political vacuum. When the working
class lacks independent political parties, a socialist press, and revolutionary
leaders, and when its official organisations, like unions and the Democratic
Party, are fully integrated into capitalism, discontent cannot develop
rationally; instead, it becomes irrational.
The Long Shadow of
History
Richard Hofstadter plays a key role in the intellectual
history outlined by David North in his lecture "The Long Shadow of
History." Hofstadter was arguably the most influential academic historian
in shaping the ideological landscape after World War II. North highlights the
transition of American liberal and left-leaning thinkers from critically
examining capitalism to adopting the "consensus" approach associated
with Cold War liberalism.
Hofstadter began his academic journey with genuinely radical
ideas, authoring The American Political Tradition (1948) from a critical
perspective. However, he quickly became the leading figure of the so-called
'consensus school' in American historiography, which asserts that American
history is defined more by shared liberal-capitalist values than by class
conflict. This shift represents the same intellectual move North describes,
removing class struggle as a meaningful category in historical analysis. Unlike
progressive historians like Charles Beard, who highlighted economic conflict,
Hofstadter framed political radicalism as a result of "status
anxiety", a psychological disorder among declining social groups rather
than a rational reaction to class exploitation.
Hofstadter's The Age of Reform (1955) further discounted the
Populist movement as a true agrarian revolt, arguing that it was fueled by
status resentment, nativism, and conspiracy theories. This perspective enabled
him to restore the mainstream narrative of American capitalism as a benign and
progressive system, temporarily sidetracked by the irrational passions of marginalised
social groups.
Hofstadter's most famous essay, "The Paranoid Style in
American Politics" (1964), offers important insights. Initially, it seems
to criticise right-wing irrationalism. Still, its underlying goal was to frame
all anti-establishment politics as psychological issues, turning serious
critiques of capitalism into signs of mental illness rather than rational
debates. This view aligned with Cold War ideology, allowing liberal
intellectuals to appear rational and objective while dismissing both the
socialist left and the McCarthyite right as equally paranoid. According to
North, this approach was the simplest option for liberals after they felt
discredited by Stalinism, shifting from Marxist critiques of Stalinism and
capitalism to a smug, depoliticised centrist stance that considered ideology a
mental disturbance.
North's lecture highlights the social foundation of this
intellectual development. Hofstadter and other postwar academics were
petty-bourgeois thinkers whose material interests were linked to their roles
within capitalist institutions. North notes that this social layer often
exhibits traits such as egotism, selfishness, and cowardice, which influence
individuals' participation in this process. As postwar prosperity returned and
McCarthyism threatened academic careers, many sought comfort in consensus liberalism
instead of engaging in the challenging, risky, and academically rigorous
pursuit of true Marxism.
The irony lies in his characterisation of political
radicalism as "paranoia" or "status anxiety," which itself
reflects the Cold War era's suppression of socialist ideas. His work remained
within ideological boundaries, effectively supporting them by providing an
academic justification for the ruling class's efforts to delegitimise
class-based politics. The phrase "paranoid style" aptly describes
Hofstadter's academic setting, a group of well-paid scholars who genuinely
struggled to understand why workers might rightly believe capitalism causes
their hardships.
Hofstadter’s
Revival
Hofstadter's essay has seen a significant resurgence during
the Trump era, often invoked by liberal commentators to frame MAGA as a form of
collective mental illness. This interpretation is even more politically naive
than the original. It enables the Democratic Party and the broader liberal
establishment to avoid responsibility for social issues such as
deindustrialisation, the opioid crisis, the 2008 financial collapse, and
ongoing wars, which fuel Trump’s anger. Labelling it "paranoia" is a
dismissive stereotype that shields the ruling class from accountability.
Hofstadter identified the symptom but wrongly diagnosed it as a mental
disorder, recommending liberal rationalism as the remedy.
When Trump descended the escalator in 2015 and eventually
won the presidency in 2016 and again in 2024, the American liberal
intelligentsia swiftly turned to Hofstadter's work. His essay, The Paranoid
Style in American Politics, was extensively reprinted, cited, and regarded as
essential for understanding the Trump phenomenon. The dominant perspective was
that Trump embodies a modern expression of America's irrational,
conspiratorial, and "paranoid" tendencies with QAnon, birtherism, and
MAGA mythology viewed as contemporary equivalents of McCarthyism and
anti-Masonic movements. Prominent outlets like The New York Times, The
Atlantic, NPR, and many liberal commentators articulated this interpretation
with apparent satisfaction.
In March 2016, David North examined Trump's Super Tuesday
surge. He questioned not why millions of workers hold skewed or irrational
beliefs, but why the genuine, justified anger of the working class has been
directed towards a right-wing demagogue instead of a socialist movement. North
stated, "More than any other Republican candidate, Trump has tailored his
message to resonate with the intense anger and frustration of tens of millions
of Americans who feel quite rightly neglected and scorned by a political system
that overlooks their daily issues."
Hofstadter's framework aims to discourage this kind of
statement. Labelling a Trump supporter as "paranoid" shifts the
debate from social and political issues—like deindustrialisation, wage
stagnation, the opioid crisis, the 2008 financial collapse and bailouts, and
ongoing conflicts—toward alleged mental flaws within the working class. This
effectively redirects attention away from objective problems, serving as a
strategy used by the ruling class.
North asked , "Why haven't workers turned left despite
all this suffering?" The answer isn't in their minds but in the deliberate
dismantling of political tools that could have offered them a left alternative.
The Democratic Party had long neglected the working class. Under Obama, who
promised "change," the administration bailed out Wall Street,
expanded drone strikes, deported more immigrants than any previous president,
and oversaw the largest wealth transfer upward in U.S. history. Corporate
interests co-opted Unions. The pseudo-left, including the DSA, the Sanders
campaign, and the NGO-industrial complex, diverted political energy back into
the Democratic Party and suppressed it. As North observed: "The essential
characteristics of this political milieu are complacency, self-absorption, and,
above all, contempt for the working class."
When the working class has no party, no press, no socialist
leadership, and every official institution claiming to represent it has
betrayed it, a right-wing demagogue who at least names the enemy (even if he
names it falsely) will find an audience. Trump's "Make America Great
Again" is a distorted, nationalist, scapegoating substitute for a class
analysis that was never provided. The Hofstadter framework, by calling this
"paranoia," performs exactly the function it is meant to perform: it
insulates the Democratic Party and the liberal establishment from
accountability.
The slogan "Make America Great Again" fits within
a long tradition of fascist-style national mythology. As North notes, "one
of the critical elements of all fascist movements is extreme nationalism and
the promotion of miraculous cures to capitalism's problems on a national
scale." Hitler aimed to restore Germany's greatness after the Treaty of
Versailles; Trump seeks to revive America's greatness after decades of
deindustrialisation and imperial decline. In both instances, the
"restoration" is a nationalist myth that masks the true cause of
workers' struggles — the capitalist system itself — and shifts blame onto
scapegoats such as immigrants, minorities, foreign powers, and
"globalists."
The ideological function of the "paranoid style"
revival in the Trump era can be stated plainly: It pathologises the working
class rather than analysing the social conditions that produce political
irrationalism. It transforms a political and economic crisis into a cultural or
psychological one, thereby making it invisible to social analysis and immune to
socialist remedy.
It rehabilitates liberalism as the rational alternative as
though the "vital centre" of Clinton, Obama, and Harris hadn't
produced the very conditions that generated Trump. Hofstadter's framework
always points back to the defence of existing institutions, existing parties,
and the existing economic order. "Extremism" on both ends is
pathological; the centre is healthy. This is ideologically indistinguishable
from the Cold War liberalism that Hofstadter himself served.
It disarms the working class by teaching workers that their
own anger is a symptom of disease rather than a legitimate response to
exploitation. Millions of workers who correctly understand that powerful,
hidden forces control their lives — that decisions are made in Wall Street
boardrooms that destroy their communities, that politicians lie to them, that
wars are launched for interests other than theirs — are told their perception
is "paranoid." The Marxist response is to say: your perception is
correct, but your analysis of who is responsible and what must be done is
wrong. That is a political task, not a psychiatric one.
As North insisted from the moment Trump emerged, the answer
to the far right is not a return to the liberal centre it is the construction of a revolutionary
socialist party capable of giving the working class a scientific understanding
of its situation and a program for fighting back. Trump is not an aberration
from American capitalism; he is its product. He is the political form
capitalism takes when its contradictions reach a breaking point, and the
working class has been left without a genuine alternative. Defeating fascism
requires abolishing the conditions that produce it which means abolishing capitalism itself.
Hofstadter's liberal rationalism has never built a single
rank-and-file committee, never organised a single strike, never told a single
worker the truth about who actually runs the country and why. As an analytical
tool for the left, it is worse than useless
it is a weapon pointed in the wrong direction.




