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Silent majority

The silent majority is an unspecified large group of people in a country or group who do not express their opinions publicly.[1] The term was popularized by U.S. President Richard Nixon in a televised address on November 3, 1969, in which he said, "And so tonight—to you, the great silent majority of my fellow Americans—I ask for your support."[2][3] In this usage it referred to those Americans who did not join in the large demonstrations against the Vietnam War at the time, who did not join in the counterculture, and who did not participate in public discourse. Nixon, along with many others, saw this group of Middle Americans as being overshadowed in the media by the more vocal minority.

Preceding Nixon by half a century, it was employed in 1919 by Calvin Coolidge's campaign for the 1920 presidential nomination. Before that, the phrase was used in the 19th century as a euphemism referring to all the people who have died, and others have used it before and after Nixon to refer to groups of voters in various nations of the world.

Early meanings edit

Euphemism for the dead edit

'The majority' or 'the silent majority' can be traced back to the Roman writer Petronius, who wrote abiit ad plures (he is gone to the majority) to describe deceased people, since the dead outnumber the living.[4] (In 2023 there were approximately 14.6 dead for every living person.[5][6]). The phrase was used for much of the 19th century to refer to the dead. Phrases such as "gone to a better world", "gone before", and "joined the silent majority" served as euphemisms for "died".[7] In 1902, Supreme Court Justice John Marshall Harlan employed this sense of the phrase, saying in a speech that "great captains on both sides of our Civil War have long ago passed over to the silent majority, leaving the memory of their splendid courage."[8]

Groups of voters edit

In May 1831, the expression "silent majority" was spoken by Churchill C. Cambreleng, representative of New York state, before 400 members of the Tammany Society.[9] Cambreleng complained to his audience about a U.S federal bill that had been rejected without full examination by the United States House of Representatives. Cambreleng's "silent majority" referred to other representatives who voted as a bloc:

Whenever majorities trample upon the rights of minorities—when men are denied even the privilege of having their causes of complaint examined into—when measures, which they deem for their relief, are rejected by the despotism of a silent majority at a second reading—when such become the rules of our legislation, the Congress of this Union will no longer justly represent a republican people.[9]

In 1883, an anonymous author calling himself "A German" wrote a memorial to Léon Gambetta, published in The Contemporary Review, a British quarterly. Describing French Conservatives of the 1870s, the writer opined that "their mistake was, not in appealing to the country, but in appealing to it in behalf of a Monarchy which had yet to be defined, instead of a Republic which existed; for in the latter case they would have had the whole of that silent majority with them."[10]

In 1919, Madison Avenue advertising executive and Republican Party supporter Bruce Barton employed the term to bolster Calvin Coolidge's campaign for the 1920 Republican Presidential nomination. In Collier's magazine, Barton portrayed Coolidge as the everyman candidate: "It sometimes seems as if this great silent majority had no spokesman. But Coolidge belongs with that crowd: he lives like them, he works like them, and understands."[11][12]

Referring to Charles I of England, historian Veronica Wedgwood wrote this sentence in her 1955 book The King's Peace, 1637–1641: "The King in his natural optimism still believed that a silent majority in Scotland were in his favour."[13]

Richard Nixon edit

While Nixon was serving in 1955 as vice-president to Dwight D. Eisenhower, John F. Kennedy and his research assistants wrote in Kennedy's book Profiles in Courage, "Some of them may have been representing the actual sentiments of the silent majority of their constituents in opposition to the screams of a vocal minority..."[14] In January 1956, Kennedy gave Nixon an autographed copy of the book. Nixon wrote back the next day to thank him: "My time for reading has been rather limited recently, but your book is first on my list and I am looking forward to reading it with great pleasure and interest."[15] Nixon wrote Six Crises, some say his response to Kennedy's book, after visiting Kennedy at the White House in April 1961.[16][17]

In 1967, labor leader George Meany asserted that those labor unionists (such as himself) who supported the Vietnam War were "the vast, silent majority in the nation."[18][19] Meany's statement may have provided Nixon's speechwriters with the specific turn of phrase.[20]

Barbara Ehrenreich[21] and Jay Caspian Kang[22] later argued that awareness by the media and politicians that there actually might be a silent majority opposed to the anti-war movement was heightened during the August 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago, especially in reaction to the widely broadcast violence by police against protesters and media there. The media reacted indignantly "against the police and the mayor" after journalists and protesters were attacked and beaten by the police, but were stunned to find that a poll showed 56% of those surveyed "sympathized with the police".[22][21] "Overnight the press abandoned its protest", awaking "to the disturbing possibility that they had grown estranged from a sizable segment of the public."[21][22]

In the months leading up to Nixon's 1969 speech, his vice-president Spiro T. Agnew said on May 9, "It is time for America's silent majority to stand up for its rights, and let us remember the American majority includes every minority. America's silent majority is bewildered by irrational protest..."[8] Soon thereafter, journalist Theodore H. White analyzed the previous year's elections, writing "Never have America's leading cultural media, its university thinkers, its influence makers been more intrigued by experiment and change; but in no election have the mute masses more completely separated themselves from such leadership and thinking. Mr. Nixon's problem is to interpret what the silent people think, and govern the country against the grain of what its more important thinkers think."[8]

On October 15, 1969, the first Moratorium to End the War in Vietnam demonstrations were held, attracting thousands of protesters.[23] Feeling very much besieged, Nixon went on national television to deliver a rebuttal speech on November 3, 1969, where he outlined "my plan to end the war" in Vietnam.[24] In his speech Nixon stated his policy of Vietnamization would lower American losses as the South Vietnamese Army would take on the burden of fighting the war; announced his willingness to compromise provided that North Vietnam recognized South Vietnam; and finally promised he would take "strong and effective measures" against North Vietnam if the war continued.[24] Nixon also implicitly conceded to the anti-war movement that South Vietnam was really not very important as he maintained that the real issue was the global credibility of the United States, as he stated his belief that all of America's allies would lose faith in American promises if the United States were to abandon South Vietnam.[24] Nixon ended his speech by saying all of this would take time, and asked for the public to support his policy of winning "peace with honor" in Vietnam as he concluded: "And so tonight, to you, the great silent majority of my fellow Americans—I ask for your support. Let us be united for peace. Let us be united against defeat. Because let us understand: North Vietnam cannot defeat or humiliate the United States. Only Americans can do that".[24] The public reaction to the "silent majority speech" was very favorable at the time and the White House phone lines were overwhelmed with thousands of phone calls in the hours afterward as too many people called to congratulate the president for his speech.[24]

Thirty-five years later, Nixon speechwriter Pat Buchanan recalled using the phrase in a memo to the president. He explained how Nixon singled out the phrase and went on to make use of it in his speech: "We [had] used 'forgotten Americans' and 'quiet Americans' and other phrases. And in one memo I mentioned twice the phrase 'silent majority,' and it's double-underlined by Richard Nixon, and it would pop up in 1969 in that great speech that basically made his presidency." Buchanan noted that while he had written the memo that contained the phrase, "Nixon wrote that speech entirely by himself."[25]

Nixon's constituency edit

Nixon's silent majority referred mainly to the older generation (those World War II veterans in all parts of the U.S.) but it also described many young people in the Midwest, West and in the South, many of whom eventually served in Vietnam. The Silent Majority was mostly populated by blue collar white people who did not take an active part in politics: suburban, exurban and rural middle class voters.[26] They did, in some cases, support the conservative policies of many politicians.[citation needed][27]

According to columnist Kenneth Crawford, "Nixon’s forgotten men should not be confused with Roosevelt's," adding that "Nixon's are comfortable, housed, clad and fed, who constitute the middle stratum of society. But they aspire to more and feel menaced by those who have less."[28]

In his famous speech, Nixon contrasted his international strategy of political realism with the "idealism" of a "vocal minority." He stated that following the radical minority's demands to withdraw all troops immediately from Vietnam would bring defeat and be disastrous for world peace. Appealing to the silent majority, Nixon asked for united support "to end the war in a way that we could win the peace." The speech was one of the first to codify the Nixon Doctrine, according to which, "the defense of freedom is everybody's business—not just America's business."[29] After giving the speech, Nixon's approval ratings which had been hovering around 50% shot up to 81% in the nation and 86% in the South.[30]

In January 1970, Time put on their cover an abstract image of a man and a woman representing "Middle America" as a replacement for their annual "Man of the Year" award. Publisher Roy E. Larsen wrote that "the events of 1969 transcended specific individuals. In a time of dissent and 'confrontation', the most striking new factor was the emergence of the Silent Majority as a powerfully assertive force in U.S. society."[31] Larsen described how the silent majority had elected Nixon, had put a man on the moon, and how this demographic felt threatened by "attacks on traditional values".[31]

The silent majority theme has been a contentious issue amongst journalists since Nixon used the phrase. Some thought Nixon used it as part of the Southern strategy; others claim it was Nixon's way of dismissing the obvious protests going on around the country, and Nixon's attempt to get other Americans not to listen to the protests. Whatever the rationale, Nixon won a landslide victory in 1972, taking 49 of 50 states, vindicating his "silent majority". The opposition vote was split successfully, with 80% of George Wallace supporters voting for Nixon rather than George McGovern, unlike Wallace himself.[32]

Nixon's use of the phrase was part of his strategy to divide Americans and to polarize them into two groups.[33] He used "divide and conquer" tactics to win his political battles, and in 1971 he directed Agnew to speak about "positive polarization" of the electorate.[34][35] The "silent majority" shared Nixon's anxieties and fears that normalcy was being eroded by changes in society.[26][36] The other group was composed of intellectuals, cosmopolitans, professionals and liberals, those willing to "live and let live."[26] Both groups saw themselves as the higher patriots.[26] According to Republican pollster Frank Luntz, "silent majority" is but one of many labels which have been applied to the same group of voters. According to him, past labels used by the media include "silent majority" in the 1960s, "forgotten middle class" in the 1970s, "angry white males" in the 1980s, "soccer moms" in the 1990s, and "NASCAR dads" in the 2000s.[37]

Later use edit

 
Donald Trump and supporters attend a rally in Muscatine, Iowa in January 2016. Multiple supporters hold up signs, which read "The silent majority stands with Trump".

"Silent majority" was the name of a movement (officially called Anticommunist City Committee) active in Milan, Italy, from 1971 to 1974 and headed by the former monarchist partisan Adamo Degli Occhi, that expressed the hostility of the middle class to the 1968 movement. At the beginning it was of conservative tendency; later it moved more and more to the right, and in 1974 Degli Occhi was arrested because of his relationships with the terroristic movement Movimento di Azione Rivoluzionaria (MAR).

In 1975, in Portugal, then president António de Spínola used the term in confronting the more radical forces of post-revolutionary Portugal.[38]

The phrase "silent majority" has also been used in the political campaigns of Ronald Reagan during the 1970s and 1980s, the Republican Revolution in the 1994 elections, and the victories of Rudy Giuliani and Michael Bloomberg. The phrase was also used by Quebec Premier Jean Charest during the 2012 Student Strike to refer to what he perceived as the majority of the Quebec voters supporting the tuition hikes.[39]

The term was used by British Prime Minister David Cameron during the 2014 Scottish independence referendum; Cameron expressed his belief that most Scots opposed independence, while implicitly conceding they may not be as vocal as the people who support it.[40]

During Donald Trump's presidential campaign, he said at a campaign rally on July 11, 2015, in Phoenix, Arizona, that "the silent majority is back, and we’re going to take our country back".[41] He also referred to the silent majority in subsequent speeches and advertisement,[42] as did the press when describing those who voted for his election as President in 2016.[43] In the midst of the George Floyd protests, he once again invoked the silent majority.[44] CNN analyst Harry Enten described that Trump's support fits better with the term "loud minority", based on the fact that he never hit 50% in any live interview opinion poll throughout his presidency.[45] Jay Caspian Kang argues that some politicians and analysts (Jim Clyburn, Chuck Rocha) feel the unexpected increase in support for Donald Trump among blacks and Latinos in the 2020 election reflects a new silent majority (including some non-whites) reacting against calls for defunding the police and the arrogance of “woke white consultants”.[22]

In 2019, the Prime Minister of Australia, Scott Morrison, acknowledged the quiet Australians in his federal election victory speech.[46]

In the face of rising opposition, the Hong Kong government often claims there is a silent majority that is too afraid to voice their support, and a group called "Silent Majority for Hong Kong" was set up in 2013 to counteract the Occupy Central with Love and Peace movement. In 2019, when the democratic movement became increasingly violent, the Carrie Lam administration and Beijing authorities appealed to the "silent majority" to dissociate themselves from the radical activists and to vote for the pro-government camp in the District Council elections, which were seen as a de facto referendum on the protests.[47] However, with a record turnout of over 70%, the pro-democracy camp won 80% of overall seats and controlled 17 out of the 18 District Councils.[48] A commentator of The New Statesman deduced that Hong Kong's true silent majority stood on the side of the democratic cause.[49] Foreign Policy stated that Beijing had been confident of a huge pro-government victory as a result of a delusion created by its own propaganda.[50]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary (1995), accessed 22/2/2011.
  2. ^ "Nixon's "Silent Majority" speech".
  3. ^ "Address to the Nation on the War in Vietnam". Miller Center of Public Affairs. November 3, 1969.
  4. ^ "Silence of the Dead".
  5. ^ "How Many People Have Ever Lived on Earth?". PRB. Retrieved 2023-07-05.
  6. ^ Haub, Carl (October 2011). "How Many People Have Ever Lived on Earth?". Population Reference Bureau. Washington, D.C. Retrieved November 13, 2014. Updated mid-2011, originally published in 1995 in Population Today, Vol. 23 (no. 2), pp. 5–6.
  7. ^ Greenough, James Bradstreet; George Lyman Kittredge (1920). Words and their ways in English speech. The Macmillan Company. p. 302. Retrieved April 15, 2010.
  8. ^ a b c Safire, William (2008). Safire's Political Dictionary. Oxford University Press U.S. p. 660. ISBN 978-0-19-534334-2. Retrieved April 15, 2010.
  9. ^ a b Niles' weekly register. Vol. 40. May 1831. p. 231. Quoting New York Representative Churchill C. Cambreleng, first appearing in the New York Standard, May 12, 1831.
  10. ^ "Gambetta". The Contemporary Review. London: Isbister and Company. 43: 185. February 1883. Retrieved April 15, 2010. Anonymous author signing as "A German".
  11. ^ Buckley, Kerry W. (December 2003). "A President for the 'Great Silent Majority': Bruce Barton's Construction of Calvin Coolidge". The New England Quarterly. 76 (4): 593–626. doi:10.2307/1559844. JSTOR 1559844.
  12. ^ Johnson, Dennis W. (2016). Democracy for Hire: A History of American Political Consulting. Oxford University Press. p. 15. ISBN 978-0-19-027269-2.
  13. ^ John Ayto (2006). Movers and Shakers: A Chronology of Words that Shaped Our Age. Oxford University Press. p. 151. ISBN 978-0-19-861452-4.
  14. ^ Kennedy, John F. (1955). "XI. The Meaning of Courage". Profiles in Courage. Harper. p. 220. ISBN 0-06-054439-2.; http://www.jfklibrary.org/Asset-Viewer/Archives/JFKPP-030-005.aspx, p.3
  15. ^ Matthews, Christopher (1997). Kennedy & Nixon: the rivalry that shaped postwar America. Simon and Schuster. p. 106. ISBN 0-684-83246-1.
  16. ^ Delson, Rudolph (November 10, 2009). . The Awl. Archived from the original on February 27, 2011. Retrieved February 22, 2011.
  17. ^ Roper, Jon (1998). "Richard Nixon's Political Hinterland: The Shadows of JFK and Charles de Gaulle". Presidential Studies Quarterly. 28 (2): 422. Retrieved February 22, 2011.
  18. ^ Perlstein, 2008, p. 212
  19. ^ Varon, Jeremy (2004). Bringing the war home: the Weather Underground, the Red Army Faction, and revolutionary violence in the sixties and seventies. University of California Press. p. 330. ISBN 0-520-24119-3.
  20. ^ Hixson, Walter L. (2008). The myth of American diplomacy: national identity and U.S. foreign policy. Yale University Press. p. 251. ISBN 978-0-300-11912-1.
  21. ^ a b c Ehrenreich, Barbara (1990). "3. The Discovery of the Working Class". Fear of Falling: The Inner Life of the Middle Class. Grand Central. ISBN 9781455543748. Retrieved 30 August 2021.
  22. ^ a b c d KANG, JAY CASPIAN (30 August 2021). "When the 'Silent Majority' Isn't White". New York Times. Retrieved 31 August 2021.
  23. ^ Karnow, Stanley Vietnam: A History, New York: Viking Books, 1983 p.599-600.
  24. ^ a b c d e Karnow, Stanley Vietnam: A History, New York: Viking Books, 1983 p.600.
  25. ^ Buchanan, Pat (October 2, 2014). The World Over Live.
  26. ^ a b c d Perlstein, 2008, p. 748
  27. ^ Coleman, David (17 September 2022). "Nixon's Presidential Approval Ratings".
  28. ^ LBJ: Architect of American Ambition by Randall B. Woods
  29. ^ Safire, William (2004). Lend me your ears: great speeches in history (3 ed.). W. W. Norton & Company. p. 993. ISBN 0-393-05931-6.
  30. ^ Perlstein, 2008, p. 444
  31. ^ a b Larsen, Roy (January 5, 1970). . Time. Archived from the original on October 30, 2010.
  32. ^ Fraser, Steve; Gerstle, Gary (1989). The Rise and fall of the New Deal order, 1930–1980. Princeton University Press. p. 263. ISBN 0-691-00607-5.
  33. ^ Chafe, William Henry (2009). Private Lives/Public Consequences: Personality and Politics in Modern America. Harvard University Press. pp. 262–263. ISBN 978-0-674-02932-3.
  34. ^ Frick, Daniel (November 26, 2008). "Obama Defeats... Nixon?". Huffington Post. Retrieved May 31, 2013.
  35. ^ "The Nixon Tapes Unleashed – Manipulative Master Politician". The Seattle Times. November 9, 1997. Reprint of the Washington Post report by Walter Pincus and George Lardner Jr.: "Kennedy, Muskie, Jackson Eyed for Nixon Dirty Tricks in '71"
  36. ^ Black, Conrad (2007). Richard M. Nixon: A Life in Full. Perseus Books. pp. 658, 764. ISBN 978-1-58648-519-1.
  37. ^ Luntz, Frank I. (2007). Words That Work: It's Not What You Say, It's What People Hear. New York: Hyperion. pp. 199–200. ISBN 978-1-4013-0308-2.
  38. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the : "Discurso da "maioria silenciosa"" – via www.youtube.com.
  39. ^ In French: «Jean Charest interpelle la majorité silencieuse».
  40. ^ Ross, Jamie (3 July 2014). "Scottish independence: Who is Scotland's 'silent majority'?". BBC News. BBC. Retrieved 3 July 2014.
  41. ^ Fandos, Nicholas (11 July 2015). "Donald Trump Defiantly Rallies a New 'Silent Majority' in a Visit to Arizona". New York Times. Retrieved 7 September 2015.
  42. ^ "We are the Silent Majority". Donald J. Trump for President. 7 November 2016.
  43. ^ Vaidyanathan, Rajini (2016-11-10). "Trump's silent majority in Florida". BBC. Retrieved 2017-11-04.
  44. ^ Trump, Donald. "SILENT MAJORITY!". Twitter.
  45. ^ Enten, Harry (2020-08-29). "Trump is the president of the loud minority, not silent majority". CNN. Retrieved 2021-05-15.
  46. ^ "Speech Sydney". Prime Minister of Australia. 18 May 2019.
  47. ^ McLaughlin, Timothy (25 November 2019). "Hong Kong Doesn't Have a Pro-China 'Silent Majority'". The Atlantic. Retrieved 28 November 2019.
  48. ^ "Hong Kong elections: Pro-democracy groups makes big gains". BBC News. BBC. 25 November 2019. Retrieved 28 November 2019.
  49. ^ Ho, Ryan Kilpatrick (26 November 2019). "The day Hong Kong's true "silent majority" spoke". New Statesman. Retrieved 28 November 2019.
  50. ^ Palmer, James (25 November 2019). "Hong Kongers Break Beijing's Delusions of Victory". Foreign Policy. Retrieved 29 November 2019. Propaganda is a heady drug, and Beijing got high on its own supply.

Further reading edit

  • Browne, Junius Henri (1874). "The Silent Majority". Harper's Magazine, June to November
  • Campbell, Karlyn Kohrs. The Great Silent Majority: Nixon's 1969 Speech on Vietnamization (Texas A&M University Press; 2014) focus on the speech of November 3, 1969
  • Perlstein, Rick (2008). Nixonland. Scribner. ISBN 978-0-7432-4302-5.

External links edit

  •   The dictionary definition of silent majority at Wiktionary

silent, majority, this, article, about, political, phrase, other, uses, disambiguation, silent, majority, unspecified, large, group, people, country, group, express, their, opinions, publicly, term, popularized, president, richard, nixon, televised, address, n. This article is about the political phrase For other uses see Silent majority disambiguation The silent majority is an unspecified large group of people in a country or group who do not express their opinions publicly 1 The term was popularized by U S President Richard Nixon in a televised address on November 3 1969 in which he said And so tonight to you the great silent majority of my fellow Americans I ask for your support 2 3 In this usage it referred to those Americans who did not join in the large demonstrations against the Vietnam War at the time who did not join in the counterculture and who did not participate in public discourse Nixon along with many others saw this group of Middle Americans as being overshadowed in the media by the more vocal minority Preceding Nixon by half a century it was employed in 1919 by Calvin Coolidge s campaign for the 1920 presidential nomination Before that the phrase was used in the 19th century as a euphemism referring to all the people who have died and others have used it before and after Nixon to refer to groups of voters in various nations of the world Contents 1 Early meanings 1 1 Euphemism for the dead 1 2 Groups of voters 2 Richard Nixon 2 1 Nixon s constituency 3 Later use 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksEarly meanings editEuphemism for the dead edit The majority or the silent majority can be traced back to the Roman writer Petronius who wrote abiit ad plures he is gone to the majority to describe deceased people since the dead outnumber the living 4 In 2023 there were approximately 14 6 dead for every living person 5 6 The phrase was used for much of the 19th century to refer to the dead Phrases such as gone to a better world gone before and joined the silent majority served as euphemisms for died 7 In 1902 Supreme Court Justice John Marshall Harlan employed this sense of the phrase saying in a speech that great captains on both sides of our Civil War have long ago passed over to the silent majority leaving the memory of their splendid courage 8 Groups of voters edit In May 1831 the expression silent majority was spoken by Churchill C Cambreleng representative of New York state before 400 members of the Tammany Society 9 Cambreleng complained to his audience about a U S federal bill that had been rejected without full examination by the United States House of Representatives Cambreleng s silent majority referred to other representatives who voted as a bloc Whenever majorities trample upon the rights of minorities when men are denied even the privilege of having their causes of complaint examined into when measures which they deem for their relief are rejected by the despotism of a silent majority at a second reading when such become the rules of our legislation the Congress of this Union will no longer justly represent a republican people 9 In 1883 an anonymous author calling himself A German wrote a memorial to Leon Gambetta published in The Contemporary Review a British quarterly Describing French Conservatives of the 1870s the writer opined that their mistake was not in appealing to the country but in appealing to it in behalf of a Monarchy which had yet to be defined instead of a Republic which existed for in the latter case they would have had the whole of that silent majority with them 10 In 1919 Madison Avenue advertising executive and Republican Party supporter Bruce Barton employed the term to bolster Calvin Coolidge s campaign for the 1920 Republican Presidential nomination In Collier s magazine Barton portrayed Coolidge as the everyman candidate It sometimes seems as if this great silent majority had no spokesman But Coolidge belongs with that crowd he lives like them he works like them and understands 11 12 Referring to Charles I of England historian Veronica Wedgwood wrote this sentence in her 1955 book The King s Peace 1637 1641 The King in his natural optimism still believed that a silent majority in Scotland were in his favour 13 Richard Nixon editWhile Nixon was serving in 1955 as vice president to Dwight D Eisenhower John F Kennedy and his research assistants wrote in Kennedy s book Profiles in Courage Some of them may have been representing the actual sentiments of the silent majority of their constituents in opposition to the screams of a vocal minority 14 In January 1956 Kennedy gave Nixon an autographed copy of the book Nixon wrote back the next day to thank him My time for reading has been rather limited recently but your book is first on my list and I am looking forward to reading it with great pleasure and interest 15 Nixon wrote Six Crises some say his response to Kennedy s book after visiting Kennedy at the White House in April 1961 16 17 In 1967 labor leader George Meany asserted that those labor unionists such as himself who supported the Vietnam War were the vast silent majority in the nation 18 19 Meany s statement may have provided Nixon s speechwriters with the specific turn of phrase 20 Barbara Ehrenreich 21 and Jay Caspian Kang 22 later argued that awareness by the media and politicians that there actually might be a silent majority opposed to the anti war movement was heightened during the August 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago especially in reaction to the widely broadcast violence by police against protesters and media there The media reacted indignantly against the police and the mayor after journalists and protesters were attacked and beaten by the police but were stunned to find that a poll showed 56 of those surveyed sympathized with the police 22 21 Overnight the press abandoned its protest awaking to the disturbing possibility that they had grown estranged from a sizable segment of the public 21 22 In the months leading up to Nixon s 1969 speech his vice president Spiro T Agnew said on May 9 It is time for America s silent majority to stand up for its rights and let us remember the American majority includes every minority America s silent majority is bewildered by irrational protest 8 Soon thereafter journalist Theodore H White analyzed the previous year s elections writing Never have America s leading cultural media its university thinkers its influence makers been more intrigued by experiment and change but in no election have the mute masses more completely separated themselves from such leadership and thinking Mr Nixon s problem is to interpret what the silent people think and govern the country against the grain of what its more important thinkers think 8 On October 15 1969 the first Moratorium to End the War in Vietnam demonstrations were held attracting thousands of protesters 23 Feeling very much besieged Nixon went on national television to deliver a rebuttal speech on November 3 1969 where he outlined my plan to end the war in Vietnam 24 In his speech Nixon stated his policy of Vietnamization would lower American losses as the South Vietnamese Army would take on the burden of fighting the war announced his willingness to compromise provided that North Vietnam recognized South Vietnam and finally promised he would take strong and effective measures against North Vietnam if the war continued 24 Nixon also implicitly conceded to the anti war movement that South Vietnam was really not very important as he maintained that the real issue was the global credibility of the United States as he stated his belief that all of America s allies would lose faith in American promises if the United States were to abandon South Vietnam 24 Nixon ended his speech by saying all of this would take time and asked for the public to support his policy of winning peace with honor in Vietnam as he concluded And so tonight to you the great silent majority of my fellow Americans I ask for your support Let us be united for peace Let us be united against defeat Because let us understand North Vietnam cannot defeat or humiliate the United States Only Americans can do that 24 The public reaction to the silent majority speech was very favorable at the time and the White House phone lines were overwhelmed with thousands of phone calls in the hours afterward as too many people called to congratulate the president for his speech 24 Thirty five years later Nixon speechwriter Pat Buchanan recalled using the phrase in a memo to the president He explained how Nixon singled out the phrase and went on to make use of it in his speech We had used forgotten Americans and quiet Americans and other phrases And in one memo I mentioned twice the phrase silent majority and it s double underlined by Richard Nixon and it would pop up in 1969 in that great speech that basically made his presidency Buchanan noted that while he had written the memo that contained the phrase Nixon wrote that speech entirely by himself 25 Nixon s constituency edit Nixon s silent majority referred mainly to the older generation those World War II veterans in all parts of the U S but it also described many young people in the Midwest West and in the South many of whom eventually served in Vietnam The Silent Majority was mostly populated by blue collar white people who did not take an active part in politics suburban exurban and rural middle class voters 26 They did in some cases support the conservative policies of many politicians citation needed 27 According to columnist Kenneth Crawford Nixon s forgotten men should not be confused with Roosevelt s adding that Nixon s are comfortable housed clad and fed who constitute the middle stratum of society But they aspire to more and feel menaced by those who have less 28 In his famous speech Nixon contrasted his international strategy of political realism with the idealism of a vocal minority He stated that following the radical minority s demands to withdraw all troops immediately from Vietnam would bring defeat and be disastrous for world peace Appealing to the silent majority Nixon asked for united support to end the war in a way that we could win the peace The speech was one of the first to codify the Nixon Doctrine according to which the defense of freedom is everybody s business not just America s business 29 After giving the speech Nixon s approval ratings which had been hovering around 50 shot up to 81 in the nation and 86 in the South 30 In January 1970 Time put on their cover an abstract image of a man and a woman representing Middle America as a replacement for their annual Man of the Year award Publisher Roy E Larsen wrote that the events of 1969 transcended specific individuals In a time of dissent and confrontation the most striking new factor was the emergence of the Silent Majority as a powerfully assertive force in U S society 31 Larsen described how the silent majority had elected Nixon had put a man on the moon and how this demographic felt threatened by attacks on traditional values 31 The silent majority theme has been a contentious issue amongst journalists since Nixon used the phrase Some thought Nixon used it as part of the Southern strategy others claim it was Nixon s way of dismissing the obvious protests going on around the country and Nixon s attempt to get other Americans not to listen to the protests Whatever the rationale Nixon won a landslide victory in 1972 taking 49 of 50 states vindicating his silent majority The opposition vote was split successfully with 80 of George Wallace supporters voting for Nixon rather than George McGovern unlike Wallace himself 32 Nixon s use of the phrase was part of his strategy to divide Americans and to polarize them into two groups 33 He used divide and conquer tactics to win his political battles and in 1971 he directed Agnew to speak about positive polarization of the electorate 34 35 The silent majority shared Nixon s anxieties and fears that normalcy was being eroded by changes in society 26 36 The other group was composed of intellectuals cosmopolitans professionals and liberals those willing to live and let live 26 Both groups saw themselves as the higher patriots 26 According to Republican pollster Frank Luntz silent majority is but one of many labels which have been applied to the same group of voters According to him past labels used by the media include silent majority in the 1960s forgotten middle class in the 1970s angry white males in the 1980s soccer moms in the 1990s and NASCAR dads in the 2000s 37 Later use edit nbsp Donald Trump and supporters attend a rally in Muscatine Iowa in January 2016 Multiple supporters hold up signs which read The silent majority stands with Trump Silent majority was the name of a movement officially called Anticommunist City Committee active in Milan Italy from 1971 to 1974 and headed by the former monarchist partisan Adamo Degli Occhi that expressed the hostility of the middle class to the 1968 movement At the beginning it was of conservative tendency later it moved more and more to the right and in 1974 Degli Occhi was arrested because of his relationships with the terroristic movement Movimento di Azione Rivoluzionaria MAR In 1975 in Portugal then president Antonio de Spinola used the term in confronting the more radical forces of post revolutionary Portugal 38 The phrase silent majority has also been used in the political campaigns of Ronald Reagan during the 1970s and 1980s the Republican Revolution in the 1994 elections and the victories of Rudy Giuliani and Michael Bloomberg The phrase was also used by Quebec Premier Jean Charest during the 2012 Student Strike to refer to what he perceived as the majority of the Quebec voters supporting the tuition hikes 39 The term was used by British Prime Minister David Cameron during the 2014 Scottish independence referendum Cameron expressed his belief that most Scots opposed independence while implicitly conceding they may not be as vocal as the people who support it 40 During Donald Trump s presidential campaign he said at a campaign rally on July 11 2015 in Phoenix Arizona that the silent majority is back and we re going to take our country back 41 He also referred to the silent majority in subsequent speeches and advertisement 42 as did the press when describing those who voted for his election as President in 2016 43 In the midst of the George Floyd protests he once again invoked the silent majority 44 CNN analyst Harry Enten described that Trump s support fits better with the term loud minority based on the fact that he never hit 50 in any live interview opinion poll throughout his presidency 45 Jay Caspian Kang argues that some politicians and analysts Jim Clyburn Chuck Rocha feel the unexpected increase in support for Donald Trump among blacks and Latinos in the 2020 election reflects a new silent majority including some non whites reacting against calls for defunding the police and the arrogance of woke white consultants 22 In 2019 the Prime Minister of Australia Scott Morrison acknowledged the quiet Australians in his federal election victory speech 46 In the face of rising opposition the Hong Kong government often claims there is a silent majority that is too afraid to voice their support and a group called Silent Majority for Hong Kong was set up in 2013 to counteract the Occupy Central with Love and Peace movement In 2019 when the democratic movement became increasingly violent the Carrie Lam administration and Beijing authorities appealed to the silent majority to dissociate themselves from the radical activists and to vote for the pro government camp in the District Council elections which were seen as a de facto referendum on the protests 47 However with a record turnout of over 70 the pro democracy camp won 80 of overall seats and controlled 17 out of the 18 District Councils 48 A commentator of The New Statesman deduced that Hong Kong s true silent majority stood on the side of the democratic cause 49 Foreign Policy stated that Beijing had been confident of a huge pro government victory as a result of a delusion created by its own propaganda 50 See also edit1 rule Internet culture Bradley effect Democracy Mainstream media Majoritarianism Majority rule Pact of forgetting Shy Tory Factor Social desirability bias Spiral of silence Visible minorityReferences edit Silent majority Cambridge Advanced Learner s Dictionary 1995 accessed 22 2 2011 Nixon s Silent Majority speech Address to the Nation on the War in Vietnam Miller Center of Public Affairs November 3 1969 Silence of the Dead How Many People Have Ever Lived on Earth PRB Retrieved 2023 07 05 Haub Carl October 2011 How Many People Have Ever Lived on Earth Population Reference Bureau Washington D C Retrieved November 13 2014 Updated mid 2011 originally published in 1995 in Population Today Vol 23 no 2 pp 5 6 Greenough James Bradstreet George Lyman Kittredge 1920 Words and their ways in English speech The Macmillan Company p 302 Retrieved April 15 2010 a b c Safire William 2008 Safire s Political Dictionary Oxford University Press U S p 660 ISBN 978 0 19 534334 2 Retrieved April 15 2010 a b Niles weekly register Vol 40 May 1831 p 231 Quoting New York Representative Churchill C Cambreleng first appearing in the New York Standard May 12 1831 Gambetta The Contemporary Review London Isbister and Company 43 185 February 1883 Retrieved April 15 2010 Anonymous author signing as A German Buckley Kerry W December 2003 A President for the Great Silent Majority Bruce Barton s Construction of Calvin Coolidge The New England Quarterly 76 4 593 626 doi 10 2307 1559844 JSTOR 1559844 Johnson Dennis W 2016 Democracy for Hire A History of American Political Consulting Oxford University Press p 15 ISBN 978 0 19 027269 2 John Ayto 2006 Movers and Shakers A Chronology of Words that Shaped Our Age Oxford University Press p 151 ISBN 978 0 19 861452 4 Kennedy John F 1955 XI The Meaning of Courage Profiles in Courage Harper p 220 ISBN 0 06 054439 2 http www jfklibrary org Asset Viewer Archives JFKPP 030 005 aspx p 3 Matthews Christopher 1997 Kennedy amp Nixon the rivalry that shaped postwar America Simon and Schuster p 106 ISBN 0 684 83246 1 Delson Rudolph November 10 2009 Literary Vices with Rudolph Delson Richard Nixon s Six Crises The Awl Archived from the original on February 27 2011 Retrieved February 22 2011 Roper Jon 1998 Richard Nixon s Political Hinterland The Shadows of JFK and Charles de Gaulle Presidential Studies Quarterly 28 2 422 Retrieved February 22 2011 Perlstein 2008 p 212 Varon Jeremy 2004 Bringing the war home the Weather Underground the Red Army Faction and revolutionary violence in the sixties and seventies University of California Press p 330 ISBN 0 520 24119 3 Hixson Walter L 2008 The myth of American diplomacy national identity and U S foreign policy Yale University Press p 251 ISBN 978 0 300 11912 1 a b c Ehrenreich Barbara 1990 3 The Discovery of the Working Class Fear of Falling The Inner Life of the Middle Class Grand Central ISBN 9781455543748 Retrieved 30 August 2021 a b c d KANG JAY CASPIAN 30 August 2021 When the Silent Majority Isn t White New York Times Retrieved 31 August 2021 Karnow Stanley Vietnam A History New York Viking Books 1983 p 599 600 a b c d e Karnow Stanley Vietnam A History New York Viking Books 1983 p 600 Buchanan Pat October 2 2014 The World Over Live a b c d Perlstein 2008 p 748 Coleman David 17 September 2022 Nixon s Presidential Approval Ratings LBJ Architect of American Ambition by Randall B Woods Safire William 2004 Lend me your ears great speeches in history 3 ed W W Norton amp Company p 993 ISBN 0 393 05931 6 Perlstein 2008 p 444 a b Larsen Roy January 5 1970 A Letter From The Publisher Time Archived from the original on October 30 2010 Fraser Steve Gerstle Gary 1989 The Rise and fall of the New Deal order 1930 1980 Princeton University Press p 263 ISBN 0 691 00607 5 Chafe William Henry 2009 Private Lives Public Consequences Personality and Politics in Modern America Harvard University Press pp 262 263 ISBN 978 0 674 02932 3 Frick Daniel November 26 2008 Obama Defeats Nixon Huffington Post Retrieved May 31 2013 The Nixon Tapes Unleashed Manipulative Master Politician The Seattle Times November 9 1997 Reprint of the Washington Post report by Walter Pincus and George Lardner Jr Kennedy Muskie Jackson Eyed for Nixon Dirty Tricks in 71 Black Conrad 2007 Richard M Nixon A Life in Full Perseus Books pp 658 764 ISBN 978 1 58648 519 1 Luntz Frank I 2007 Words That Work It s Not What You Say It s What People Hear New York Hyperion pp 199 200 ISBN 978 1 4013 0308 2 Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine Discurso da maioria silenciosa via www youtube com In French Jean Charest interpelle la majorite silencieuse Ross Jamie 3 July 2014 Scottish independence Who is Scotland s silent majority BBC News BBC Retrieved 3 July 2014 Fandos Nicholas 11 July 2015 Donald Trump Defiantly Rallies a New Silent Majority in a Visit to Arizona New York Times Retrieved 7 September 2015 We are the Silent Majority Donald J Trump for President 7 November 2016 Vaidyanathan Rajini 2016 11 10 Trump s silent majority in Florida BBC Retrieved 2017 11 04 Trump Donald SILENT MAJORITY Twitter Enten Harry 2020 08 29 Trump is the president of the loud minority not silent majority CNN Retrieved 2021 05 15 Speech Sydney Prime Minister of Australia 18 May 2019 McLaughlin Timothy 25 November 2019 Hong Kong Doesn t Have a Pro China Silent Majority The Atlantic Retrieved 28 November 2019 Hong Kong elections Pro democracy groups makes big gains BBC News BBC 25 November 2019 Retrieved 28 November 2019 Ho Ryan Kilpatrick 26 November 2019 The day Hong Kong s true silent majority spoke New Statesman Retrieved 28 November 2019 Palmer James 25 November 2019 Hong Kongers Break Beijing s Delusions of Victory Foreign Policy Retrieved 29 November 2019 Propaganda is a heady drug and Beijing got high on its own supply Further reading editBrowne Junius Henri 1874 The Silent Majority Harper s Magazine June to November Campbell Karlyn Kohrs The Great Silent Majority Nixon s 1969 Speech on Vietnamization Texas A amp M University Press 2014 focus on the speech of November 3 1969 Perlstein Rick 2008 Nixonland Scribner ISBN 978 0 7432 4302 5 External links edit nbsp The dictionary definition of silent majority at Wiktionary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Silent majority amp oldid 1176412745, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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