Propaganda, Edward Bernays, 1928 - ch 6
CHAPTER VI
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PROPAGANDA AND POLITICAL LEADERSHIP
[audio mp3 of this chapter]
THE great political problem in our modern democracy is how to
induce our leaders to lead. The dogma that the voice of the people is
the voice of God tends to make elected persons the will-less servants
of their constituents. This is undoubtedly part cause of the political
sterility of which certain American critics constantly complain.
No serious sociologist any longer believes that the voice of the
people expresses any divine or specially wise and lofty idea. The
voice of the people expresses the mind of the people, and that mind is
made up for it by the group leaders in whom it believes and by those
persons who understand the manipulation of public opinion. It is
composed of inherited prejudices and symbols and cliches and verbal
formulas supplied to them by the leaders.
Fortunately, the sincere and gifted politician is able, by the
instrument of propaganda, to mold and form the will of the people.
Disraeli cynically expressed the dilemma, when he said: "I must
follow the people. Am I not their leader?" He might have added: "I
must lead the people. Am I not their servant?"
Unfortunately, the methods of our contemporary politicians, in
dealing with the public, are as archaic and ineffective as the
advertising methods of business in 1900 would be to-day. While
politics was the first important department of American life to use
propaganda on a large scale, it has been the slowest in modifying its
propaganda methods to meet the changed conditions of the public mind.
American business first learned from politics the methods of appealing
to the broad public. But it continually improved those methods in the
course of its competitive struggle, while politics clung to the old
formulas.
The political apathy of the average voter, of which we hear so
much, is undoubtedly due to the fact that the politician does not know
how to meet the conditions of the public mind. He cannot dramatize
himself and his platform in terms which have real meaning to the
public. Acting on the fallacy that the leader must slavishly follow,
he deprives his campaign of all dramatic interest. An automaton cannot
arouse the public interest. A leader, a fighter, a dictator, can. But,
given our present political conditions under which every office seeker
must cater to the vote of the masses, the only means by which the born
leader can lead is the expert use of propaganda.
Whether in the problem of getting elected to office or in the
problem of interpreting and popularizing new issues, or in the problem
of making the day-to-day administration of public affairs a vital part
of the community life, the use of propaganda, carefully adjusted to
the mentality of the masses, is an essential adjunct of political
life.
The successful business man to-day apes the politician. He has
adopted the glitter and the ballyhoo of the campaign. He has set up
all the side shows. He has annual dinners that are a compendium of
speeches, flags, bombast, stateliness, pseudo-democracy slightly
tinged with paternalism. On occasion he doles out honors to employees,
much as the republic of classic times rewarded its worthy citizens.
But these are merely the side shows, the drums, of big business,
by which it builds up an image of public service, and of honorary
service. This is but one of the methods by which business stimulates
loyal enthusiasms on the part of directors, the workers, the
stockholders and the consumer public. It is one of the methods by
which big business performs its function of making and selling
products to the public. The real work and campaign of business
consists of intensive study of the public, the manufacture of products
based on this study, and exhaustive use of every means of reaching the
public.
Political campaigns to-day are all side shows, all honors, all
bombast, glitter, and speeches. These are for the most part unrelated
to the main business of studying the public scientifically, of
supplying the public with party, candidate, platform, and performance,
and selling the public these ideas and products.
Politics was the first big business in America. Therefore there
is a good deal of irony in the fact that business has learned
everything that politics has had to teach, but that politics has
failed to learn very much from business methods of mass distribution
of ideas and products.
Emily Newell Blair has recounted in the Independent a typical
instance of the waste of effort and money in a political campaign, a
week's speaking tour in which she herself took part. She estimates
that on a five-day trip covering nearly a thousand miles she and the
United States Senator with whom she was making political speeches
addressed no more than 1,105 persons whose votes might conceivably
have been changed as a result of their efforts. The cost of this
appeal to these voters she estimates (calculating the value of the
time spent on a very moderate basis) as $15.27 for each vote which
might have been changed as a result of the campaign.
This, she says, was a "drive for votes, just as an Ivory Soap
advertising campaign is a drive for sales." But, she asks, "what would
a company executive say to a sales manager who sent a high-priced
speaker to describe his product to less than 1,200 people at a cost of
$15.27 for each possible buyer?" She finds it "amazing that the very
men who make their millions out of cleverly devised drives for soap
and bonds and cars will turn around and give large contributions to be
expended for vote-getting in an utterly inefficient and antiquated
fashion."
It is, indeed, incomprehensible that politicians do not make use
of the elaborate business methods that industry has built up. Because
a politician knows political strategy, can develop campaign issues,
can devise strong planks for platforms and envisage broad policies, it
does not follow that he can be given the responsibility of selling
ideas to a public as large as that of the United States.
The politician understands the public. He knows what the public
wants and what the public will accept. But the politician is not
necessarily a general sales manager, a public relations counsel, or a
man who knows how to secure mass distribution of ideas.
Obviously, an occasional political leader may be capable of
combining every feature of leadership, just as in business there are
certain brilliant industrial leaders who are financiers, factory
directors, engineers, sales managers and public relations counsel all
rolled into one.
Big business is conducted on the principle that it must prepare
its policies carefully, and that in selling an idea to the large
buying public of America, it must proceed according to broad plans.
The political strategist must do likewise. The entire campaign should
be worked out according to broad basic plans. Platforms, planks,
pledges, budgets, activities, personalities, must be as carefully
studied, apportioned and used as they are when big business desires to
get what it wants from the public.
The first step in a political campaign is to determine on the
objectives, and to express them exceedingly well in the current
form--that is, as a platform. In devising the platform the leader
should be sure that it is an honest platform. Campaign pledges and
promises should not be lightly considered by the public, and they
ought to carry something of the guarantee principle and money-back
policy that an honorable business institution carries with the sale of
its goods. The public has lost faith in campaign promotion work. It
does not say that politicians are dishonorable, but it does say that
campaign pledges are written on the sand. Here then is one fact of
public opinion of which the party that wishes to be successful might
well take cognizance.
To aid in the preparation of the platform there should be made
as nearly scientific an analysis as possible of the public and of the
needs of the public. A survey of public desires and demands would come
to the aid of the political strategist whose business it is to make a
proposed plan of the activities of the parties and its elected
officials during the coming terms of office.
A big business that wants to sell a product to the public
surveys and analyzes its market before it takes a single step either
to make or to sell the product. If one section of the community is
absolutely sold to the idea of this product, no money is wasted in
reselling it to it. If, on the other hand, another section of the
public is irrevocably committed to another product, no money is wasted
on a lost cause. Very often the analysis is the cause of basic changes
and improvements in the product itself, as well as an index of how it
is to be presented. So carefully is this analysis of markets and sales
made that when a company makes out its sales budget for the year, it
subdivides the circulations of the various magazines and newspapers it
uses in advertising and calculates with a fair degree of accuracy how
many times a section of that population is subjected to the appeal of
the company. It knows approximately to what extent a national campaign
duplicates and repeats the emphasis of a local campaign of selling.
As in the business field, the expenses of the political campaign
should be budgeted. A large business to-day knows exactly how much
money it is going to spend on propaganda during the next year or
years. It knows that a certain percentage of its gross receipts will
be given over to advertising--newspaper, magazine, outdoor and poster;
a certain percentage to circularization and sales promotion--such as
house organs and dealer aids; and a certain percentage must go to the
supervising salesmen who travel around the country to infuse extra
stimulus in the local sales campaign.
A political campaign should be similarly budgeted. The first
question which should be decided is the amount of money that should be
raised for the campaign. This decision can be reached by a careful
analysis of campaign costs. There is enough precedent in business
procedure to enable experts to work this out accurately. Then the
second question of importance is the manner in which money should be
raised.
It is obvious that politics would gain much in prestige if the
money-raising campaign were conducted candidly and publicly, like the
campaigns for the war funds. Charity drives might be made excellent
models for political funds drives. The elimination of the little black
bag element in politics would raise the entire prestige of politics in
America, and the public interest would be infinitely greater if the
actual participation occurred earlier and more constructively in the
campaign.
Again, as in the business field, there should be a clear
decision as to how the money is to be spent. This should be done
according to the most careful and exact budgeting, wherein every step
in the campaign is given its proportionate importance, and the funds
allotted accordingly. Advertising in newspapers and periodicals,
posters and street banners, the exploitation of personalities in
motion pictures, in speeches and lectures and meetings, spectacular
events and all forms of propaganda should be considered
proportionately according to the budget, and should always be
coordinated with the whole plan. Certain expenditures may be warranted
if they represent a small proportion of the budget and may be totally
unwarranted if they make up a large proportion of the budget.
In the same way the emotions by which the public is appealed to
may be made part of the broad plan of the campaign. Unrelated emotions
become maudlin and sentimental too easily, are often costly, and too
often waste effort because the idea is not part of the conscious and
coherent whole.
Big business has realized that it must use as many of the basic
emotions as possible. The politician, however, has used the emotions
aroused by words almost exclusively.
To appeal to the emotions of the public in a political campaign
is sound--in fact it is an indispensable part of the campaign. But the
emotional content must-- (a) coincide in every way with the
broad basic plans of the campaign and all its minor details;
(b) be adapted to the many groups of the public at which it is
to be aimed; and
(c) conform to the media of the distribution of ideas. The
emotions of oratory have been worn down through long years of overuse.
Parades, mass meetings, and the like are successful when the public
has a frenzied emotional interest in the event. The candidate who
takes babies on his lap, and has his photograph taken, is doing a wise
thing emotionally, if this act epitomizes a definite plank in his
platform. Kissing babies, if it is worth anything, must be used as a
symbol for a baby policy and it must be synchronized with a plank in
the platform. But the haphazard staging of emotional events without
regard to their value as part of the whole campaign, is a waste of
effort, just as it would be a waste of effort for the manufacturer of
hockey skates to advertise a picture of a church surrounded by spring
foliage. It is true that the church appeals to our religious impulses
and that everybody loves the spring, but these impulses do not help to
sell the idea that hockey skates are amusing, helpful, or increase the
general enjoyment of life for the buyer.
Present-day politics places emphasis on personality. An entire
party, a platform, an international policy is sold to the public, or
is not sold, on the basis of the intangible element of personality. A
charming candidate is the alchemist's secret that can transmute a
prosaic platform into the gold of votes. Helpful as is a candidate who
for some reason has caught the imagination of the country, the party
and its aims are certainly more important than the personality of the
candidate. Not personality, but the ability of the candidate to carry
out the party's program adequately, and the program itself should be
emphasized in a sound campaign plan. Even Henry Ford, the most
picturesque personality in business in America to-day, has become
known through his product, and not his product through him.
It is essential for the campaign manager to educate the emotions
in terms of groups. The public is not made up merely of Democrats and
Republicans. People to-day are largely uninterested in politics and
their interest in the issues of the campaign must be secured by
coordinating it with their personal interests. The public is made up
of interlocking groups --economic, social, religious, educational,
cultural, racial, collegiate, local, sports, and hundreds of others.
When President Coolidge invited actors for breakfast, he did so
because he realized not only that actors were a group, but that
audiences, the large group of people who like amusements, who like
people who amuse them, and who like people who can be amused, ought to
be aligned with him.
The Shepard-Towner Maternity Bill was passed because the people
who fought to secure its passage realized that mothers made up a
group, that educators made up a group, that physicians made up a
group, that all these groups in turn influence other groups, and that
taken all together these groups were sufficiently strong and numerous
to impress Congress with the fact that the people at large wanted this
bill to be made part of the national law.
The political campaign having defined its broad objects and its
basic plans, having defined the group appeal which it must use, must
carefully allocate to each of the media at hand the work which it can
do with maximum efficiency.
The media through which a political campaign may be brought home
to the public are numerous and fairly well defined. Events and
activities must be created in order to put ideas into circulation, in
these channels, which are as varied as the means of human
communication. Every object which presents pictures or words that the
public can see, everything that presents intelligible sounds, can be
utilized in one way or another.
At present, the political campaigner uses for the greatest part
the radio, the press, the banquet hall, the mass meeting, the lecture
platform, and the stump generally as a means for furthering his ideas.
But this is only a small part of what may be done. Actually there are
infinitely more varied events that can be created to dramatize the
campaign, and to make people talk of it. Exhibitions, contests,
institutes of politics, the cooperation of educational institutions,
the dramatic cooperation of groups which hitherto have not been drawn
into active politics, and many others may be made the vehicle for the
presentation of ideas to the public.
But whatever is done must be synchronized accurately with all
other forms of appeal to the public. News reaches the public through
the printed word-- books, magazines, letters, posters, circulars and
banners, newspapers; through pictures--photographs and motion
pictures; through the ear--lectures, speeches, band music, radio,
campaign songs. All these must be employed by the political party if
it is to succeed. One method of appeal is merely one method of appeal
and in this age wherein a thousand movements and ideas are competing
for public attention, one dare not put all one's eggs into one basket.
It is understood that the methods of propaganda can be effective
only with the voter who makes up his own mind on the basis of his
group prejudices and desires. Where specific allegiances and loyalties
exist, as in the case of boss leadership, these loyalties will operate
to nullify the free will of the voter. In this close relation between
the boss and his constituents lies, of course, the strength of his
position in politics.
It is not necessary for the politician to be the slave of the
public's group prejudices, if he can learn how to mold the mind of the
voters in conformity with his own ideas of public welfare and public
service. The important thing for the statesman of our age is not so
much to know how to please the public, but to know how to sway the
public. In theory, this education might be done by means of learned
pamphlets explaining the intricacies of public questions. In actual
fact, it can be done only by meeting the conditions of the public
mind, by creating circumstances which set up trains of thought, by
dramatizing personalities, by establishing contact with the group
leaders who control the opinions of their publics.
But campaigning is only an incident in political life. The
process of government is continuous. And the expert use of propaganda
is more useful and fundamental, although less striking, as an aid to
democratic administration, than as an aid to vote getting.
Good government can be sold to a community just as any other
commodity can be sold. I often wonder whether the politicians of the
future, who are responsible for maintaining the prestige and
effectiveness of their party, will not endeavor to train politicians
who are at the same time propagandists. I talked recently with George
Olvany. He said that a certain number of Princeton men were joining
Tammany Hall. If I were in his place I should have taken some of my
brightest young men and set them to work for Broadway theatrical
productions or apprenticed them as assistants to professional
propagandists before recruiting them to the service of the party.
One reason, perhaps, why the politician to-day is slow to take
up methods which are a commonplace in business life is that he has
such ready entry to the media of communication on which his power
depends.
The newspaper man looks to him for news. And by his power of
giving or withholding information the politician can often effectively
censor political news. But being dependent, every day of the year and
for year after year, upon certain politicians for news, the newspaper
reporters are obliged to work in harmony with their news sources.
The political leader must be a creator of circumstances, not
only a creature of mechanical processes of stereotyping and rubber
stamping.
Let us suppose that he is campaigning on a lowtariff platform.
He may use the modern mechanism of the radio to spread his views, but
he will almost certainly use the psychological method of approach
which was old in Andrew Jackson's day, and which business has largely
discarded. He will say over the radio: "Vote for me and low tariff,
because the high tariff increases the cost of the things you buy." He
may, it is true, have the great advantage of being able to speak by
radio directly to fifty million listeners. But he is making an
old-fashioned approach. He is arguing with them. He is assaulting,
single-handed, the resistance of inertia.
If he were a propagandist, on the other hand, although he would
still use the radio, he would use it as one instrument of a
well-planned strategy. Since he is campaigning on the issue of a low
tariff, he not merely would tell people that the high tariff increases
the cost of the things they buy, but would create circumstances which
would make his contention dramatic and self-evident. He would perhaps
stage a low-tariff exhibition simultaneously in twenty cities, with
exhibits illustrating the additional cost due to the tariff in force.
He would see that these exhibitions were ceremoniously inaugurated by
prominent men and women who were interested in a low tariff apart from
any interest in his personal political fortunes. He would have groups,
whose interests were especially affected by the high cost of living,
institute an agitation for lower schedules. He would dramatize the
issue, perhaps by having prominent men boycott woolen clothes, and go
to important functions in cotton suits, until the wool schedule was
reduced. He might get the opinion of social workers as to whether the
high cost of wool endangers the health of the poor in winter.
In whatever ways he dramatized the issue, the attention of the
public would be attracted to the question before he addressed them
personally. Then, when he spoke to his millions of listeners on the
radio, he would not be seeking to force an argument down the throats
of a public thinking of other things and annoyed by another demand on
its attention; on the contrary, he would be answering the spontaneous
questions and expressing the emotional demands of a public already
keyed to a certain pitch of interest in the subject.
The importance of taking the entire world public into
consideration before planning an important event is shown by the wise
action of Thomas Masaryk, then Provisional President, now President of
the Republic of Czecho-Slovakia.
Czecho-Slovakia officially became a free state on Monday,
October 28, 1918, instead of Sunday, October 27, 1918, because
Professor Masaryk realized that the people of the world would receive
more information and would be more receptive to, the announcement of
the republic's freedom on a Monday morning than on a Sunday, because
the press would have more space to devote to it on Monday morning.
Discussing the matter with me before he made the announcement,
Professor Masaryk said, "I would be making history for the cables if I
changed the date of Czecho-Slovakia's birth as a free nation." Cables
make history and so the date was changed.
This incident illustrates the importance of technique in the new
propaganda.
It will be objected, of course, that propaganda will tend to
defeat itself as its mechanism becomes obvious to the public. My
opinion is that it will not. The only propaganda which will ever tend
to weaken itself as the world becomes more sophisticated and
intelligent, is propaganda that is untrue or unsocial.
Again, the objection is raised that propaganda is utilized to
manufacture our leading political personalities. It is asked whether,
in fact, the leader makes propaganda, or whether propaganda makes the
leader. There is a widespread impression that a good press agent can
puff up a nobody into a great man.
The answer is the same as that made to the old query as to
whether the newspaper makes public opinion or whether public opinion
makes the newspaper. There has to be fertile ground for the leader and
the idea to fall on. But the leader also has to have some vital seed
to sow. To use another figure, a mutual need has to exist before
either can become positively effective. Propaganda is of no use to the
politician unless he has something to say which the public,
consciously or unconsciously, wants to hear.
But even supposing that a certain propaganda is untrue or
dishonest, we cannot on that account reject the methods of propaganda
as such. For propaganda in some form will always be used where leaders
need to appeal to their constituencies.
The criticism is often made that propaganda tends to make the
President of the United States so important that he becomes not the
President but the embodiment of the idea of hero worship, not to say
deity worship. I quite agree that this is so, but how are you going to
stop a condition which very accurately reflects the desires of a
certain part of the public? The American people rightly senses the
enormous importance of the executive's office. If the public tends to
make of the President a heroic symbol of that power, that is not the
fault of propaganda but lies in the very nature of the office and its
relation to the people.
This condition, despite its somewhat irrational puffing up of
the man to fit the office, is perhaps still more sound than a
condition in which the man utilizes no propaganda, or a propaganda not
adapted to its proper end. Note the example of the Prince of Wales.
This young man reaped bales of clippings and little additional glory
from his American visit, merely because he was poorly advised. To the
American public he became a well dressed, charming, sportloving,
dancing, perhaps frivolous youth. Nothing was done to add dignity and
prestige to this impression until towards the end of his stay he made
a trip in the subway of New York. This sole venture into democracy and
the serious business of living as evidenced in the daily habits of
workers, aroused new interest in the Prince. Had he been properly
advised he would have augmented this somewhat by such serious studies
of American life as were made by another prince, Gustave of Sweden. As
a result of the lack of well directed propaganda, the Prince of Wales
became in the eyes of the American people, not the thing which he
constitutionally is, a symbol of the unity of the British Empire, but
part and parcel of sporting Long Island and dancing beauties of the
ballroom. Great Britain lost an invaluable opportunity to increase the
good will and understanding between the two countries when it failed
to understand the importance of correct public relations counsel for
His Royal Highness.
The public actions of America's chief executive are, if one
chooses to put it that way, stage-managed. But they are chosen to
represent and dramatize the man in his function as representative of
the people. A political practice which has its roots in the tendency
of the popular leader to follow oftener than he leads is the technique
of the trial balloon which he uses in order to maintain, as he
believes, his contact with the public. The politician, of course, has
his ear to the ground. It might be called the clinical ear. It touches
the ground and hears the disturbances of the political universe.
But he often does not know what the disturbances mean, whether
they are superficial, or fundamental. So he sends up his balloon. He
may send out an anonymous interview through the press. He then waits
for reverberations to come from the public--a public which expresses
itself in mass meetings, or resolutions, or telegrams, or even such
obvious manifestations as editorials in the partisan or nonpartisan
press. On the basis of these repercussions he then publicly adopts his
original tentative policy, or rejects it, or modifies it to conform to
the sum of public opinion which has reached him. This method is
modeled on the peace feelers which were used during the war to sound
out the disposition of the enemy to make peace or to test any one of a
dozen other popular tendencies. It is the method commonly used by a
politician before committing himself to legislation of any kind, and
by a government before committing itself on foreign or domestic
policies.
It is a method which has little justification. If a politician
is a real leader he will be able, by the skillful use of propaganda,
to lead the people, instead of following the people by means of the
clumsy instrument of trial and error.
The propagandist's approach is the exact opposite of that of the
politician just described. The whole basis of successful propaganda is
to have an objective and then to endeavor to arrive at it through an
exact knowledge of the public and modifying circumstances to
manipulate and sway that public.
"The function of a statesman," says George Bernard Shaw, "is to
express the will of the people in the way of a scientist."
The political leader of to-day should be a leader as finely
versed in the technique of propaganda as in political economy and
civics. If he remains merely the reflection of the average
intelligence of his community, he might as well go out of politics. If
one is dealing with a democracy in which the herd and the group follow
those whom they recognize as leaders, why should not the young men
training for leadership be trained in its technique as well as in its
idealism?
"When the interval between the intellectual classes and the
practical classes is too great," says the historian Buckle, "the
former will possess no influence, the latter will reap no benefits."
Propaganda bridges this interval in our modern complex
civilization.
Only through the wise use of propaganda will our government,
considered as the continuous administrative organ of the people, be
able to maintain that intimate relationship with the public which is
necessary in a democracy.
As David Lawrence pointed out in a recent speech, there is need
for an intelligent interpretative bureau for our government in
Washington. There is, it is true, a Division of Current Information in
the Department of State, which at first was headed by a trained
newspaper man. But later this position began to be filled by men from
the diplomatic service, men who had very little knowledge of the
public. While some of these diplomats have done very well, Mr.
Lawrence asserted that in the long run the country would be benefited
if the functions of this office were in the hands of a different type
of person.
There should, I believe, be an Assistant Secretary of State who
is familiar with the problem of dispensing information to the
press--some one upon whom the Secretary of State can call for
consultation and who has sufficient authority to persuade the
Secretary of State to make public that which, for insufficient reason,
is suppressed.
The function of the propagandist is much broader in scope than
that of a mere dispenser of information to the press. The United
States Government should create a Secretary of Public Relations as
member of the President's Cabinet. The function of this official
should be correctly to interpret America's aims and ideals throughout
the world, and to keep the citizens of this country in touch with
governmental activities and the reasons which prompt them. He would,
in short, interpret the people to the government and the government to
the people.
Such an official would be neither a propagandist nor a press
agent, in the ordinary understanding of those terms. He would be,
rather, a trained technician who would be helpful in analyzing public
thought and public trends, in order to keep the government informed
about the public, and the people informed about the government.
America's relations with South America and with Europe would be
greatly improved under such circumstances. Ours must be a leadership
democracy administered by the intelligent minority who know how to
regiment and guide the masses.
Is this government by propaganda? Call it, if you prefer,
government by education. But education, in the academic sense of the
word, is not sufficient. It must be enlightened expert propaganda
through the creation of circumstances, through the high-spotting of
significant events, and the dramatization of important issues. The
statesman of the future will thus be enabled to focus the public mind
on crucial points of policy, and regiment a vast, heterogeneous mass
of voters to clear understanding and intelligent action.
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