Nobody likes losing. But rather than accepting failure, former President Donald Trump has preferred to tell a different story, one where he never lost at all. In the version of events told in the “big lie,” Trump was the victim of a massive voter fraud scheme, one that stole the election from him and handed it over to President Joe Biden.
The “big lie” is just the latest version of the myths that reactionaries have always told themselves.
Recent polling shows it’s a story that still sticks with a supermajority of Republicans. The University of Massachusetts Amherst found that 71 percent of GOP respondents believe Biden’s win was at least “probably” illegitimate. An ABC News/Ipsos poll found the exact same result: 71 percent of Republicans “sided with Trump’s false claims that he was the rightful winner.”
What to make of this seemingly desperate rejection of reality? The fact is that Trump is not nearly as original or creative as he portrays himself to be. In this case, he’s merely slapped his name and branding onto a concept that predates him. The “big lie” is just the latest version of the myths that reactionaries have always told themselves.
Even before President Barack Obama was elected in 2008, rumors spread that he was a secret Muslim who was born in Kenya. These white “birthers,” who took comfort in the idea that it was only through subterfuge that America had elected its first Black president, were originally viewed as a fringe among Republicans. Trump didn’t originate birtherism, but he became its most prominent promoter. In 2011, as Obama prepared to run for re-election and Trump mulled running against him, he began calling Obama’s election illegitimate to anyone who would listen.
“He doesn’t have a birth certificate. He may have one, but there is something on that birth certificate — maybe religion, maybe it says he’s a Muslim. I don’t know,” Trump told Fox News, his partner in promoting the racist and entirely debunked conspiracy theory.
Before Obama released his long-form birth certificate in April 2011, a YouGov poll found that 70 percent of Republicans either thought Obama wasn’t born in the U.S. or weren’t sure. Even in 2019, 56 percent of self-identified Republicans were still certain Obama had been born in Kenya. It appears that the very people who have now latched on to Trump’s imaginary victory still believe, despite a mountain of evidence to the contrary, that a vast cover-up deluded the public into electing a foreigner from Africa whose candidacy was invalid under the Constitution.
As the “big lie” and birtherism show, it’s easier and more comforting to rewrite history than to acknowledge the shortcomings of a failed cause or accept the loss of social and political dominance. It’s a theme we have seen from sore losers throughout history. After the Union’s victory in the Civil War, former Confederates spun the tale of the “Lost Cause,” framing the South’s secession as a noble, just crusade to protect states’ rights and their genteel way of life from the rapacious Northerners. It’s a story that generations of American schoolchildren learned in class thanks to the propagation of the Dunning School and other white nationalist narratives.
Similarly, following Germany’s surrender in World War I, rather than admit the Allies outfought the collapsed Central Powers, right-wing members of the German army convinced themselves the brave soldiers on the field must have been betrayed. This “stab-in-the-back” myth placed the blame for Germany’s defeat on its newly republican government, leftists who’d destabilized the war effort and especially on Jewish civilians who were described as traitors. That lie was a bedrock of faith for Adolf Hitler, whose Nazi Party made it the official version of history once it took power.








