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The Framing Challenge Trish Hennessy Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives www.policyalternatives.ca

The Framing Challenge Trish Hennessy Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives

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Page 1: The Framing Challenge Trish Hennessy Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives

The Framing ChallengeTrish Hennessy

Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives

www.policyalternatives.ca

Page 2: The Framing Challenge Trish Hennessy Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives

Why can’t progressives connect?

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Neurological science findings

Reason vs. emotion – which one wins?

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Research on emotions

Thinking = processed feelings

Emotions affect decision-making

Important finding for framing

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How framing works

Every word and idea exists within a frame. Surface frames touch surface emotionsDeep frames tap into deeply-held values, principles, beliefs--morality.

-- George LakoffRockridge Institute

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It’s not about spin

Spin taps into surface framesNot enough to use better words

Need to re-hardwire how we think

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It’s not about ‘the’ issue

Federal poll post-sponsorship scandal

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It’s not about ‘the’ issue

Federal poll post-sponsorship scandal Stop laundry list approach

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It’s not about ‘the’ issue

Federal poll post-sponsorship scandal Stop laundry list approach People vote based on values,

connection, authenticity, trust, identity

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It’s not about ‘the’ issue

Federal poll post-sponsorship scandal Stop laundry list approach People vote based on values,

connection, authenticity, trust, identity

They rarely vote for a single issue

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It’s about values

…and Conservatives are better at messages that tap into their values

than progressives are.

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Conservative frame

Father knows best

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Conservative frame

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Progressive frame

Nurturant parent family

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The power of repetition

Repetition tricks the brain into believing myths and false statements are true-- Norbert SchwarzUniversity of Michigan

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Staying out of their frame

Negating the frame reinforces the frame-- George Lakoff Don’t think of an elephant

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Putting it to the test

Case study: Income inquality

RichPoor

Middle class

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The rich are like cartoon characters

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What Canadians think

Canada is a middle class nation Middle class is as much a state of mind

as it is an income category Middle class is the holy grail Aspirational notion

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Summary of focus groups

Sketchy, stereotypical view of rich/poor

Gaze is on the middle class Middle class proxy for the good life Sense of middle class struggle, worry No anger toward rich Some anger toward poor

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Othering

Middle class rationality helps them disengage

Talking about people they don’t know A spectator sport (explains online

newspaper comments)

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Empathy blocks/myths

Family influence (children learn to be poor) Vicious cycle (poverty a way of life, a choice) Bad decisions, (too many kids, big TVs) Lack of work ethic, education Stubborn myth: Some people choose to be

poor & won’t be helped Can never eliminate poverty

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Conservative frame dominates

Poor people need ‘tough love’

We need rich people to succeed

Reward the winners, punish the losers

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Growing gap reframe

The rich and the rest of us

The majority vs. the elite few

We put the promise of prosperity on trial

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Use of repetition

Our message box:

The rich are getting richer

The middle is being squeezed

The poor are getting left behind

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Use of emotion & fact

Focus group gut check:

What would it be like to live on $23,000 or less (poorest 20%)

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Holding the lens on worry

Struggle helps middle disconnect with poverty

Affirming the struggle, and showing commonalities, helps tap social responsibility

Solution: We’re in it together

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Triggering moral outrage

Highlight contrast between rich/poor (CEO and the teller inspiration); show

absurdities

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Pride

Canadians don’t like that poverty exists in Canada and, within limits,

they support moves to reduce it

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Best defense a good offense

It’s time to move away from critique and move towards change that feels

do-able.

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Make the case for change

Hold lens on what and why before solutions

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Avoid impossibility theorems(or try to)

Solutions are brief, focused, pragmaticExample: complexity of poverty

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The quiet limits of facts

We use big numbers to shock but know numbers alone don’t move people

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A serious challenge

Trust issues with government

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Another serious challenge

People are disengaged, ill informed

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Second federal budget poll slide (60%)

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Second federal budget poll slide (60%)

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Second federal budget poll slide (60%)

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The apathy trap

Canadians think they want rational, reasoned political leadership but

respond emotionally

“Conservative fear frame” keeps getting tapped

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http://www.conferenceboard.ca/HCP/Details/society/voter-turnout.aspx

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Get excited about your democracy

“I Am Canadian” ad writer: 30% of the people are with you 30% are against you 20% are in the middle – the deciders

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Show, don’t tell

Human stories that tap into emotions, values

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Emotions, message

The ball’s in your court