The Democrats must stop undervaluing sports – or keep losing elections | Jules Boykoff
Ahead of Donald Trump’s victory in the 2024 presidential election, Maga doubters abounded. It wasn’t just pollster
J Ann Selzer’s infamous whiff in Iowa
where Kamala Harris supposedly leapfrogged Trump on the eve of the election. One Democrat official in the battleground state of Pennsylvania went as far as toclaim
, “The Republicans, they really didn’t have a ground game.” Trump’s ground game as subpar and vibes-based, forgambling
on infrequent voters, foroutsourcing
operations to private groups like Elon Musk’sAmerica Pac
. In doing so, these critics overlooked conservative groups’ investment in spaces not typically viewed as electoral or even political. Republican strategists focused on off-the-radar communal groups that channeled low-propensity voters in a rightward direction. “We were more focused on relationships built,”explained
Tyler Bowyer of the get-out-the-vote outfit Turning Point.
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Sports comprise a vital zone where such relationships are built and cultivated, and the Trump campaign took full advantage. Yet, many political strategists and social commentators failed to understand that engaging with the sphere of sports can be
more politically effective
by beingless explicitly political
.Sports played an enormous role in Trump’s successful bid for the White House. Dallas Mavericks owner Miriam Adelson
$100m into Trump’s reelection effort. In June, Trump attended a UFC card in New Jersey where fanschanted
, “We love Trump!” Former professional wrestler Hulk Hogan spoke at the Republican National Convention. Attacking transgender athletes became ago-to-move
on the stump. Just before the election, Trump did athree-hour interview
with UFC color commentator and podcaster Joe Rogan. UFC president Dana Whitespeechified
at Trump’s victory celebration. Trumpsummoned
the Maga-hat-clad pro golfer Bryson DeChambeau to the stage, too, while NHL great Wayne Gretzky stood in the wingssporting
a Maga cap. NFL defensive endNick Bosa
seemed todon
a Maga hat at nearly every opportunity, while the Kansas City Chiefs’ Harrison Butkerstarted
a Pac to support Trump-aligned conservative causes. Boxer Mike Tyson, former NFL player Antonio Brown, and UFC fighter Jorge Masvidal werereportedly
on the guest list for Trump’s inauguration. The list goes on.But sports aren’t just part of Trump’s past. They’re a huge part of his future. The 2026 men’s soccer World Cup and the Los Angeles 2028 Summer Olympics provide Trump with a premium opportunity to engage in
, when political leaders leverage sports to self-legitimize on the world stage while stoking nationalism and diverting attention from ingrained social problems and human-rights woes at home. Trump has hyped his own role in securing these sports mega-events. Hebragged
to Bill Belichick on the former New England Patriots coach’s podcast that “The World Cup and the Olympics, I was responsible for getting both of them, actually.”Many sports honchos are more than happy to help Trump capitalize. Fifa president Gianni Infantino wasted no time congratulating Trump on his victory, even before the Electoral College votes were officially tallied,
on Instagram, “We will have a great FIFA World Cup and a great FIFA Club World Cup in the United States of America!” Infantino shared six photos of himself and the US president-elect, signaling to billions of fans that Maga is soccer-friendly. Infantino attended Trump’s inauguration, andposted
about it on Instagram.
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When it comes to taking sports seriously, Democrats have flat-out dropped the ball. But downplaying the importance of sports has a long and ignominious tradition.
For years, academics and political strategists alike have snubbed sport as unserious turf. A shiny bauble for the trinket shelf. The American Political Science Association – the flagship professional organization for the study of political science – has 55 organized sections and not one of them addresses the politics of sport. French intellectual Pierre Bourdieu famously wrote about how “sociologists of sports are…doubly dominated, both in the world of sociologists and the world of sports.” In short, those who take sports seriously are often relegated to the political sidelines.
Trump’s reelection shows that it is past time to ditch the bugaboo that sports don’t matter, or worse, that they are some spurious diversion from reality, a nefarious opioid that dulls our collective political vim. “Karl Marx once described religion as the opiate of the masses,”
Richard F Shepard in a 1974 New York Times essay. “Well, Marx went away too soon or he might have revised his dictum to make organized sports the villain of the piece. There is nothing that comes close to sports in the seizure of men’s souls.” The sentiment hasn’t dampened with time. More recently, French intellectual Marc Perelmandubbed
sport “the new opium of the people.”But it is clear that sports helped sway voters into ticking Trump on their ballots. Sports create space where people create collective meaning. Fandom isn’t random. It is rooted in social relations that can bend toward the political.
In fact, Marx himself might have taken issue with dismissing the power of sport. After all, his original “opium of the people” passage rippled with empathy. Marx wrote that “Religious distress is at the same time the
expression
of real distress and also theprotest
against real distress.” For him, “Religion is the sigh of the oppressed creature, the heart of a heartless world, just as it is the spirit of spiritless conditions. It is theopium
of the people.” So, Marx viewed religion somewhat sympathetically as “the heart of a heartless world.” For many, the same can be said of sport.Conservatives have already dialed in to this reality. Sure, Laura Ingraham infamously
LeBron James to “shut up and dribble,” but this is a distraction. A faction of the Republican party is committed to platforming sports during the second Trump presidency.Democrats lost the 2024 presidential election in part because they failed to embrace spaces where community connection was being forged. Sports is an ever-bubbling cauldron of connection on full boil. To ignore it is to concede defeat.