Listen longer, they are more than their politics

This is the third of a four-piece series promoting ways Connecticut people can help overcome the political and social polarization dividing the United States. Here are Parts One and Two.

When I boarded an Amtrak train from Chicago to Washington, D.C. earlier this year, I carried with me a Chipotle bag, a heavy suitcase, and an even heavier question: Why do so many people still support President Donald Trump?

The morning after the 2024 election, my classmates at the University of Chicago had gathered in disbelief, but I was not surprised. Members of my family in Indiana had voted for him before, and the concerns I heard in rural towns last summer were not the same culture war issues dominating cable news. So I set out to the inauguration —not to endorse, but to listen.

On the train, I met Esther and Lester, retired therapists from Michigan. Esther told me she had been at the January 6 rally, so I tried to put away my own understanding of that day to be present to her worldview.

Michael Hernandez

It turns out Esther’s world was thousands of miles in diameter. She and her husband had just returned from a trip to Indonesia to meet their newborn granddaughter. They proudly swiped through photos as they enthusiastically recalled hiking through the jungle with their son-in-law’s Indonesian family —even picking tropical fruits along the way. Their love for their granddaughter was undeniable, but so were their competing world views. They were staunch Trump supporters, but they also saw a world beyond MAGA that included their new Indonesian relatives.

This pattern repeated itself. A Mexican immigrant named Pedro admired Trump for “saying what he means.” An Army servicemember named Jackson spoke less about politics and more about faith and belonging. A retired executive from Nashville confessed she had once voted Democrat, but now placed her loyalty in Trump. What united them was not ideology so much as presence. They were warm, generous, and eager to connect if I was willing to suspend judgment and ask, “Where are you from? What brings you here?”

Our mainstream culture often reduces partisan rivals to caricatures. However, my experience underscored a simple truth: no one is only their vote. People carry with them stories, families, dreams, and wounds. To dismiss them as irredeemable is to shut the door on civic trust.

I caught a glimpse of how that trust can be rebuilt last year at Interfaith America, where I worked on the Evangelicals in a Diverse Democracy project, which tells a new story of how evangelicals might practice faith and neighborliness in a world beyond their control. Indeed, theologians like Marcus Borg, in The Heart of Christianity, invite us to see Christianity not as a rigid system of beliefs to be defended, but as a living tradition centered on transformation, relationships, and meaning. I have come to see civic life in the same way. Trust begins with presence. Listening, not to agree, but to understand, creates belonging. This is what keeps us from treating politics as a zero-sum game where our neighbors are enemies.

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