U-M Professor Publishes Book on Identifying Political Disinformation

As the election draws near, we delve into Barbara McQuade鈥檚 bestselling early 2024 book that takes a nonpartisan look at the history of disinformation in politics and offers steps to stop the spreading of lies.
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Cover courtesy of Seven Stories Press

University of Michigan Law School professor and TV legal analyst (NBC News and MSNBC) Barbara McQuade cites an unusual combination of influences for her career path: the Detroit Tigers and Watergate.

Her lifelong dream, as a Sterling Heights kid born in Detroit, was to play shortstop for the Tigers, but as a young girl, she was warned that this would be impossible due to her gender.

鈥淭hat caused me to feel a sense of betrayal, and seemed very anti-American,鈥 writes McQuade in her book, . 鈥淵ou want to do something to level the playing field.鈥

At around the same time, when McQuade was 9 or 10, the Watergate scandal broke.

鈥淚 had always thought of the president as this exalted leader, someone we should look up to, so I was deeply offended that he would do something so awful that he鈥檇 be forced to resign,鈥 McQuade says. 鈥淚 was also intrigued by the idea that reporters had exposed the misconduct that led to his resignation. So I think all of those things motivated my interest in news media 鈥 and my interest in law, especially in public corruption cases 鈥 protecting the public, and serving that watchdog role, from people who abused their authority.鈥

McQuade鈥檚 already impressive r茅sum茅 鈥 Barack Obama appointed her U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Michigan (2010-17), the first woman ever in that role 鈥 recently got another entry: bestselling author, courtesy of Attack from Within, which debuted at No. 3 on The New York Times bestseller list earlier this year.

鈥淚 wanted to reach people of intelligence and good faith, but a [lay] audience, not lawyers or national security specialists,鈥 says McQuade, who teaches courses in criminal law, criminal procedure, national security, and data privacy at U-M. 鈥淚 thought that if people can identify [disinformation] and recognize it, then they are less likely to be susceptible to it.鈥

The idea for the book was born in part from discussions with her students about the 2019 Mueller report, which focused on the ways Russia planted disinformation online not only to influence the 2016 election in America but to ramp up conflict within our borders. Sadly, this foreign strategy was, in some ways, in sync with the way our own political system had begun to operate.

鈥淚t used to be that parties in the primary elections would seek to curry favor with the more either conservative for Republicans, liberal for Democrats, members of their base,鈥 McQuade says. 鈥淭hen, in the general election, they鈥檇 tack back toward the middle and try to persuade swing voters, moderates, and independents to vote for them.鈥

In the past 25 years, however, with more and better data at their fingertips, 鈥減olitical strategists instead determined that it鈥檚 a better strategy to double down on your base, because if you can motivate your base to show up, that is a vote that will reliably be in your column,鈥 McQuade says. 鈥淚f you excited the moderates, the independents, you don鈥檛 know how they might vote, 鈥 so a better strategy 鈥 is firing up the base by stoking the culture wars and portraying the opponent as a demon and an existential threat to life as we know it.鈥

Moderates, meanwhile, have only grown more cynical about elections because the options seem so extreme, so they are more likely to vote for a third-party candidate or not at all.

鈥淎lthough this may be good for political candidates, it鈥檚 terrible for America, because we can鈥檛 accomplish anything when we鈥檙e so divided,鈥 McQuade says 鈥淧olitical purity never achieved anything. 鈥 We鈥檝e got big problems to solve in this country, and instead, we spin our wheels because we want to accuse the other side of all kinds of misconduct, or we want the other side to be unsuccessful. And that is the way disinformation is really harming our democracy.鈥

While promoting Attack at events across the country, McQuade got the sense that to some extent, her book is preaching to the choir, 鈥渂ut it鈥檚 also given me an opportunity to have good discussions with people who might not share my politics but who share a love for the country and our institutions of government,鈥 she says.

Diving deep into a project about how quickly and broadly disinformation spreads online is sobering, to say the least. But McQuade thinks efforts to combat disinformation during this election cycle are helping, and she also places hopes on the young people sitting in her classrooms.

鈥淭hese are smart, idealistic, hardworking, driven young people who want to make the world a better, more equitable place,鈥 McQuade says. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e much more media literate than those of us who are not digital natives. The group that鈥檚 coming up next is going to be well equipped to help solve some of these problems.鈥


This story originally appeared in the September 2024 issue of 香港六合彩图库资料 magazine. To read more, pick up a copy of 香港六合彩图库资料 at a local retail outlet. Our will be available on Sept. 6.