On Point with Meghna Chakrabarti

What happened to shame in politics?

15 snips
Feb 2, 2026
Carolyn Long, an associate professor who studies civility, shame, and political behavior, explores how shame used to check leaders and why politics now rewards shamelessness. She discusses televised turning points, how campaigns incentivize outrage, differences between shame and guilt, why shaming backfires, and ideas for changing incentives to restore accountability.
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ANECDOTE

Personal Attacks On The Campaign Trail

  • Carolyn Long describes being attacked in her congressional races with personal attacks on her husband and daughter.
  • She says those attacks shocked her because campaigns used to avoid going after family.
INSIGHT

Shamelessness Is Politically Rewarded

  • Carolyn Long argues politics now rewards shameless behavior with attention and fundraising advantages.
  • That incentive structure encourages candidates to double down on provocative acts rather than apologize.
INSIGHT

Shame Versus Guilt And Shamelessness

  • Carolyn Long differentiates guilt from shame and cites Brene Brown's definition of shame as feeling fundamentally flawed.
  • She defines shamelessness as an absence of that painful self-evaluation, enabling persistent norm violations.
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