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ID186673
Title ProperMyth of Global Populism
LanguageENG
AuthorArt, David
Summary / Abstract (Note)The “rise of global populism” has become a primary metanarrative for the previous decade in advanced industrial democracies, but I argue that it is a deeply misleading one. Nativism—not populism—is the defining feature of both radical right parties in Western Europe and of radical right politicians like Donald Trump in the United States. The tide of “left-wing populism” in Europe receded quickly, as did its promise of returning power to the people through online voting and policy deliberation. The erosion of democracy in states like Hungary has not been the result of populism, but rather of the deliberate practice of competitive authoritarianism. Calling these disparate phenomena “populist” obscures their core features and mistakenly attaches normatively redeeming qualities to nativists and authoritarians.
`In' analytical NotePerspectives on Politics Vol. 20, No.3; Sep 2022: p.999 - 1011
Journal SourcePerspectives on Politics 2022-09 20, 3
Key WordsGlobal Populism