Explaining the Populist Right in the Neoliberal West

With the 2016 double shock of Brexit and Trump, the populist right has become a game- changing force on both sides of the North Atlantic. A proper explanation needs to combine political, economic, and cultural elements. Qua populism, the populist right addresses a political condition, which is neoli...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Societies
Main Author: Joppke, Christian
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: MDPI 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://boris.unibe.ch/197579/1/societies-13-00110-v2.pdf
https://boris.unibe.ch/197579/
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Summary:With the 2016 double shock of Brexit and Trump, the populist right has become a game- changing force on both sides of the North Atlantic. A proper explanation needs to combine political, economic, and cultural elements. Qua populism, the populist right addresses a political condition, which is neoliberalism’s endemic democracy deficit. However, the illiberal democracy that populists advocate is not a cure for it. Cleavage theory in the Lipset–Rokkan tradition sheds light on the rightist orientation and the nationalist content of this populism. The main explanatory challenge remains the combination of economic and cultural factors in the rise of populism. In economic respect, middle- class decline under a neoliberal order seems to be the root cause of populism. However, its agenda is culture-focused, amounting to a nationalist opposition to immigration and cosmopolitanism. This “cultural deflection” is a persistent puzzle. The minimum to conclude is that one-sided accounts of populism in exclusively economic or cultural terms are unconvincing.