Populism is also usually a facade for right-wing economic policies. — Tim3003
So, is this just a temporary phenomenon, to be overtaken by an (eventual) recovery from the 2008 crash? Or is future politics to be a constant battle of internationalist liberalism versus insular immigration-fear and xenophobia? — Tim3003
Populism is also usually a facade for right-wing economic policies. — Tim3003
Please expand on this. — Wallows
I'm not saying populists are especially concerned with economic or political theory - their yardstick is winning votes, but is it coincidence they're all right-of-centre? — Tim3003
One definition of populism is this:
a political approach that strives to appeal to ordinary people who feel that their concerns are disregarded by established elite groups.
Is that what we're talking about? — Terrapin Station
Your Overtone window has shifted significantly. I though third way politics worked best for the UK, what happened? — Wallows
Populism is more a politics of the dichotomy between the elite and the people, no matter their political leanings. I don’t think it can last because once they take power, they are the elite. But I think populism can be beneficial so long as the demagoguery preaches freedom rather than megalomania. — NOS4A2
Yes, but it doesn't 'strive to appeal' in my view. It latches onto base fears, exploits and manipulates them with half-truths and lies; and its aim is to benefit the egos and megalomania of its leaders rather than the ordinary people. — Tim3003
Does it preach freedom? It seems to me it preaches fear of foreigners and building walls to keep them out. Are we free inside a self-built prison?
I’m not aware of any of them preaching fear of foreigners. Perhaps you’ve misinterpreted or misrepresented what they actually say. — NOS4A2
One definition of populism is this:
a political approach that strives to appeal to ordinary people who feel that their concerns are disregarded by established elite groups. — Terrapin Station
Yes, but it doesn't 'strive to appeal' in my view. It latches onto base fears, exploits and manipulates them with half-truths and lies; and its aim is to benefit the egos and megalomania of its leaders rather than the ordinary people. — Tim3003
I saw someone recently characterize the difference between left-wing populism (which is a thing) and right-wing populism something like this: both are ostensibly in favor of the common people against their elite rulers, but left-wing populists see the "common people" as the laboring classes (proletarians) generally and the "elites" as the wealthy ownership classes (bourgeoisie) generally, while right-wing populists see the "common people" as the "middle class" (petite bourgeoisie) of the "normal" national identity (race, language, religion, etc) within the country in question, and the "elites" as some nefarious international cabal of foreigners and their political puppets within the country in question. — Pfhorrest
When do politicians give serious consideration to compromise? When do politicians suggest we have to face difficulties if we really want things to change? These are truths of governing that populists will avoid. — ZhouBoTong
Remember the Liberals' 'personal pledge' to save student grants? Reactionary 'honesty' can 'prove successful' only if backed by total lies, surely? — iolo
That sounds a bit unfair. As the junior partners in the coalition govt the Lib Dems could not hope to get all their manifesto pledges into the joint policy agreement. As the Tories did not like the scrapping of tuition fees it was axed. Being the govt they were then obliged to vote with the Tories on the subject. I have thought the Lib Dems were unfairly lambasted for this 'breaking of a pledge' ever since. Maybe people in the UK need to learn how coalition govts work. — Tim3003
I think one can talk about it as a movement sweeping the Western world.I'm not sure we can talk about populism as a movement sweeping the world. — Tim3003
This is so true. I've pointed out in many threads pointed out that this isn't something inherently right-wing. The confrontational demagoguery and divisive rhetoric of the elite vs the people can and has been used also by the left.Populism is more a politics of the dichotomy between the elite and the people, no matter their political leanings. — NOS4A2
and 8 years of austerity. — Tim3003
I think one can talk about it as a movement sweeping the Western world. — ssu
If a simple view of "populism" would be the political version of "give the people what they want", then of course it will dominate in an open democracy. — ZhouBoTong
Put it this way: if a law were passed that levied a tax of X% of your income but gave you a tax credit of X% the mean income, in a country with an income distribution like the US about 75% of people would get more than they pay, and the whole thing would be neutral on the national budget because that's how math works. (Assuming X<100). — Pfhorrest
Which suggests either that your thesis is wrong, or that we don't really have an open democracy. I lean toward the latter. — Pfhorrest
During 8 years of austerity (that you mentioned is coming to an end), Britain's national debt increased. Why not make it austere enough to have an impact? Why is it ending when "progress" has been so slow? I get that the deficit has dropped significantly since 2007-2008, but a large chunk of that would have occurred anyway as the economy recovered. The UK is still running a deficit, with austerity ending wouldn't we expect that to start trending up again (in a few years, I think they have planned budgets for a while)? — ZhouBoTong
If a simple view of "populism" would be the political version of "give the people what they want", then of course it will dominate in an open democracy. — ZhouBoTong
That would then entail that some kind of socialism should dominate in an open democracy, whether under that name or not, since the thing that most people want is the easement of their material suffering, and since wealth and income are distributed in such a way that most people have far less than the average (mean), the vast majority of people could get that material suffering eased at the expense of the tiny minority who hold all the wealth. — Pfhorrest
Populism and the divide to "the elite" and "the common people" needs basically an agenda that the so-called mainstream parties either aren't or seem not to be doing anything about. There has to be something that creates in reality or in the minds of people this divide. Otherwise it's really a fringe group of conspiracy buffs that are quite hilarious.With the current accessibility of information, along with higher education levels, it seems that ANY modern democracy will be at the whims of populists. — ZhouBoTong
Openly populist parties emphasize this and their idea of populism leaves out (at least officially) the crucial ingredient: that populism has the important division to "us" and "them" and that "they", the elite, the establishment, the powers at be, are against their ideas.If a simple view of "populism" would be the political version of "give the people what they want", then of course it will dominate in an open democracy. None of us know the best way to govern, but we all know what we want. — ZhouBoTong
hat would then entail that some kind of socialism should dominate in an open democracy, whether under that name or not, since the thing that most people want is the easement of their material suffering, — Pfhorrest
It ignores the huge bulk of the middle class — Tim3003
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