Exclusive: analysis of results in 31 countries last year found 32% of votes were cast for parties that are populist, far-left or far-right.

  • @arymandias@feddit.de
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    311 year ago

    Because the establishment sucks balls, I just don’t think adding racism to the mix is gonna fix anything.

    • @taladar@feddit.de
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      251 year ago

      Ironically the anti-establishment populist parties are one of the few organisations with even less likelihood to fix anything than the establishment ones.

      • @Sulfamide@jlai.lu
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        41 year ago

        And I like to oppose the opposers by saying that the current “establishment” is the best humanity ever had in its entire history, at least on this scale.

        Most European politicians are models of honesty, good faith, and care for their people compared to any governing elite that existed up until now. They are also so far ahead of the dickheads in the US and the wannabe dictators in the rest of the world it’s not even funny.

        And by foolishly spewing cynicism and being spoiled brats, the people are pushing their governments right in the arms of far-right idiots.

        Downvote me daddy

  • AutoTL;DRB
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    31 year ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    Almost one-third of Europeans now vote for populist, far-right or far-left parties, research shows, with wide support for anti-establishment politics surging across the continent in an increasingly problematic challenge to the mainstream.

    In a sign of how far the rise of the nativist, authoritarian far right has shifted Europe’s politics rightwards, the researchers considered classifying several of the continent’s better-known centre-right parties as borderline far-right.

    “We talked a lot about reclassifying the UK’s Conservatives, Mark Rutte’s VVD in the Netherlands, Les Républicains in France and the ÖVP in Austria,” Rooduijn said.

    Critics say populists in power often subvert democratic norms, undermining the judiciary and media or restricting minority rights, sometimes in ways that will long outlast their mandates.

    Andrea Pirro, another of the study’s co-authors and a comparative political scientist at the University of Bologna, said the mainstream – the big, catch-all centre-right and centre-left parties – was partly to blame.

    Cas Mudde, a professor in international affairs at the University of Georgia who formulated the widely accepted definition of populism, said core support for anti-establishment, particularly radical right parties had not actually grown much.


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