Populism and the quest for political power: the pitfalls to populist electoral success in Canada

Abstract Recent electoral inroads by anti-establishment political parties in Europe and around the world have led to the resurgence of the debate on populism. Within the burgeoning theoretical and analytic interpretations of the surge of populism, competing arguments have been deployed. Economic dis...

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Autor principal: Sirvan Karimi
Formato: Artigo
Idioma:English
Publicado em: Springer Nature 2024-02-01
coleção:Humanities & Social Sciences Communications
Acesso em linha:https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-024-02683-5
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author Sirvan Karimi
author_facet Sirvan Karimi
author_sort Sirvan Karimi
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Recent electoral inroads by anti-establishment political parties in Europe and around the world have led to the resurgence of the debate on populism. Within the burgeoning theoretical and analytic interpretations of the surge of populism, competing arguments have been deployed. Economic dislocation and the demographic shift within liberal democratic societies have provided fertile ground for the rise of populism. However, the success of these populist political parties, particularly the radical right populist parties, in utilizing prevailing societal resentment is to a great extent conditional upon a perceived threat to national identity. While the vestiges of political distrust and social and economic indignation can be found in Canadian society, the absence of a historically ingrained strong sense of nationhood, consolidation of multiculturalism, the eclipse of class from national political discourse, and the implausibility of resorting to Anti-Americanism as a mobilizing tactic has made it difficult for both Canadian right and left-populist forces to replicate the success of their international counterparts at the national level.
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spelling doaj.art-1c1ca721a34d4730b912a8f552c629212024-03-05T18:00:52ZengSpringer NatureHumanities & Social Sciences Communications2662-99922024-02-0111111310.1057/s41599-024-02683-5Populism and the quest for political power: the pitfalls to populist electoral success in CanadaSirvan Karimi0School of Public Policy and Administration, Faculty of LA&PS, York University, 133 McLaughlin CollegeAbstract Recent electoral inroads by anti-establishment political parties in Europe and around the world have led to the resurgence of the debate on populism. Within the burgeoning theoretical and analytic interpretations of the surge of populism, competing arguments have been deployed. Economic dislocation and the demographic shift within liberal democratic societies have provided fertile ground for the rise of populism. However, the success of these populist political parties, particularly the radical right populist parties, in utilizing prevailing societal resentment is to a great extent conditional upon a perceived threat to national identity. While the vestiges of political distrust and social and economic indignation can be found in Canadian society, the absence of a historically ingrained strong sense of nationhood, consolidation of multiculturalism, the eclipse of class from national political discourse, and the implausibility of resorting to Anti-Americanism as a mobilizing tactic has made it difficult for both Canadian right and left-populist forces to replicate the success of their international counterparts at the national level.https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-024-02683-5
spellingShingle Sirvan Karimi
Populism and the quest for political power: the pitfalls to populist electoral success in Canada
Humanities & Social Sciences Communications
title Populism and the quest for political power: the pitfalls to populist electoral success in Canada
title_full Populism and the quest for political power: the pitfalls to populist electoral success in Canada
title_fullStr Populism and the quest for political power: the pitfalls to populist electoral success in Canada
title_full_unstemmed Populism and the quest for political power: the pitfalls to populist electoral success in Canada
title_short Populism and the quest for political power: the pitfalls to populist electoral success in Canada
title_sort populism and the quest for political power the pitfalls to populist electoral success in canada
url https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-024-02683-5
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