6533b86efe1ef96bd12cb29c
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Populism, Its Prevalence, and Its Negative Influence on Democratic Institutions
Simon KruschinskiMárton BeneDelia Cristina BalabanVicente FenollDarren G. Lillekersubject
Populismmedia_common.quotation_subjectPolitical sciencePolitical economyDemocracymedia_commondescription
Populism is presented as a severe challenge to democracies as it delegitimises the institutions and processes on which democratic society is built. The infectious nature of populism within a system drives a shift in the public mood. The authors investigate this phenomenon through a content analysis of party posts on Facebook during the 2019 European parliamentary elections across 12 countries. They find almost a quarter of posts contain some form of populism, with anti-elitism the most common trope. Populist appeals are most likely to accompany critiques of labour and social policy, labelling elites or minority groups as causing inequalities which disadvantage the ordinary people. Both forms of populism enjoy high levels of user engagement suggesting they gain higher levels of reach within social media platforms. As support for populism rose in the wake of the economic and migrant crises, the authors suggest post-pandemic this increase is likely to continue.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2022-01-01 |