Rise in populism caused by cultural backlash, not economic insecurity

 
More Than Mortal
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This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.
At least according to this Harvard working paper:

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Rising support for populist parties has disrupted the politics of many Western societies. What explains this phenomenon? Two theories are examined here. Perhaps the most widely-held view of mass support for populism -- the economic insecurity perspective -- emphasizes the consequences of profound changes transforming the workforce and society in post-industrial economies. Alternatively, the cultural backlash thesis suggests that support can be explained as a retro reaction by once-predominant sectors of the population to progressive value change. To consider these arguments, Part I develops the conceptual and theoretical framework. Part II of the study uses the 2014 Chapel Hill Expert Survey (CHES) to identify the ideological location of 268 political parties in 31 European countries. Part III compares the pattern of European party competition at national-level. Part IV uses the pooled European Social Survey 1-6 (2002-2014) to examine the cross-national evidence at individual level for the impact of the economic insecurity and cultural values as predictors of voting for populist parties. Part V summarizes the key findings and considers their implications. Overall, we find the most consistent evidence supporting the cultural backlash thesis.


 
 
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This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.
Is this surprising? I honestly wasn't expecting much different.
Maybe it's because I mostly hang out on econ-based subreddits; standard assumption was that economic insecurity was behind Brexit/Trump.


 
Luciana
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Is this surprising? I honestly wasn't expecting much different.
Maybe it's because I mostly hang out on econ-based subreddits; standard assumption was that economic insecurity was behind Brexit/Trump.
Brexit maybe, but not Trump. Whites (or the alt right, I guess?) are afraid they're slowly not becoming the dominant force in the US.


 
Alternative Facts
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Is this surprising? I honestly wasn't expecting much different.
Maybe it's because I mostly hang out on econ-based subreddits; standard assumption was that economic insecurity was behind Brexit/Trump.

I'd say economic issues certainly played a role in the rise of populism in rural America. But cultural issues were also key to Trump's victory.

The NYT actually had a pretty interesting opinion piece today that focused on this - Why Rural America Voted for Trump

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Political analysts have talked about how ignorance, racism, sexism, nationalism, Islamophobia, economic disenfranchisement and the decline of the middle class contributed to the popularity of Mr. Trump in rural America. But this misses the deeper cultural factors that shape the thinking of the conservatives who live here.

For me, it took a 2015 pre-caucus stop in Pella by J. C. Watts, a Baptist minister raised in the small town of Eufaula, Okla., who was a Republican congressman from 1995 to 2003, to begin to understand my neighbors — and most likely other rural Americans as well.

“The difference between Republicans and Democrats is that Republicans believe people are fundamentally bad, while Democrats see people as fundamentally good,” said Mr. Watts, who was in the area to campaign for Senator Rand Paul. “We are born bad,” he said and added that children did not need to be taught to behave badly — they are born knowing how to do that.

“We teach them how to be good,” he said. “We become good by being reborn — born again.”

He continued: “Democrats believe that we are born good, that we create God, not that he created us. If we are our own God, as the Democrats say, then we need to look at something else to blame when things go wrong — not us.”

Mr. Watts talked about the 2015 movie theater shooting in Lafayette, La., in which two people were killed. Mr. Watts said that Republicans knew that the gunman was a bad man, doing a bad thing. Democrats, he added, “would look for other causes — that the man was basically good, but that it was the guns, society or some other place where the blame lies and then they will want to control the guns, or something else — not the man.” Republicans, he said, don’t need to look anywhere else for the blame.

Hearing Mr. Watts was an epiphany for me. For the first time I had a glimpse of where many of my conservative friends and neighbors were coming from. I thought, no wonder Republicans and Democrats can’t agree on things like gun control, regulations or the value of social programs. We live in different philosophical worlds, with different foundational principles.


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Is this surprising? I honestly wasn't expecting much different.
Maybe it's because I mostly hang out on econ-based subreddits; standard assumption was that economic insecurity was behind Brexit/Trump.
Brexit maybe, but not Trump. Whites (or the alt right, I guess?) are afraid they're slowly not becoming the dominant force in the US.
I would have thought the opposite. I've never heard anyone besides kids on forums talking about "white genocide", for lack of a better term.