We can鈥檛 fight authoritarianism without understanding populism鈥檚 allure
Populists across the globe .
Donald Trump in the United States, Jair Bolsonaro in Brazil and Boris Johnson in the United Kingdom are no longer in power. Rodrigo Duterte in the Philippines and Mexico鈥檚 at the end of his presidency too.
Even Canada鈥檚 Pierre Poilievre for meeting with a German far-right politician.
But is populism over? Hardly.
The leaders of the current phase, however, are smarter and their Machiavellian ambitions grander. In the U.S., a dozen or more newly elected congressional ultra-rightists to replace Trump at the head of the Republican Party at the first opportunity.
Populism 2.0
The focused populism of 2023 is light years away from the unexpected successes of 2016. The newest class of right-wing populists aims not only to dismantle the guardrails of democracy, but also the most fundamental principles of the rule of law.
in many countries. Populists are moving fast and using targeted strategies to subordinate the legal order to authoritarian rule.
The attack on judicial independence , the violent occupation of the Supreme Court and Houses of Parliament , the arrest and intimidation of journalists and the imprisonment of thousands of Russians opposed to all happened in the past year.
Recent surveys have shown that citizens in democracies around the world increasingly believe that both government and the media are 鈥.鈥
Policy experts if populism is a cause or a symptom of polarization. Regardless, trust in the democratic process is eroding.
The 鈥榝ascistic individual鈥
In his 1950 book The Authoritarian Personality, German sociologist Theodor Adorno argues there鈥檚 an inherent desire for dominance deep in the . Adorno was ahead of his time in exploring the psychology of the 鈥減otentially fascistic individual鈥 lying dormant within us.
More than 70 years later, social scientists still haven鈥檛 explained the magnetism of the abyss 鈥 a term describing some people鈥檚 willingness to embrace reckless policies regardless of the explosive consequences for their societies.
To come to terms with this capacity for delusion, contemporary psychologists have returned to the idea that there are certain ways of thinking that create a warped world view.
Research into Machiavellianism, narcissism and psychopathy, the so-called of anti-social personality traits, draws upon Adorno鈥檚 important insights. Social scientists are now identifying the link between a vindictive world view and political extremism, online abuse and .
The masks of command
Each authoritarian leader is different, bound only by their anti-liberalism, Dark Triad traits and their celebration as the ringleader of a populist circus.
In our recent book, , we show how charismatic leaders encourage a form of totalitarianism in which blind allegiance creates a feeling of partisan belonging. To carry it off, leaders wear what we call 鈥渕asks of command鈥 to rally their followers.
In our assessment, leaders who spin webs of lies wear the mask of 鈥渃onspirator-in-chief.鈥 The conspirator uses favours, relationships and money to destabilize institutions and erode the norms that stand in the way of autocracy.
Israel鈥檚 Benjamin Netanyahu relies upon the commander鈥檚 mask of 鈥渇irst citizen of the empire鈥 when he argues that the solution to societal polarization is more personalized power.
The first citizen always desires fewer checks and balances. For example, Netanyahu wants to politicize judicial appointments and reduce the oversight of Israel鈥檚 Supreme Court. It鈥檚 all aimed at who have the responsibility to protect Israel鈥檚 constitution.
Johnson and Trump frequently wore the aggressive mask of 鈥渘ational defender.鈥 As false tribunes of the people, they to their own advantage.
For Trump, America was beset by armies of refugees from Latin America. For Johnson, the U.K. needed to raise the drawbridge on migrants from eastern Europe. The zealot national defender always exaggerates external threats.
The 鈥渉oly crusader鈥 is even more ambitious because he believes he can change the entire international order to return his nation to greatness.
For example, Putin is a warmonger who uses imperialistic belligerence to disguise his nation鈥檚 decline. He aggressively sells the delusion of a Eurasian century.
Backed by China, he shadow-boxes with Russia鈥檚 old foe, western capitalism, to restore Moscow鈥檚 .
The spectacle of authoritarianism
These politicians play to jaded electorates and captive audiences who reward grandiosity and xenophobia because partisanship fills the void left by an absence of genuine national community.
These shamanistic masks have long been a mainstay of populists.
To many contemporary observers, the idea of an authoritarian personality . We disagree. What Adorno and his contemporaries did was ground-breaking. They clarified why some people prefer authoritarianism even when it runs counter .
So how to oppose extremism?
As political scientists, we believe democracy only works when it is safeguarded by a robust system of checks and balances, masses of engaged citizens and an independent judiciary. Every populist who promises to destroy the government to save it is lying for personal gain. It鈥檚 as simple as that.
In his book , political scientist Larry Diamond of Stanford University argues that the fate of democracy depends on the passion of the people to defend it from its enemies. But today, the people鈥檚 passion is in the grips of hard-right populists.
Canada is still experiencing the shock waves of the .
Yet we shouldn鈥檛 be complacent to the immediate reality that more radioactive fallout from American politics is heading our way. It demands an urgent response.
By Professor emeritus , Department of Politics, 91亚色, and , Professor of Political Science and Founding Director, International Studies Program, Burman University
This article is republished from .






