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From Donald Trump to Danielle Smith: 4 ways populists are jeopardizing democracy

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From Donald Trump to Danielle Smith: 4 ways populists are jeopardizing democracy

In 1954, , asked a provocative question about : Where did this extremism come from?

He argued in a  that even the prosperous, post-Second World War United States was not immune to the radicalism of authoritarian populism. The so-called Red Scare of the 1950s was 鈥渟imply the old ultra-conservatism and the old isolationism heightened by the extraordinary pressures of the contemporary world.鈥

Seven decades later, Hofstadter鈥檚 words ring true again. Conservative movements are always fighting a rearguard action against modernity by falsely claiming to  who trample traditional values and sneer at the forgotten men and women who embrace them.

Paranoid politics

With so much money and power behind it, this paranoid style of politics 鈥 with its enemies lists,  and often violent language 鈥 has gone mainstream.

Conspiracy theories are no longer a stigma discrediting those who trade in salacious innuendo. Even mainstream politicians are now peddling them.

But is there anything to fear from the red-hot rhetoric of the paranoid style of politics? Some argue these circumstances .

In Hofstadter鈥檚 time, after all, American conservative politics turned away from fringe radicalism following the assassination of John F. Kennedy in 1963. The following year, Lyndon Johnson  in one of the largest landslides in U.S. history.

But the crisis we face today is bigger in scale . It鈥檚 been whipped to a frenzy by political leaders who seek to profit from the chaos that it incites via social media.

Populism was supposed to bring government closer to the people, but it actually places the levers of power . Here are four ways populism has turned poisonous and poses existential threats to democracy:

1. The shrinking middle ground

Democracy without compromise erodes popular sovereignty by fragmenting the electorate and eliminating meaningful compromise.

We are now in a world of zero-sum political contests, with a shrinking .  to maintain their grip on a deeply divided electorate.

Election campaigns have become dangerous contests over  designed to deepen cultural divisions using social media.

We saw this with . Donald Trump did it well  Republicans are now doubling down on the abortion issue, even though they鈥檙e facing pushback from .

In Canada, Alberta鈥檚 Premier Danielle Smith, whose United Conservative Party has been newly re-elected with a majority,  and has  in her months as premier.

2. The working class isn鈥檛 benefiting

Identity politics isn鈥檛 empowering working people because the politics of revenge doesn鈥檛 fix structural problems.

Nevertheless, conservative parties around the world are marketing themselves as parties of the .

Populists recognize the  to their success at the national level because of the 鈥 that now separates right and left.

There is a strong correlation between lacking a college diploma and supporting  at election time.

It used to be that working people recognized education as a path to prosperity. But , in particular, have betrayed the promise of universal access to a college degree.

Tuition fees are also heading in the wrong direction in . Education now reinforces class divisions rather than breaking down barriers to a better life.

3. The rich and powerful direct the chaos

Populism was supposed to empower people outside the corridors of power, but talk of  normalizes calls for political violence 鈥 always a bad thing.

In a war of all against all, it鈥檚 not the wealthy who lose. It鈥檚 ordinary, hard-working citizens.

Furthermore, once a lust for vengeance takes hold in the general public, it鈥檚 almost always being directed by elites with money and power who benefit financially or politically from the chaos.

4. Assaults on the rule of law

Authoritarian leaders have gained unprecedented  by building successful movements based on fantasies of blood and soil. The paranoid style of politics has entered a new phase with a full-spectrum assault on the rule of law 鈥 from inside government.

Populists are lying when they argue they want to empower the rest of us by divesting judges of their authority to oversee democracy. They really want to breach the strongest constitutional barrier against authoritarianism.

Look at the situation in Israel, where Benjamin Netanyahu鈥檚 extremist coalition seeks to destroy judicial checks and balances and allow the country鈥檚 parliament to , a move that would ease the prime minister鈥檚 legal woes.

Netanyahu has been charged with 

Trump鈥檚 attempts to undermine the legitimacy of judges are equally self-serving. As he runs again for president, he鈥檚 already telegraphing his violent desires, 

The road ahead for populists

The political dial is already spinning. The defeats of Trump and Brazil鈥檚 Jair Bolsonaro don鈥檛 represent  of their movements.

Despite an  and , Trump is still the 2024 front-runner.

We can鈥檛 count on an easy institutional fix, like a grand electoral coalition to push the populists off the ballot.

Opponents of Hungary鈥檚 Viktor Orban formed a united front to oppose him in the country鈥檚 2022 elections. But Orban was re-elected in a vote  as free but not fair.

Opposing coalitions are an uncertain strategy in most cases, and they don鈥檛 work at all in two-party systems. There is in fact no obvious electoral strategy for defeating populism, especially now that the far right has hacked the system.

Red lights flashing

We can no longer view elections as contests between the centre-right and centre-left in which undecided voters make the difference between victory and defeat. Nor can we count on the right to step back from the . We can鈥檛 even say for certain that the populism will recede in the usual cyclical manner.

Only decisive rejection can force the right to abandon anger and grievance, but voters are not yet turning their backs on the paranoid populists. It will take a lot of strategic ingenuity to beat them. And it will get harder to do so as they rig the game with rules designed to disenfranchise people who are young, poor or racialized.

All citizens can do is offer is constant, concerted pushback against the many big lies told by populists. It鈥檚 never enough, but for the time being, it鈥檚 the only way forward.

By 91亚色 Professor emeritus Daniel Drache, Department of Politics, 91亚色, and Marc D. Froese, Burman University professor of political science and founding director, International Studies Program.

This article is republished from